Wednesday, December 01, 2010
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Proactively “From the Sea”; an agent of change leveraging the littoral best practices for a paradigm breaking six-sigma best business case to synergize a consistent design in the global commons, rightsizing the core values supporting our mission statement via the 5-vector model through cultural diversity.
Well the upUS Navy stopped using Lead Base Oaint in 1996, which would have made Cdr. Michael William Brannon, USN the first of the post 1996 Rust Navy Commanding Officers or Cdr. Charles Ferguson...
CDR Salamander: We Need a Material Condition Standdown · 3 months ago
How about for the period actually under discussion in the article? When that picture was taken. I'm guessing the ship didn't look like that when it came out of the builder's yard, so maybe that guy...
CDR Salamander: We Need a Material Condition Standdown · 3 months ago
For what timeframe! USS Fort McHenry had twenty-four CO’s from 8 August 1987 to 27 March 2021! The last being Cdr. Michael J. Fabrizio, which last known whereabouts was in Mayport, Florida of the...
CDR Salamander: We Need a Material Condition Standdown · 3 months ago
All these years later, I'm curious--does anyone know where the then CO ended up? Retire at 3-star or something?
CDR Salamander: We Need a Material Condition Standdown · 3 months ago
The detailed breakdown of NATO's shifts in policy and military posture provides a lot of food for thought. speedy...
CDR Salamander: NATO's Evolution in Response to the Russo-Ukrainian War with Jorge Benitez - on Midrats · 10 months ago
13 comments:
Let me introduce you to a personal friend of mine... the M-41A pulse rifle :P
eh. Why bother. it will just collect dust with career minded CO's afraid to employ it even as their ship is sinking.
If you want one per boat and two boats, make it 3. Never trust an advertising pitch. Everything needs maintenence.
It's just the top half of the failed XM-29.
never enuff dakka... though I agree that unless mission>career in the mind of the CO, no weapons will help
I saw this weapon on Future Weapons a few years back. It looked impressive and seemed capable in the field as it appeared farely robust and could be of some use at getting insurgents across the mountains and behind cover. I guess the field use in AFG will test this writer's uneducated opinion.
I'd kinda like to have one of these mounted coax with ma-duece ... nice force protection weapon for pierside use, too.
Looks great for the Marines and the Army, but I'm not sure what purpose it would really fill WRT the Navy. I'm sure it's the answer to some question Navy-wise, but I'm not sure that question was about VBSS or anything man-portable. If you're rocking and rolling on a RHIB, this probably isn't going to help you much, and once you've boarded you don't have a long enough engagement range probably for this to even arm.
I don't really see what this could do in the Fleet that you couldn't do - and just as well, if not better - with the Bushmaster, if your target is either hard or out of concealment. If your target is concealed ... well, there's always defilade and VTRF ...
That was me, sorry.
In a USS Cole scenario or similar while underway in the littorals a couple of them really can help!
Plus one bushmaster mount can cover only so much field of fire an targets at a time...
One Bushmaster PER SIDE can cover a lot more real estate, and 4 M2HB twin-mounts expands it even more. And M14s, Mossy 500s and M79s help out a lot too.
But none of it means a damned thing unless you've got eyes watching topside, looking for a boat pulling up alongside you. One rifleman with an M14 could have stopped COLE from getting hit ... if they'd been looking for what was coming.
In a Cole type situation, there's nothing this could do that a Mk19 couldn't do a hell of a lot better.
Of course, I've put my own thoughts on this out there for all to see.
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