Here are some I picked out of the 10,000 or so photos I have taken over the last six years. Now that I have actually looked through then, a large percentage are of ceremonies, mostly changes of command. None of those photos are included:
Veteran of four wars, four enlistments, four branches: Air Force, Army, Army Reserve, Army National Guard. I am both an AF (Air Force) veteran and as Veteran AF (As Fuck)
Sunday, March 1, 2015
Photos of 28th Combat Aviation Brigade for Fort Rucker
During the February drill weekend, our Command Sergeant Major asked for a disc of 200 or so phots to send to the Army Aviation Training Facility at Fort Rucker, Alabama. We regularly send pilots and other aircrew there for training and the flight school asked for photos of 28th CAB.
Thursday, February 26, 2015
Gun Trucks in the Vietnam and Iraq Wars: Why Lessons Aren't Learned
Yesterday I went to a presentation at Franklin and Marshall College about Gun Trucks in Vietnam and in Iraq. I knew about the many variations of gun trucks assembled by soldiers in the Iraq War, especially before up-armor kits were available for Humvees and other vehicles.
But I had no idea of the extent of the Gun Truck culture during the Vietnam War. Nina Kollars, Assistant Professor of Government at F&M, talked for about 40 minutes about the origin of the gun trucks in Vietnam and how they grew and spread among transport units until there were hundred of 5-ton and "Deuce-and-a-Half" trucks rolling on the roads in Vietnam with various kinds of armor plate and heavy machine guns.
In Iraq, the chaos after Saddam was defeated left American soldiers vulnerable to IEDs and snipers--just like their brothers from the Vietnam war 40 years earlier. In both wars, soldiers welded armor on the vehicles they and mounted heavy machine guns.
One of my favorite images from the presentation was the truck above with a palletized gun platform made from a Conex box. It has shade, armor and if the M1074 PLS truck breaks down, the gun platform can be dropped and picked up on another PLS.
One big difference between the two wars was that during Iraq, the Army centralized training and upgrading vehicles with armor. In that way, the lessons learned in Iraq were not lost as in Vietnam, but passed along to soldiers as they arrived. I never got to see the Skunk Werks at Camp Anaconda, but I went through convoy training at Camp Udairi in Kuwait before going to Iraq. By the time I went, the lessons learned had become a curriculum with classes and manuals and a lot of on-the-road training.
Nina will be presenting her research at a meeting of military historians in the UK in a couple of weeks.
One question that came up in the research was why the lessons learned in Vietnam had to be re-learned in Iraq. that question I had an answer for. The U.S. Army was only too happy to turn its back on everything Vietnam after that war ended. We trained to fight the big war in Europe against the Soviets. No more un-winnable wars for us!!
So when we got in another un-winnable war, we had to learn the up-armor lessons all over again.
Wednesday, February 25, 2015
Who Fights Our Wars: Carrie Davis Jackson
That's what a soldier looks like.
Today I had the biggest anxiety attack since this whole
deployment started. It was first of two days of live fire with the M-16.
Although I spent 11 years in the military back in the 70s and 80s, I have not
fired an M-16 on a qualification range since Air Force basic training in
February in 1972. Worse, in AF basic we did not go through the whole
qualification process: zeroing the weapons, pop-up targets, night fire, firing
in gas masks. In the Air Force, they handed us a weapon, we shot at some
targets, they took the weapons and that was the one and only day in my Air
Force career I handled a personal weapon.
When I joined the Army, I went straight to tank training.
For the next eight years my personal weapon was a 45 cal. pistol. So this
morning we boarded a bus to go to the range wearing our new bulletproof vests
and helmets.
On the first range we zeroed the weapon. To zero, you shoot
three rounds at a paper target at 25 meters. To zero the weapon, you must put 5
rounds in a 4 cm square. Since the M16A4 we use has both traditional iron
sights and the new close quarters optical device, we have to zero the weapon
twice, once with each sight.
So to zero the weapon with both sights, you have to shoot at
least 12 rounds--six with each sight--and hit at least five out of six. Most of
the 25 of us who were shooting fired 36 to 48 rounds. I fired 60. A few
soldiers fired more. One soldier, a female sergeant, fired 12 rounds and was
done.
We fire side by side in 8-foot-wide "lanes" with
very prominent numbers. When the safety NCO told the tower the woman in Lane 6
zeroed with 12 rounds, the tower told her to walk down the embankment we shoot
from and clear her weapon. As she walked toward the ammo point to turn in her
unused ammunition, the tower told all the rest of us to turn around and look at
the female sergeant walking to the ammo point.
Congratulations again Carrie!
Tuesday, February 24, 2015
Trading a Guitar for a Gun--Who Fights Our Wars
By the way, this photo is used at the Army Sergeant's Major Academy as an example of BAD SAFETY PRACTICES!
The story is here: Trading a Guitar for a Gun.
Or here:
Seven years ago, then 18-year-old Nicholas Raia of Altoona,
Pa., brought his trumpet to an audition for the Pennsylvania Army National
Guard band. He aced the audition and until last summer was member of several
performance groups within the band. Over those seven years he performed more
and more with the band and ensembles playing the guitar for recruiting events
and celebrations. For more formal military ceremonies he now plays the
baritone—a small tuba.
After seven years in the band, Raia, now a sergeant, decided
to take a year away from performing and volunteer for a combat tour. Since
mobilization in January, Raia has served as a door gunner on a CH-47 Chinook
helicopter with Company B, 2nd Battalion, 104th Aviation Regiment.
“I felt that after 7 years in the Guard, it was my turn to
do my part overseas,” said Raia.
To get ready for the transition from full-time student and
weekend band member, Raia volunteered for additional training in weapons. In
June 2008, Raia attended the Small Arms Master Gunner course at Fort Indiantown
Gap, Pa. To prepare for hand-to-hand combat he completed the week-long Level
One Combatives Course in July. At the end of September, he was one of 10
Soldiers in the first class trained in the new Live-Fire Shoot House also at Fort
Indiantown Gap.
His transition from band member and college student to door
gunner had difficulties training could not help.
“It was a decision that I struggled with for a while,” Raia
said. “It’s one thing to tell your loved ones you are being ordered to leave
and a totally different animal entirely when you are trying to explain to them
that you are voluntarily leaving.”
Over the years he was in the band, Raia came to believe he
should deploy with a combat unit.
“Our job (in the band) is unique in that we are in the
public eye often, and we often get thanked for our service by people in our
audiences,” Raia said. “I would find myself conflicted, because while it is
true that we, as a unit, were serving our country in the way in which we were
meant to serve, I also felt as if I should be doing more.”
Raia had several friends in the Guard who deployed overseas
at least once in their careers. He said he felt those were the Soldiers who
truly deserved to be thanked.
“I felt that after seven years in the guard, it was my turn
to do my part overseas,” he said.
His final decision to deploy was met with mixed emotions.
“My unit could not have been more supportive of my
decision,” Raia recalled. “They helped me get everything on the military side
of the house in order prior to my deployment and have made it a point to ensure
it would not affect me negatively upon my return.”
His friends, on the other hand, were confused by Raia’s
decision.
“Many of my friends are not in the military and I think that
makes a big difference,” he said. “People in the military think a little
differently than those who are not and most of the Soldiers in the military
today could probably easily understand the feeling of responsibility that
compelled me to deploy.”
“My family worried about me and they were not real thrilled
that I would volunteer to leave them for a year to go to a combat zone. Raia
continued. “My family has been super supportive of my decision. Any previous
uncertainty or worries has given way to pride in what I am doing.”
Before deployment, Raia completed all the requirements for a
bachelor’s degree at Penn State with a double major in Criminal Justice and
Psychology. He plans to bring together all of his training, experience and
education by becoming a police officer after deployment—except on National
Guard weekends when he will be back on stage or in formation at ceremonies in
the 28th Infantry Division Band
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
I Dumped T-Mobile Because of Their Extreme Roamer Policy
I was a fan of T-Mobile even before I was a customer. Until this year I had very reliable service fromT-Mobile. Then I ran afoul of the...

-
Tasks, Conditions and Standards is how we learn to do everything in the Army. If you are assigned to be the machine gunner in a rifle squad...
-
On 10 November 2003 the crew of Chinook helicopter Yankee 2-6 made this landing on a cliff in Afghanistan. Artist Larry Selman i...
-
Senatus Populusque Romanus The Senate and People of Rome Some of the soldiers I served with in Iraq talked about getting an SPQR tat...