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The 1st Tactical Studies Group (Airborne) is a non-profit think-tank and action group dedicated to furthering U.S. military excellence. It is composed of several sub-study groups specializing in key military areas:

Air-Mech-Strike Study Group (AMS-SG)

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BREAKING NEWS

MARCH 29, 2005: BREAKING NEWS! EXCLUSIVE!

CNN VIDEO REPORT EXPOSES STRYKER TRUCKS AS FAILURES IN COMBAT!

www.douglasmacgregor.com/cnnstrykertruckflawed032902005.wmv

Even though the Army tries to hid Stryker trucks from combat, an internal Army report details their many flaws which have resulted in calls for millions of dollars of repairs/alterations/fixes...retired Army Colonel Douglas Macgregor is interviewed...

Survive Iraq Gear List

1st TSG (A) is infuriated and sickened by the Army's negligence for not properly equipping our troops for non-linear combat in Iraq with light tracked AFVs. We have put together a desperation list of things individual Soldiers and units can do to save themselves. We will update this list regularly.

www.geocities.com/paratroop2000/surviveiraqgearlist.htm

O'Reilly's Latest Masterpiece: Preventable Deaths

Victor O'Reilly has in his latest report revealed why the U.S. Army is currently unable to reform itself as its men are killed/maimed in Iraq driving around in vulnerable wheeled vehicles while the tracked vehicles that could save them sit in storage; talk about "transformation" is just a "smoke screen" to perpetuate the failed status quo by changing a few brigades into impotent motorized infantry with computers while the vast majority of the Army gets clobbered on foot and in trucks if they are "light" and burdened with too-heavy tracks if they are "heavy".

POGO exposes high-level Army pay-offs behind Stryker wheeled armored car purchases

POGO calls for investigation into Stryker revolving door and rush to deploy in Iraq. Renewed debate on the revolving door has brought attention to the hiring of a top Army general by General Dynamics only 11 months before the defense contractor was awarded a $4 billion contract to build the Stryker armored vehicle. The first Stryker brigade was recently deployed in Iraq's Sunni Triangle despite warnings by the Pentagon's top tester that the wheeled vehicle is vulnerable to rocket propelled grenades (RPGs).

Stan Crist's Airborne M113 Gavins in Special Weapons for Military and Police #33 and #26

On news stands now!

Stan Crist has 4 articles in the two issues:

Taming the Tank Killer: defeating RPGs Iraqi Lessons Learned, page 28

Airborne Armor: Paratroopers become super-mobile mechanized infantry with enhanced M113A3s, page 48

The XM8-a first look: a new combat rifle for the U.S. Military, page 28

SCAR-Special Weapon for Special Forces?: its the Robinson Armament M96 in 6.8mm special purpose cartridge, page 60

Sign the Petition to Honor General James M. Gavin: name the M113

Join General Gavin's wife, Jean and others by signing a petition to name the world's greatest armored fighting vehicle (AFV) of all time, ever after its creator

Bush Administration Killing our troops: Lazy Neocon computer-steered firepower madness: world conquest without troops

Please listen to neocon idiots Richard Perle's and David Frums interview on NPR. They had some very interesting things to say about the military. It was like a bad Tofflerian nightmare. It was too bad the interviewer (Terry Gross) didn't know more about the military, she really could have got some more interesting "insights". She did attack Perle for his "revolving door" influence peddling; one scam earned him over $700, 000 trying to help a communist Hong Kong software company.

http://freshair.npr.org/day_fa.jhtml?display=day&todayDate=01/08/2004-1

We are in deep trouble with these two clowns steering Bush administration foreign policy. Who elected them? Who says they are "military experts"? They want to be world conquerors without being the "bad guy" storm troopers via labor-saving American gadget firepower. They want their cake without having to bake it.

The Neocons led by never-served-in-the-military, chickenhawk-wonks Richard Perle/Frums see Tofflerian RMA-we-can-steer-munitions-with-computers as a panacea to execute their pre-emptive war foreign policy on the cheap. They are so clueless they spin the debacle in Iraq as vindication for SecDef Rumsfeld's invade-Iraq-on-a-shoestring, with troops-in-trucks operation which nearly failed had it not been for the Army's 3rd ID in tracked AFVs able to overcome enemy physical resistance reaching Baghdad; cleverly they not mention that since the fall of the Iraqi government their computer-steered firepower hasn't been doing "squat" to keep the peace in Iraq which requires boots on the ground to find the Saddams and keep Iraqi guerrillas from blowing up oil pipelines.

The Neocon/Tofflerian RMA hubrists are so out-of-touch with physical reality with their we-don't-need-troops mentality they simply ignore the fact that we are losing men each day in Iraq trying to hold together what their firepower destroyed. Perle/Frums have no idea that military power and force is more than blowing things up. Its about CONTROL, about holding ground and making it livable, changing peoples and governments, MANEUVER not just firepower.

Operation Airborne Dragon: M113A3 Gavins flown into Northern Iraq: wheeled Army doesn't want you to know about it

www-cgsc.army.mil/milrev/download/english/NovDec03/barclay.pdf

IRTF 1-63rd Armor, 3rd BDE, 1st Infantry Division attached to 173rd Airborne Brigade

MRC
1st Platoon Bravo Company 2/2 IN M113A3 Gavin light AFVs
3rd Platoon Bravo Company 2/2 IN M113A3 Gavin light AFVs

HRC 2d Platoon Bravo Company 2/2 IN M2A2 Bradley Medium AFVs
3rd Platoon Charlie Company 1/63rd Armor Battalion M1A2 Abrams Heavy tanks

FSB and C4I elements

On 07 April 2003 the IRTF flew from Ramstein AFB, Germany to Bashur Airfield in Northern Iraq by 30 x C-17 Globemaster III sorties as the follow-on echelon to the 173rd Airborne Brigade which had jumped in earlier. Fanning out, the Sky Soldiers and IRTF Soldiers collapsed Iraqi resistance in the north by April 10th.

1st TSG (A)'s Carol Murphy in the Washington Post!

www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/ A23732-2004Jan16.html

Copter Camouflage

Sunday, January 18, 2004; Page B06

After reading the Jan. 11 news story "Insurgents Downed Copter in Iraq, Army Says," I think The Post should ask the Army why its helicopters haven't been painted light tan or gray as the Marines, Navy and Air Force have all done to make their aircraft blend in with the blue-gray sky and desert tan of Iraq -- and harder to spot and shoot down.

CAROL MURPHY

New York

The writer is editor of the U.S. Army Aviation [Journal]

NG Iraqi Deployment Horror story unfolding as we speak....Shame on you, National Guard going along with active Army HMMWV truck non-sense

The National Guard's leadership in Washington D.C. and in the 30th and 81st Brigades is so lacking in professional military knowledge--even self-preservation survival instinct---that they are going to Iraq as "temporary help" underlings of the active army without demanding they take with them their 235+ M113 Gavin light tracked armored fighting vehicles which are perfectly suited to urban stability operations threatened by car/road bombs, grenades, RPGs and AK47 attacks. I say "+" because I'm not counting the M113s their Combat Engineers use. If you count just the M113 Gavins their Infantry and Armor Battalions use/have they have over 235 light tracked AFVs which can each move 11 Soldiers at a time, or 2,585 people under full armor protection at a single time.

81st ARMOR BDE = 94 x M113 Gavin-type light tracked AFVs
30th INFANTRY BDE = 141 M113 Gavin-type light tracked AFVs

TOTAL 235 x M113 Gavin-type light tracked AFVs

www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/ policy/army/toe/mech.htm

81st Armored BDE = has 94 x M113 Gavin type light tracked AFVs

30th Infantry BDE = has 141 x M113 Gavin type light tracked AFVs

www.globalsecurity.org/military/agency/army/30in-bde.htm

The 30th eHSB, headquartered in Clinton, is the largest brigade in the North Carolina Army National Guard. The brigade has three maneuver battalions, two infantry and one armor. However, there appears to be an extra tank battalion from the West Virginia National Guard that is a part of the 30th IB BDE, making it have 2 battalions of infantry and two battalions of armor.

THE ARMY & MARINE WHEELED TRUCK MADNESS CONTINUES IN IRAQ: LAV-3/Stryker "Bird cage" didn't work, did it?

www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=4678909

In another attack, insurgents fired two rocket-propelled grenades at a U.S. Stryker military vehicle on patrol in a western district, setting it on fire, witnesses said. More blasts shook the Stryker, as its fuel tanks and ammunition exploded, but a U.S. military spokesman said there were no casualties. Lieutenant-Colonel Joseph Piek of Task Force Olympia said the commander and driver of the vehicle had jumped out. Other Soldiers in the unit were patrolling on foot.

http://news.ft.com/servlet/ContentServer?pagename=FT.com/WireFeed/WireFeed& c=WireFeed&cid=1079420081603

Iraqi guerrillas fire at U.S. military vehicle
(Reuters) - March 28 2004 14:11

MOSUL, Iraq (Reuters) - Insurgents have fired two rocket-propelled grenades at a U.S. military vehicle in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul, setting it on fire, witnesses have said.

More blasts shook the wheeled Stryker armoured vehicle, apparently as its ammunition exploded. There was no immediate word on casualties in the attack in the west of the city.

A passer-by, Mahmoud Ibrahim, 40, said he had seen three attackers in a car fire an RPG at the Stryker as it went down a side street in a western district of Mosul on Sunday. Another RPG was fired at the U.S. vehicle moments later.

"I saw the Stryker burning," he said. "I saw nobody getting out of the vehicle."

U.S. troops in other Strykers sealed off the area.

WHAT'S NEW?

January 30, 2005

U.S. Army finally begins to adapt to the non-linear, 4GW battlefield: more M113 Gavins to save the day in Iraq...1,775 already in Iraq

EXCLUSIVE! SEE MINI-MOVIE ON THE MESS IN IRAQ AND HOW TRACKED ARMORED FIGHTING VEHICLES CAN SAVE THE DAY: "We Must Be Invincible"

www.combatreform.com/INVINCIBLEforinternetcaptioned.wmv

These M113 Gavins actually are for the 3rd Infantry Division's second tour of duty to Iraq. There are already over 1,700 M113 Gavins in Iraq that have been in continuous combat for over two years first with 3rd ID's "Thunder Run" that took Baghdad (USMC was 6 days late and Saddam & accomplices escaped to start guerrilla war against us), all the way to the present occupation of Iraq. Even in their "vanilla" neglected-by-the-Army state without the outer armor and gunshields they are supposed to have, less people have died in thousands of M113 Gavins than have died in just 300 Stryker trucks over a shorter period of months. We still have a long, long way to go to fully adapt the U.S. Army to the non-linear battlefield....our Airborne/Air Assault/Light Infantry units need M113 Gavins starting with Delta Weapons companies and supply & transportation units...we still have thousands of M113 Gavins in storage that need to be put into service....but the tide has turned finally against the emasculated wheeled Army mentality...if we can change our culture and develop an egalitarian, adult warfighting strategy to win 4GWs...our many men who died in Iraq will not have died in vain.

An excellent way to do this would be to "start over" with a Non-Linear Maneuver Brigade (NLMB) that does all of the non-sexy but necessary things nobody in DoD wants to do: use fixed-wing observation/attack aircraft, amphibious and aircraft delivered tracked AFVs for 2D and 3D maneuver...live in ISO Container "BattleBoxes" not former dictator palaces which inflame the locals and starts guerrilla wars....call it "SeaBasing 21" or adult common sense; we need massive doses of this if we are to stave off defeat in Iraq and the rest of the Middle East...

Link to the Galloway Article

Army to upgrade armor on older personnel carriers

By JOSEPH L. GALLOWAY

Knight Ridder Newspapers

WASHINGTON - The Army, beset with complaints that its troops are going into combat in inadequately armored Humvees, will send an older and less used class of armored personnel carriers to Iraq after spending $84 million to add armor to them.

These vehicles, both veteran warhorses, are the M113/A3 armored personnel carrier and the M577 command post carrier. Both will be tougher and safer than newly armored Humvees.

Army officials who pushed hard over the last two years for getting the M113 into duty in Iraq said it was more useful, cheaper and easier to transport than the Army's new wheeled Stryker armored vehicle, which also is in use in Iraq.

The Army and Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld found themselves at the center of a firestorm last month over the pace of adding armor to the Humvee, a small transport vehicle that's been pressed into service in Iraq as a combat vehicle. Critics have charged that even with armor the Humvee is too easily destroyed by rocket-propelled grenades and improvised explosive devices.

An Army representative, who didn't want to be identified, said Monday that $84 million was being spent to add armor to 734 M113/A3s and M577s.

For the M113s, that includes hardened steel side armor, a "slat armor" cage that bolts to the side armor and protects against RPGs, anti-mine armor on the bottom and a new transparent, bulletproof gun shield on the top that vastly improves gunners' vision.

The M577, nicknamed the "high-top shoe" for its tall, ungainly silhouette, will get only slat armor and anti-mine armor. Its high sides can't take the steel armor without making the vehicle unstable and even more liable to roll over.

The slat-type armor essentially is a metal cage designed to detonate RPGs before they breach the steel armor and the light aluminum wall. Similar slat armor has been added to the Stryker vehicle.

The armor kits will be produced in the United States, the Army representative said, and installed in Kuwait.

The representative said the M113 upgrade was requested by Lt. Gen. Thomas Metz, the ground commander in Iraq, and approved by Gen. George Casey, the commander of multinational forces in Iraq.

The M113 typically carries a driver, a commander and 11 infantry Soldiers. It can be fitted with a .50-caliber machine gun or a MK19 40 mm grenade launcher. The M113/A3 version, introduced in 1987, has a bigger turbo-charged diesel engine, an improved transmission, steering and braking package, and inside liners to suppress spall, the superheated molten metal produced by RPG and tank-round hits. It has a range of 300 miles and a road speed of more than 40 mph. It also can swim.

More than 80,000 M113s in 28 configurations have been manufactured since they were introduced in 1960, and they still do yeoman duty in many of the world's armies.

At around 13 tons, the M113 is much easier to transport than the behemoth M1A2 Abrams tank, the Bradley Fighting Vehicle or even the wheeled Stryker.

The Army has spent hundreds of millions of dollars buying armored Humvees at $150,000 each and buying and making special tempered-steel and bulletproof-glass kits to add armor protection to the thin-skinned variety. The demand for armor on the Humvees grew as insurgents began pouring RPGs onto American patrols and convoys, and detonating deadly homemade bombs in the late summer of 2003.

The current demand in Iraq is for more than 22,000 armor-protected Humvees, a goal the Army says it will meet sometime between now and March. Its prime focus has turned now to armoring the five models of trucks that travel Iraq's dangerous roads to supply American forces.

Rumsfeld recently told a Tennessee National Guard Soldier, who asked why his outfit had to scavenge dumps in Kuwait for scraps of armor for their Humvees, that "you go to war with the Army you have, not the Army you might like to have."

One serving officer, who asked not to be identified, said Rumsfeld "didn't even let us go to war with the Army we had; he made us leave half our armored vehicles at home in pursuit of lighter, faster and cheaper."

PAST PROGNOSIS: June 17th, 2004

The U.S. Army is self-destructing.

On February 25, Headquarters Department of the Army (HQDA) presented to the House Armed Services Commitee (HASC) their plan to expand to 43-48 Brigades by handing Soldiers a rifle and made to walk or ride around in a cheapo truck. The "Hollow Army" of the 1970s has returned even though thousands of M113 Gavin light tracked AFVs sit in storage that could upgraded with RPG-resistant armor, gunshields, C4ISR to be non-linear battlefield transport means for every rifle squad. Previously, the Army on January 28, 2004 presented President Bush an expansion plan to gut the Army of its tracked combat engineers and heavy tank battalions for more vulnerable light troops on foot and in wheeled rubber-tired trucks or armored cars-with-a-computers; a techno-madness concocted by Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD) egomaniacs who want to steer weak, All Volunteer Force (AVF) co-dependants around a map graphic linear battlefield fantasy that doesn't exist. Its the dismal WWII Italian Army with computers. Troops-in-trucks is a miserable 500+ dead and over 2,000 wounded failure in the physical world we live in where nation-states are collapsing via 4th Generation Warfare attacks by RPGs, car/roadside bombs, land mines and an "AK47" in every third world household. So while our men are getting killed and maimed in wheeled vehicles that can never adequately protect them, the Army tries to bribe them with $10,000 re-enlistment bonuses to stay in Iraq for one more year. If you are DEAD you can't spend it. However, if these monies were instead pooled together, say the money that would have been given to 8 Soldiers ($80,000) a M113A3 Gavin light tracked Armored Fighting Vehicle (AFV) sitting in storage could be supplied with RPG-resistant armor, underbelly countermine armor and gunshields to enable these same 8 Soldiers to fight alert, and heads-out to prevail in 360 non-linear combat, so they can return home ALIVE and intact. Yet the Army lusts for two $250,000 so-called "up-armored HMMWV trucks" for every squad; $500,000 that can't fully protect our men, can't go cross-country, can't swim and requires 4 out of 9 men to stay with the vehicles and not fight on foot. For $400,000 just one M113A4 Gavin could carry the entire rifle squad, require only two men stay with the vehicle, one manning a heavy machine gun or autocannon in overwatch, providing full amphibious, cross-country, stealthy hybrid-electric drive RPG-roadside bomb protected mobility: superior capabilities no Army on eath has today. While others fantasize about "FCS" capabilities 10 years from now, for just $400,000 per Gavin we could have them today in every Army rifle squad.

Tragically, current Army leaders sick with NPD illness refuse to do what's right to adapt properly to the Non-Linear Battlefield (NLB) of our 4GW world to accomplish the mission and save their men; they have bought into the discredited sociologists Alvin and Heidi Toffler's mythical, feel-good "Third Wave" world-view that anything that is physical is no longer important; all that matters is that we slap a computer in to do mental gymnastics to create a virtual, WWII-style linear battlefield that does not exist, where everybody stays in their inferior social position in the Army to feed NPD ego; relying on higher headquarters to micromanage them and "save them" as they beg for outside fire support--an expensive guided bomb dropped by a sexy USAF aircraft---when overwhelmed by enemy AK47s, RPGs and IEDs. A homogenized, one-size-fits-all, "medium" or "light" weight truck/foot-slogging Army; a bureaucrat's wish to-pinch-pennies-wheels too light to fight and too heavy to fly, restricted to easily ambushed roads/trails. The Army's narcissistic Generals can then brag that they have been such "visionaries" bringing in a mythical "new age" of network-centric, information-driven warfare; a "Revolution in Military Affairs" (RMA) where local units are physically weak and unable to take initiative like the science fiction movie, "Demolition Man" warned us about using satire. Providing ALL Army units with 22,000 pound light tracked M113A3 Gavin AFVs instead of impotent rubber-tired 22,000 pound FMTV-type trucks would provide local units physical, armored/air/ amphibious/cross-country mobility, firepower and supply superiority to take the fight to the enemy anywhere in the world using small-unit initiative, imagination and daring. The IDF has up-armored M113 light tracked AFVs and doesn't lose a man a day like we are in Iraq....

We certainly can't have that!

This is why its time the American people and the Soldiers of the Army itself work through the Congress to take back control of DoD and the Army which belongs to them---NOT the senior officers who are on ego trips and waiting for high-paid jobs after retirement (re: Generals Heebner and Keane) from corrupt contractors building crap equipment for our troops like General Dynamics Land Systems and their borrowed Canadian "Stryker" armored car/deathtrap design. If we don't get our military on track, the DoD mandarins will continue to "transform" ourselves like the French did before WWII--according to our fantasies instead of realities that will continue to result in real disasters for America and our men.

If you REALLY care about our troops dying and being maimed in combat, contact your Congressman/Senator:

Contact Congress

If you are a Soldier/marine headed to Iraq, read our Survive Iraq Gear List which we will constantly update as new information comes in.

Politics of the New "Hollow" Wheeled U.S. Army in Action: armored HMMWVs and Strykers fail


FULL REPORT ON HOW ARMY IS SACRIFICING ITS MEN IN IRAQ INSIDE INADEQUATE WHEELED TRUCKS

NEW! Army troops-in-trucks in Iraq is medically unsafe and unsound"

Dire NLB Medical Threats

The Bush DoD is Tofflerian: they think all you need to win wars is steer FIREPOWER by mouse clicks and "mop up" with troops-in-trucks. This has failed on the non-linear battlefield in Iraq where the enemy can attack in any direction at any time; 1, 331 dead, 10,000 wounded Americans so maimed for life. Rather than admit their view of warfare is wrong, the Tofflerians want a 2-year expensive program to slap armor onto wheeled trucks which also doesn't work and will make the entire Army road-bound if we have to fight in the mud/rice paddies of the far east. If you are blown to bits there are no medical techniques and technology that can save you as the report above details. The answer to save our troops in Iraq and future battles is to value ground MANEUVER and send over the thousands of M113 Gavin light tracked armored fighting vehicles now sitting in storage so our men don't get wounded in the first place; the National Guards now in Iraq left 235 of these thick-skinned, go-anywhere vehicles. Upgrade these sound platforms for future warfare not waste money and time on trucks. A tracked AFV is 28% more space/weight efficient than a wheeled truck; we cannot afford to throw out 1/4 of our armor protection by rolling on air-filled rubber tires, and the troops cannot wait 2 years for a HMMWV armor cover-up.

Air-Mech-Strike for Stability Operations: CNN and General David Grange blow-the-whistle on the HMMWV and Stryker truck fiasco in Iraq that is killing/maiming our troops

See General Grange on CNN's Lou Dobbs MONEYLINE daily and every Thursday night or hear him on the radio:

www.veteransradiohour.com

Call in, ask him questions about Air-Mech-Strike or any other military topic!

ROUND 1

www.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0404/26/ldt.00.html

DOBBS: The U.S. Army is sending hundreds of armored Humvees to Iraq to protect troops from attacks by insurgents. But tonight, there are new fears that the armor on those reinforced Humvees is still inadequate to provide protection for our Soldiers.

Senior Pentagon correspondent Jamie McIntyre has the report.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

JAMIE MCINTYRE, CNN MILITARY AFFAIRS CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): With U.S. troops still dying in deadly roadside attacks, the Pentagon is spending $400 million racing to replace the Army's basic thin- skinned Humvees with reinforced up-armored versions. But the better armor is still not providing adequate protection, writes a four-star general in a memo obtained by CNN.

"Commanders in the field are reporting to me that the up-armored Humvee is not providing the solution the Army hoped to achieve," writes General Larry Ellis, commanding general of the U.S. Army Forces Command, in a March 30 memo to the Army chief of staff.

Critics say, even with better armor, the Humvee's shoulder-level doors make it too easy to lob a grenade inside. Its four rubber tires burn too readily. At two tons, it is light enough to be overturned by a mob.

General Ellis wants to shift Army funds to build twice as many of the Army's newest combat vehicle, the Stryker, which has eight wheels, weighs 19 tons and when equipped with a special cage can withstand an RPG attack. "It is imperative that the Army accelerate the production of Stryker vehicles to support current operations," Ellis says.

But critics say the Army is overlooking an even cheaper, faster solution than the $3.3 million Stryker, the thousands of Vietnam-era M-113 Gavin personnel carriers the Army has in storage which can be upgraded with new armor for less than $100,000 apiece. Neither the Stryker nor the Gavin offer 100 percent protection. Some U.S. troops have been killed in the top-of-the-line M1-A1 Abrams tank. But the more armor, the better chance of survival.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

MCINTYRE: In his memo, General Ellis pleads for quick action, lamenting that, while the U.S. is at war, some in the Army seem to be in a peacetime posture. He writes: "If our actions impede the ability to train, equip or organize our Soldiers for combat, then we fail the soldier and the nation" -- Lou.

DOBBS: And General Ellis' remarks and note come a year after that war began in Iraq. What is -- what is taking so long for the command structure of the U.S. Army, the U.S. military, to provide the equipment that our men and women need in Iraq?

MCINTYRE: Well, I think the short answer is that they misestimated the threat that they would be facing at this point. They have been trying to adapt as time went on. They have been rushing the armored Humvees into theater, but now they are realizing they don't provide enough protection either. What General Ellis wants to do is quick action to get the authority to shift some funds around and ramp up production of the Strykers, so you can get more of those into the combat theater.

But, as I said, some of the critics say they should look to some of the vehicles they already have in storage. They think they can get them there even faster. I think General Ellis is reflecting some of the frustration that the Army feels it can't act fast enough to get enough protection to its troops.

DOBBS: General Ellis, a four-star general. Who put him in charge of looking into this? What is, if you will, his portfolio?

MCINTYRE: Well, he is commanding general of the U.S. Army Forces Command. So his main job is training and equipping. And, of course, he's writing this memo to the Army chief of staff, who is the main person in charge of training and equipping the Army, General Schoomaker. So the right people are focused on the problem. The question is how soon will they have the solution?

DOBBS: Well, for the sake of our men and women in uniform in Iraq, let's hope very quickly.

Jamie, thank you very much -- Jamie McIntyre, our senior Pentagon correspondent.

The military believes about 2,000 insurgents and foreign fighters are now holed up in Fallujah. The marines are hoping those insurgents will surrender their heavy weapons. But the troops are preparing to assault the city if the insurgents do not disarm.

I'm joined now by our CNN military analyst, General David Grange.

General, good to have you with us.

RETIRED BRIG. GEN. DAVID GRANGE, CNN MILITARY ANALYST: Thank you, Lou.

DOBBS: I have to ask you, first, what is your reaction to Jamie McIntyre's report and the statement by General Ellis that, point blank, our command structure seems in some respects to be in a peacetime posture, while our men and women in uniform are in war in Iraq?

GRANGE: Well, Lou, I know the leadership of the Army and I don't think they are in a peacetime mind-set.

However, I do agree totally that armored vehicles need to be sent to Iraq immediately to solve some of these problems with the Humvees. First of all, the -- any armored vehicle can take a certain kind of hit and be destroyed or incapacitated. However, Humvees are not the answer. It's too light-skinned, even the up-armored, for some of these actions, whether it be resupply or combat missions that the troops have.

The interim solution is to take the inventory that was just shown on the broadcast of the old '113s, armor those, and use those immediately in Iraq to protect the troops.

DOBBS: General Grange, you are talking about what was popularly known as the APC, the armored personnel carrier, thousands of them, Jamie McIntyre reported, in storage and ready to be rearmored if necessary. Under current armor, could the APC still be serviceable, that is protect our troops in Iraq?

GRANGE: There's no 100 percent protection, but it would provide much more protection than a Humvee and they are readily available and can be up-armored quickly. The Stryker is going to take too long to produce that many. So I'd get something out there now during this very intense period in Iraq.

DOBBS: General, the question has to be asked, this is the 21st century. The U.S. military is supposed to be the most advanced and focused and technologically advantaged force in the world. Yet what appears to be at least at first blush when we have men and women without sufficient armored vests, when they don't have armored vehicles, even the old APC, it does raise a question, what in the world has gone on with our command structure? Because we've got men and women dying there.

GRANGE: Well, that's true. And it's -- when you are a commander on the ground, it's very frustrating when you don't get the things that you think, at least you think that you need. We relearn lessons from every war.

(CROSSTALK)

DOBBS: General, excuse me. Let me be clear in my question, if I was not. I'm not worried about the commander at the company level or the battalion level. I'm talking about the command structure of the United States military, the Pentagon.

GRANGE: Yes, the upgraded vehicles need to be sent to Iraq immediately. They should have already been there. The Humvee is not the answer. I think there was the -- the assessment that the transition after the maneuver warfare to the stability and support operations were not be as violent as it's become was off-base a little bit. But it can be fixed now. Let's do something now and at least provide the needed protection and maneuverability that can be afforded now with the assets that we have. It's still not too late to do something.

DOBBS: Twenty-two -- 2,500 Soldiers, rather, now around Najaf, the U.S. marines surrounding Fallujah. Negotiations continue, which are being honored in the breech here. What is your -- your assessment as to the risk and the necessity of entering in particular Fallujah?

GRANGE: Fallujah, I have a problem with the cease-fire. There are some people that generally want it in Fallujah, some of the civilian leaders. But the hard-core insurgents are going to continue when they want to attack coalition forces, unless they are disarmed.

The city has to be continue to be isolated. You have to separate as many of the civilians from the insurgents as possible. You have to control key terrain and the services provided to the city itself. And you have to take down enemy strongholds as you find them. It's the only way to ensure lasting peace in this particular city. I believe there's a lot of them, insurgents, in there and that's one reason they want to negotiate.

DOBBS: Do you think we should not be negotiating? Mark Kimmitt, General Mark Kimmitt, said capture or kill Muqtada al-Sadr. And the response so far has been, negotiate.

GRANGE: Well, in Fallujah, that out to be taken care of right now. I think there's some time for Sadr. Even though he's maintaining weapons, he's building up his supplies for a fight, I think that that can be worked out, I really do, with some senior Shiite clerics. But, in Fallujah, that's the immediate problem. That has to be taken care of. I think it's OK to have a cease-fire to give it a chance.

The coalition should give it a chance. But I would not test it too much with those marines. In other words, if it looks like it's not working, then be on with it and get on with it and take care of the insurgents in that town once and for all.

DOBBS: General David Grange on point, thank you.

ROUND 2

www.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0404/27/ldt.00.html

The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Richard Myers, today defended the Pentagon's decision not to send more Stryker and M-113 armored personnel carriers to Iraq. The general's comments followed Jamie's McIntyre's report yesterday citing a memo from a four-star general saying the Army's reinforced Humvees don't provide enough protection for our Soldiers.

CNN military analyst General David Grange joins me now. But first, let's hear exactly what General Myers said today.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

GEN. RICHARD MYERS, JOINT CHIEFS CHAIRMAN: I think if you look at -- we'll have to get the figures on APCs. But all these systems -- none of these systems provide 100 percent protection. That's the fact.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

DOBBS: General Grange, you believe the Pentagon can do better than that. How so?

RETIRED BRIG. GEN. DAVID GRANGE, CNN MILITARY ANALYST: Well, I believe that. I think the Pentagon can do better.

General Myers is correct that there's not a fighting vehicle out there that provides 100 percent protection. But I think what the troops need is better protection than what they have out there right now. And there's stuff in the inventory, like the APC, the armed personnel carrier, the '113, that can provide that almost immediately to give some additional protection, medical personnel, engineers, civil affairs, logistics people, those moving around in the battlefield, it can be solved, I think, quite quickly.

DOBBS: Those '113s, the APC, do they have to be shipped from the United States, or are they forward deployed in other places?

GRANGE: Well, you have both. There's already '113s in country. They're in Kuwait and other places. But there's a lot in the military inventory.

In fact, they're part of the organization, the armored organizations right now, sometimes used as command-and-control vehicles, engineer vehicles, medical vehicles, command-and-control of artillery fires, different things like that. So they're out there. It is just a matter of getting them in there just to provide additional protection for the troops in certain tough situations.

DOBBS: Give us your best assessment. U.S. marines surround Fallujah. It appears that the prospects of entering Fallujah rise each day. Do our marines have the armor that they need to go into Fallujah again in your best assessment?

GRANGE: Well, as you know, the marines went over there with not all their equipment like many of the forces did because of the expectations of a little bit different type of environment. And it has become much more volatile.

I think that the marines will have to be enhanced with armor probably from the Army units that are there. There's armor in country to do that. If they attack throughout Fallujah, I don't think they will attack the entire city. But you want to a mixed infantry, foot Soldiers with armored units, armored elements in order to get the effect you need.

Sometimes, if there's an enemy sniper in the window, the best use of force, surgical use of force is a 120-millimeter tank round right through that window.

DOBBS: The 1st Armored Division, as you know, is there. They are amongst the troops who have been extended. That's heavy armor, that unit. How is that going to enter into the planning for further rotations in Iraq?

GRANGE: Well, one reason the 1st Armored stayed there was one, they're veterans of the battle. They've been there a year. They know what's going on. And they are a heavy unit. They have not only foot Soldiers, but they have armored vehicles to fight. So they were really a good choice for the situation.

I think subsequent rotations that the Department of Defense will ensure there's enough heavy armor mixed with the light forces, the special operating forces to do nation-building or whatever comes about, because you never know what the results will be.

DOBBS: General David Grange, thank you.

GRANGE: My pleasure.

MORE BREAKING M113 GAVIN NEWS!!

http://portal.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2004/04/28/wirq128.xml

Replace the hopeless Humvee, Pentagon chiefs are urged

By David Rennie in Washington
(Filed: 28/04/2004)

Armoured cars being sent to Iraq are not up to the job, according to a senior United States army general, prompting calls for Pentagon chiefs to swallow their pride and reactivate thousands of mothballed Vietnam-era armoured personnel carriers.

With improvised bombs, rifle fire and rocket-propelled grenades taking an ever deadlier toll on coalition forces, the Pentagon is spending £225 million to replace thin-skinned versions of the Humvee, the US military's ubiquitous jeep-like transport, with an "up-armoured" model, as fast as they can be churned off the production line.

Humvees are proving easy prey on the streets of Iraq

Commanders have shuddered as troops attached home-made armour plating and even sandbags to ordinary Humvees, whose thin skin, canvas doors and shoulder height windows have made them highly vulnerable to attack.

The new, armour-plated Humvees have been touted by Pentagon chiefs as the best solution to complaints from the field about the standard version of the vehicle.

But Gen Larry Ellis, the commanding general of US army forces, told his superiors that even the armoured Humvee is proving ineffective.

In a memo leaked to CNN television, he wrote: "Commanders in the field are reporting to me that the up-armoured Humvee is not providing the solution the army hoped to achieve."

Reports from the field say that even with armour plating, the Humvee's rubber tyres can be burnt out by a Molotov cocktail, while at two tons, it is light enough to be turned over by a mob.

Gen Ellis said it was "imperative" that the Pentagon instead accelerate production of the newest armoured personnel carrier, the Stryker, which weighs 19 tons and moves at high speed on eight rubber tyres.

But the Stryker has many influential critics who say it is too big to be flown easily on the military's C-130 transport aircraft, and too cumbersome to manoeuvre in narrow streets. Instead, they want the Pentagon to turn back the clock and re-deploy thousands of Vietnam-era M-113 "Gavin" armoured personnel carriers, which are still used by support and engineering units, and are held in huge numbers by reserve units.

Gary Motsek, the deputy director of support operations for US army materiel command, said: "I have roughly 700 113-series vehicles sitting pre-positioned in Kuwait, though some are in need of repairs. I have them available right now, if they want them."

The Death Wagons of Iraq By Colonel David H. Hackworth

www.sftt.org

06-14-2004

Hack's Target: The Death Wagons of Iraq

By David H. Hackworth

In Iraq, a Humvee – the modern military's jeep – is involved in an enemy action or a serious fender bender or rollover almost daily. Lt. Gen. Thomas F. Metz’s command has experienced 13 Humvee rollovers, resulting in 17 of his Soldiers dying. “Nine of the deaths occurred in the last 90 days,” he says.

Gen. Metz says that most rollovers occur when “the driver has lost control of the vehicle.” In a letter to his unit, he summed up other causes, such as “aggressive driving, lack of situational awareness, rough terrain, poor/limited visibility, adverse traffic conditions, improvised configurations and failure to wear seat belts.”

Amen on the aggressive driving. If bad guys are firing rockets and automatic weapons and blowing off mines left, right and center, no one in his or her right mind would drive on the most dangerous roads in the world the way we oh-so-carefully drive by a parked police car on the freeway. As longtime guerrilla-war veteran Lt. Col. Ben Willis (retired) puts it, “The MO would be to put the pedal to the metal.”

The problem is that the soft-skinned Humvee was conceived as a light utility truck – not a close combat vehicle. “The Humvee is horribly thin-skinned and underpowered,” says Army veteran Scott Schreiber, who drove one for six years. “It should be used in roles that don’t call for armor. If the role calls for armor, it’s simple: use armor.”

At the end of World War II, I was in a recon company in Italy. We started with armored cars – M-8s – but as Terrible Tito’s terrorists started using roadside mines and staging ambushes similar to the mean stuff going down in Iraq, our leaders quickly got rid of those thin-skinned suckers and put us in light tanks – M-24s. Within a year, as the guerrilla war with Yugoslavia heated up, we were given Sherman tanks – M-4s – with their even-thicker armor protection. And when a blown mine or ambush slapped shrapnel or slugs against the sides of our 36-ton tanks, we sat safely inside those steel walls, with our weapons turned full-bore on the enemy. Our armor protection gave us the critical edge our troopers should have today.

But here we are in Iraq after 15 bloody months still welding steel plate onto Humvees. Sure, our Soldiers gain a tad more protection, but it also turns the vehicles into rollover queens because it shifts their center of gravity.

Meanwhile, we have the Pentagon spending billions of dollars on irrelevant gold-plated fighter aircraft and on the lightly armored Stryker – a vehicle that is not battle-tried and that the Army has placed in relatively safe northern Iraq. Not to mention the thousands of potentially lifesaving armored personnel carriers – M-113s – left over from the Cold War gathering dust in depots.

What’s further wrong with this picture is that Iraq has excellent steelworkers and first-class machine shops that could be put to good use upgrading captured Iraqi equipment into armored vehicles capable of protecting our warriors while also securing our long, exposed supply lines.

Our modern generals might give a lot of lip service to protecting the force, but any way you cut it, what’s going on in Iraq is criminal. Clearly there’s a disconnect. The brass need to spend less time in their luxurious lakefront palaces and get down on the ground with the troops.

Maybe then they’ll develop a greater sense of urgency about what’s really needed on those killer roads the same way the 88th Division commanding general, Maj. Gen. Bryant E. Moore, did with us back in Italy and then again in Korea – where he was eventually killed as a corps commander leading from the front. And maybe our lawmakers should stop by Walter Reed hospital and get some firsthand skinny from the terribly wounded being treated there about what a death wagon the Humvee has become from the way it's presently being used.

“How many Soldiers and marines need to be maimed or killed by roadside bombs before Congress will get off their tails?” Mary Martino rightfully asks. “My son is serving his country with honor and pride in Iraq ... and has the right to expect that his country will do whatever it takes to protect him in his duties.”

USMC admits V-22 can't lift a quasi-armored a HMMWV truck (cancel both)

www.spacedaily.com/upi/20040608-17423100.html

PAMELA HESS, Pentagon correspondent for UPI interviewed marine General Magnus on June 8, 2004:

About $500 Million of that has come from the marine's annual budget. The Corps has forsworn new Humvees to pay for extra armor for the vehicles it already owns.

The marine corps has had to install up to 1,800 pounds of armor plating on Humvees and other vehicles to protect marines against roadside bombs and rocket-propelled grenade attacks. The armor has been permanently welded onto about 3,000 vehicles so far with another 1,000 to go. The problem is what will happen to these vehicles after the war.

"That has pretty interesting implications. A Humvee has 1,800 lbs. of armor on it, now it can't even be lifted by the V-22 at the distances you want. And what does 800 to 1,800 pounds of armor do for you in Africa? Gets a very well-armored vehicle stuck in the mud," Magnus said.

The extra weight poses near-term problems as well. The vehicles were designed to carry a certain payload; the extra weight stresses the frame and reduces the amount of equipment they can haul, forcing three vehicles to carry a load one could otherwise handle. It also breaks door hinges and bolts, forcing more maintenance in the field and putting a further demand on other vehicles.

Air-Mech-Strike for 3D Maneuver Warfare: Army "fiddles" with mythical FCS and mythical heavy lift helicopters while our Soldiers burn in Iraq: Air-Mech-Strike 3D maneuver can and needs to be done today using existing equipment

Stop trying to fit 20 tons of FCS to into 15 ton helicopters...If you can't raise the Bridge.....

Maybe you use light tracked tanks under 12 tons that fit inside CH-47F/CH-53Xs instead of the 20-30 ton FCS cash cow?

A 11-ton M113A4 Gavin can be made roadside bomb and RPG resistant with a C4ISR network-centric warfare package, hybrid-electric drive, band tracks etc. for under $500,000. It can even be narrowed to fit inside a CH-47F/CH-53X. Beats wheeled FCS trucks @ $10 million each in 2012, doesn't it?

Piasecki can make the CH-47F/CH-53X fly 200 mph for 2,000 faster with their ring-tail compound helicopter technology to effect the "vertical maneuver" we desire.

We call this "Air-Mech-Strike" and its all in our book. Maybe more Generals should read it?

READ HOW GENERALS AND DoD LUST FOR FANTASIES WHEN THEY CAN HAVE REALTY NOW

www.defensedaily.com/cgi/rw/show_mag.cgi?pub=rw&mon=0304&file=0304vertical.htm

RECENT OPERATIONS
All the World's Airborne Operations
U.S. Army Paratroopers first-to-fight: combat jumps in Afghanistan and now Northern Iraq!

The Inherent Vulnerabilities of Technology
Colonel Rosenberger's insights from the National Training Center's (NTC)Opposing Force (OPFOR): what the enemy does to defeat "precision" munitions

Operation Allied Force and Air Strike Myths
How the USAF has deceived Congress and the American people into thinking wars can be won by just air strikes using increasingly expensive munitions.

U.S. Soldiers' Suicide Rate Is Up in Iraq
Maybe if the Army provided adequate PROTECTION for its Soldiers in Iraq in the form of up-armored M113 Gavin light tracked AFVs, then our Soldiers wouldn't be so stressed out? Maybe they wouldn't have to open fire so often just to keep Iraqis away from them? Maybe they wouldn't see so many of their buddies blown to bits? Maybe the Army spokesman quoted in the article who says the standard "party line" that all that could be done is being done, is a liar or a fool--or both--? ALL THAT COULD BE DONE IS NOT BEING DONE TO PROTECT OUR TROOPS IN IRAQ.

NEEDED ARMY CULTURAL REFORMS
New Soldier's Creed
New CSA, General Schoomaker is right: its Soldiers not soldiers, all must be RIFLEMEN

REAL Army L-E-A-D-E-R-S-H-I-P values
Current LDRSHP values are missing important values of ENTHUSIASM, ALERTNESS and INNOVATION to build an Army of excellence, or simply tolerable to be a part of.

Proposed U.S. Army Ethos derived from IDF
Being in the military is NOT the catch-all, end-all of human existence, the U.S. Army needs an ADULT and morally sound reason for being (defend American freedom by dominant land maneuver power) that has nothing to do with weak, co-dependants wanting to validate themselves by being fawning yes-men in search of badges and rank and beating their chests as snobby egomaniacs. This requires ADULT self-actualizers who can call a spade-a-spade who enjoy military things as they accomplish the mission and take care of their fellow Soldiers.

Brain-Dead U.S. Army Culture
How the sleepless Army wastes time on non-sense peacetime, garrison building care to look "busy" and keep its Soldiers in the dark and in their social pecking order "lane".

FEEDBACK! & NEW AES ARTICLES
ARMY OFFICERS 0-6 AND BELOW WANT TRACKS NOT WHEELS

"Mike,

I hope this note finds you doing well. You've been a champion of the M113/M8 and I greatly appreciate your efforts and value what you written in speaking the truth about the Stryker. Stryker is a deathtrap and absolutely the wrong vehicle for our Army.

I thought I'd pass on a few items to you about the MGS. In the civillian world I am a Manufacturing Advisor for XXXXX XXXXX. I served 25 yrs in the regular and reserve component of the Army. Airborne qualified and served in 3 different M113 mech Infantry Bns as an enlisted man and as an officer. I know an ARNG officer who was an Engineer for XXXXX and now working for GD on the Stryker program. He confided in me that they cannot make the MGS work and are trying to figure out how to get out from under it and CYA. Additionally, I've had a conversation w/ a Colonel from Ft Knox that told me more than he should have concerning Stryker-the gist of which was from the 0-6 level down they recommended tracks over Stryker but the Generals seemed dead set for Stryker. This 0-6 was hoping Congress would force hearings on the matter and get to the truth. Another item, I spoke to someone at TACOM and he and others' feelings mirrored mine-I would not want my son going into combat in a Stryker.

I was wondering what you've heard about the M8 Thunderbolt-from what I'm able to gather is that the 120mm live-fire (stationary and on-the-move) has gone well. Last month they were to fire DU rounds. I've also read that the CG 82d Airborne has requested 4 M8 AGS for all future operations. Personally, I'd like to see the IBCTs have at the company level 1 Plt of M8s, 2-3 Plts of M113/MTLV Infantry and a section of M113s w/ Turret-mounted 120mm Mortars capable of direct and indirect fire. (I'd love to be a TC or gunner in an M8 if I were enlisted again or to be a Company Cdr of such a Company).

Is there anyone in Congress I can write to and advocate/push on the M8? I live in Michigan now and I do not think much of Sens Levin and Stambinaugh. It's just a gut feeling mind you, but I feel there is a real chance we'll end up getting Thunderbolt. Have you heard anything? Is my thinking wishful or do you sense the same thing? I'd really appreciate anything you can pass along.

Final note/ question ( for now)- Have you heard anything about the Army dumping the POS M9 Beretta? I understand the SOF folks are getting new build M1911s. I personally have had a M1991a1 Colt Compact .45 that I had packed in my gear as my personal "go-to-war" gun. When I was recalled to AD for 6 mo. after 9/11 I was issued a M9 (really wanted an M4 issued) before long, I started carrying my Colt Commander .45 in my holster and either no one noticed or cared not to notice. The Colt Commander was to be the orginal replacement for the 1911 @ 1950 but then Korea broke out and the Army shelved it."

Mike, I'll close for now- I look forward to hearing from you. In the meantime, Keep up the good fight and take care.

1st TSG (A) REPLY: Thanks for the kind words! your revelations are encouraging. How do we get rid of the current crop of wheels 'n computer generals?

This web site expresses I think their absurd mindset:

www.geocities.com/transformationunderfire

We may have no choice but to vote Bush out of office since his Tofflerian/RMA apointees simply don't get it--their troops-in-trucks steering aircraft firepower has failed miserably in Iraq, and actually Afghanistan, too. I think if Bush doesn't make the Army supply M113 Gavins to replace ALL the HMMWVs over in Iraq he will be thrown out of office in November. The daily death toll is going to undo him IMHO.

Airborne!

Mike

WHAT'S REALLY GOING ON WITH THE STRYKER DEBACLE?

Another 1st TSG (A) member writes in:

"Have you any idea where I can locate more information on the current status of the Stryker program as well as any information on how well it is performing in Iraq today?

This thing is a classic procurement boondoggle and will probably kill a bunch of kids."

A concerned citizen asks:

"After reading a lot of the stuff on your site, I just can't understand why the Army uses Humvees so much. They don't offer much protection at all. I also was surprised about reports of certain units having to improvise by adding armor plating on their trucks and other vehicles. You are right about how this has lead to quite a few deaths and it does not seem all that hard to solve. Maybe someday someone will do something about this because the Soldiers need better protection than this."

1st TSG (A) REPLY: Here are some web pages we update:

www.geocities.com/paratroop2000/strykerhorrors.htm
www.combatreform.com/lavdanger.htm

Have you done a google search on Stryker and M113 Gavin?

Carol

Official Army Report on the Jessica Lynch Convoy Debacle in Iraq
How "Support" units live down to their prescribed place in the Army existentialist "pecking order"

Iraq war phase After Action Review (AAR): armored mobility saved the invasion
When the marines-in-trucks got clobbered by small-arms fire, RPGs, and their LAV armored cars got stuck in the mud, the U.S. Army's 3rd Infantry Division (Mechanized) in TRACKS saved the entire invasion by reaching Baghdad first to collapse the enemy's center-of-gravity

Iraqi Ambush: July 23, 2003 photos
Details of how command-detonated land mines now called the buzz word/acronym "IEDs" (Improvised Explosive Devices) were used in one recent ambush

Stan Crist rips apart the lies holding the lav3stryker program: M113A3 Gavin Brigade Combat Teams needed

In a brilliantly illustrated slide show, Stan Crist shows point-by-point why wheeled armored cars are not even effective operating against the forces of nature much less against human foes. Planet earth realities demand TRACKED armored fighting vehicles if we want to prevail over the forces of nature and other humans.

New Articles as of January 29th, 2004

The Non-Linear Fight We are Now In: It takes MANEUVER, Tofflerian/RMA NeoCons!

Former CIA Director Woolsey and Dr. Kopp expose what ISLAMO-FASCISM really is

Starship Trooper physical MANEUVER versus Tofflerian mental firepower: DoD on a collision course with disaster

Biddle's Army War College Afghanistan report debunks precision firepower without ground maneuver "future of warfare" madness infecting DoD

LTC Gentry reveals RMA/netcentric mentalism is a dangerous, failed crutch!

How the U.S. Army reverse-engineers reality into their "transformation" plans: Chapter 6, page 159 dismisses our superior Air-Mech-Strike and Breaking the Phalanx plans!

Tale of two Colonels: Charles DeGaulle and Douglas MacGregor misunderstood reformers

Improved Tank/Infantry cooperation for urban combat?

U.S. Army Reserves: Not Ready, but need to be ready for non-linear combat

Retired General David Grange begins Military Veterans Radio/WWW Sunday Night Show

Return of the Horse Soldiers?

Impeach/Don't re-elect Bush: wants to reduce U.S. nuclear shield to 4 subs and 4 AF bases by 2017, National Survival in jeopardy

Mexican Army and intel services leading attacks across U.S. southern borders: time to move National Guard with live ammunition to seal off this asymmetric attack avenue for 9/11 type terrorists

DoD: screwed up since 1947, how to fix it before its too late

U.S. Army needs Honor Code NOW

New book charts Army success path: Air-Mech-Strike: Asymmetric Maneuver Warfare for the 21st Century

Study Group Member conducts first U.S. Army Air-Mech-Strike assault in Afghanistan

Tofflerian thinking poisoning U.S. military?

Afghanistan Primer: solving the "we don't do mountains" light-itis non-sense

Tanks are Combat Engineer Vehicles


More on the U.S. Army wheeled mafia's Stryker armored car deathtrap!

O'Reilly Report as PDF File

U.S. Soldiers dying; Enough-is-Enough: send in enough M113 Gavins to replace all HMMWV trucks in Iraq

Soft-skin Army getting clobbered in Iraq: wheeled HMMWV trucks and inadequate Soldier protection

Shinseki gone: Stryker lies starting to come out: roll-over at NTC

WorldNetDaily: Billions wasted on new military vehicle? Critics pan Army's 'Stryker' as poor alternative to tracked predecessors

Transform the Army Airborne and Light Divisions' Delta Companies: it maneuvers a Battalion

Army censorship defeated: LAVDANGER web site online again revealing Stryker deathtrap

High-level Army official reveals current Army leaders have been lying about Stryker armored car all along

Lav3stryker: Senator Stevens wants PORK, RAND calls it a LEMON, Soldiers need the DIAMOND; the M113A3 Gavin

Former Speaker of the House Gingrich blows whistle on lav3stryker deathtrap

Wargame cheating cannot save Army wheeled deathtrap: DoD considers canceling the lav3stryker

Official U.S. Army Report: Lav3stryker is a miserable failure; FCS is unworkable fantasy, USAF not even consulted when 96 hour air transport claims made!

New combat simulation study proves M113A3/M8 AGS IBCT force structure superior to LAV-III armored cars

Rubber-tired LAV armored cars will not survive modern combats

Gavin's Cavalry: light tracked M113 AAM/PVFs perfect for non-linear, lethal modern battlefields

Hi-Technology tracked 2nd ACR beats wheeled IBCTs

Heavy tanks, helicopter fighter-bombers: U.S. Army in search of doctrine?

Army officer in 1989 proposed better transformation plan; Army has no justification for LAV armored car purchases

Army enlistedman/officer presents M113A3 transformation plan in 1995 ARMOR magazine

Colonel MacGregor's Airborne-Air Assault Battle Groups

Light Mech Sappers

How blind obedience creates bad decisions like LAV-IIIs

Army says "wheels or walk!", ignores lighter tracks

Why doesn't the press expose the LAV-III/IAV scam?

Russian LAV-III equivalent armored car blown up in Chechnya (actual footage)

Tracks vs. Wheels 101: look at the drivetrains!

What if your LAV-III can't turn around on a mountain pass?

Official MTMC-TEA Study proves LAV-IIIs NOT C-130 transportable

Only 2 x LAV-IIIs fly by C-17, we can fly 2 x Bradleys, 5 x M113A3 Gavins, why waste $$BILLIONS on LAV-IIIs?

Goodbye armor, hello peacekeepers! Don Loughlin exposes LAV-III scam in Defense Daily News

High-level misconduct behind LAV-III scam

Britain wants tracks for FSCS Tracer scout vehicle, Gen Shinseki didn't: program cancelled, No Cavalry Branch, no Cavalry vehicles!

Army adopts air-delivered M113A3 Mech-Infantry concept in Europe reaction force, airlands into Northern Iraq

Light Mechanized Sapper Company (Airborne)

FM 7-7: Cross-country-capable, amphibious APC: rediscover a lost art

Ocean-going M113A3 Amphigavins: key to speeding Army sealift

Australian Army upgrades its tracked M113s: East Timor victors by way of C-130

Canadians selling us their wheeled armored cars (pork$$$), upgrading THEIR TRACKED M113s (combat power)

Spin: Canadians call tracked M113s "TLAVs", can't admit wheeled "LAVs" stink

Many New Zealanders reject LAV-III deathtrap armored cars

Italian Army has better adapted M113A3s

U.S. Army World-wide Strategic Maneuver (AWSOM) costs less than LAV-III cars, solves strategic air/sea lift woes

Defense Daily News: AWSOM 2D/3D maneuver and firepower doctrine

How tracked tanks can fly by leased cargo 747s (large armored cars can't)

An Army without tanks?

Mechanized Cavalry history: wheels a failure, no Cavalry Branch, No Cavalry

ALL Future Combat System proposals wheeled: fantasy "cash cow" to fleece America


New Soldier Self-Help Discoveries!

Iraqi Combat: Small Arms and Individual Equipment Lessons Learned

Army battery charging problems solved: power inverters in HMMWV trucks NOW

U.S. Army Reading List NOW

Helmet NVG mount protection and rank/name ID: without 100 mph tape

MOLLE rucksack failure: what do we do for a jump-capable rucksack?

Kosmo MOUT lifeline: rescue your buddy out of the line of fire

Combat Light: Soldiers Load Solution do-able right now!

Got bad gear, Soldier? Nobody listening? Post your ideas at Brigade Quartermasters: they'll get good gear to the good guys (you)

Does Ecotat have the Soldier's Load problem solved?

Winter approaches: replace field jacket liners ASAP!

The Great 21st Century Rifle Controversy: is 5.56mm enough?

U.S. Army reports Afghan gear problems: 1st TSG (A) told them so, Soldiers still getting ignored

Ground launched Hydra 70mm 2.75 inch rockets: Brazil makes the launcher we need

Ranger Rick Tscherne returns from the Balkans: creates SOS survival dog tag necklace

Fighting "war" on terrorism handicapped: where is the tear gas?

No more hard plastic canteen jump injuries: flexible 1-qt canteens are here

New Army chinstrap will save lives IF we get it NOW, not in 10 years

Col Hackworth's Vietnam Primer: excellent guide to non-linear combat in closed terrain against asymmetric enemies

"An Army of One, a Soldier for all"

WWII Airborne screen saver


Improved Aircraft and Close Air Support (CAS)

1st TSG (A) discovers 108 Paratroopers can jump from a C-17!

LA Times USMC self-promotion: pride/ego-created AV-8 and V-22 kill Americans, waste $BILLIONS tax dollars; w/o phony "911" unit, maybe we'd not have 9/11 attacks?

Why can't the U.S. military land on water anymore?

Boeing Phantom Works adopts AMS-SG's WIG concept!

V-22: marine Colonel's lies about flying deathtrap exposed!

Fix USAF CAS: Air Commandos and 2-seat OA-10B Warthogs

Fix U.S. Army Close Fight Support: Attack Pathfinder AeroScouts

U.S. Army adopts 1st TSG (A) "RoboCobra" UCAV concept

The trouble with aircraft: they ain't--ground mobility needed

Why air strikes without decisive maneuver failed in Iraq and Kosovo

How the USAF sees the world!

Got CAS? Charles Myers Maneuver Air Support can fix this

"Killer Bees": low-cost scout/attack aircraft for the 1st Cavalry Division

Goodbye Future Transport Rotorcraft! All Army monies are being wasted on LAV-III/FCS armored deathcars

No future for U.S. Navy/marines without jet seaplanes

No Air Recon: how fighter pilot egos grounded the SR-71