Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Last German WWI Veteran Has Died

The Associated Press reports that the last German veteran of the First World War has died. Erich Kaestner joined the army in 1918 and didn't get to the front before the end of the war. His death has gone largely unreported in Germany.

Monday, January 28, 2008

Communicating with Submarines

The blog The Stupid Shall Be Punished has a post about a new technology that will allow messages to be sent to patrolling submarines deep underwater. The system uses disposable buoys that relay the messages acoustically. The sub has to be within 175 nautical miles of the buoy so the presence of the buoys won't give away too much.

Friday, January 25, 2008

US Army Drone Unit

Danger Room has an article about a US Army unit called Task Force ODIN. The unit links feeds from Unmanned Aerial Vehicles with other units in an effort to combat bomb planting insurgents in Iraq.
a hundred-man Army unit is using an array of drones, manned surveillance planes, helicopters, and video downlinks to kill 2,400 bomb-planters and capture 141 more.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Scientists hope to reduce ship movement

The Halifax Chronicle Herald has an article about a new effort by scientists to reduce the roll of warships in high seas.

Sunday, January 20, 2008

US deployment figures

Slate has a blog post quoting some figures from the Stars and Strips newspaper on deployments of US Army personnel.
According to US Army Human Resources Command there are 515,000 Active Duty Soldiers:
  • 200,000 have one combat tour.
  • 70,000 have two combat tours.
  • 15,000 have three or more tours.

Friday, January 18, 2008

Four million bullets

The Telegraph reports that the British fired 4 million bullets last year in Helmand province, Afghanistan.

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Royal Marines learn parkour

The Times has an article about the Royal Marines learning the extreme sport of parkour or "free running". Parkour is the art of moving rapidly through urban terrain and is often seen in television commercials.

SEALS to get new boats

The Miami Herald reports the US Navy SEALS will be getting new boats. The goal is to reduce the impacts suffered by the SEALS as their boats travel through waves at speeds greater than 50 knots.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Around Africa

The Torch has a post summarising HMCS Toronto's recent trip around Africa. The author interviewed the ship's executive officer and the article has numerous links and some video clips.

Monday, January 14, 2008

Paralysed UK soldier back on duty

The Telegraph has an article about a British soldier who was paralysed in Afghanistan. Even though he is now confined to a wheelchair he has returned to duty.

Sunday, January 13, 2008

New device to check submarine hulls

The Halifax Chronicle Herald has an article about a new device being used by the Canadian Navy. Having fixed a dent in HMCS Victoria the navy is going to use the new 'sub mouse' to check the integrity of the hull.

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Canadians and Ghurkas in Afghanistan

Canada.com has an article about British Ghurka troops who are serving near Canadian troops in Khandahar. The Canadians have gone on operations with the Ghurkas several times and seem impressed with them.
"The Gurkhas are a very remarkable organization. They have very good fighters," said Brig.-Gen. Guy Laroche, commander of the Canadian Forces in Afghanistan. "We want to keep on working with them as long as we can."

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Shooting around corners

Danger Room has an article about the "Corner Shot". This is an Israeli weapon that lets the user fire around corners. A pistol mounts to the front end of the device and a lever lets the operator turn the pistol to either side. A small LCD screen shows the operator what the weapon is aimed at. There is a video on the site that shows the device in use.

Wednesday, January 09, 2008

Open Source Intelligence

Danger Room has an article about Open Source Intelligence (ie intelligence gathered from publicly available information) and how it is often overlooked by the intelligence community.
Steele showed up with:
  • The names of the top 10 journalists covering Burundi (ripe for debriefing)
  • The names of the top 10 academics covering Burundi (ripe for debriefing)
  • 20 two-page executive-level political-military summaries on Burundi
  • Burundi order-of-battle information down to the tribal level.
  • 1:50 maps of the country
  • 1:50 cloud-free imagery of the country that was less than 3 years old.

The CIA showed up with a PowerPoint chart of nominal value and a regional – not country-specific – economic study. You could pretty much conduct a non-combat operation in Burundi with Steele's info; you wouldn't send your worst enemy to Burundi based on what the CIA provided.