Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Canadian Bomb Disposal Team in Afghanistan

Canoe.ca has an article about Canadian bomb disposal teams in Afghanistan.

Different regions of Afghanistan favour different types of bombs. If it's a region he's not familiar with, he'll ask local Afghan police or army officials for information. Remote means are used to gather as much information as possible on the bomb.

Friday, October 24, 2008

Autonomous Helicopter Lands on Ship

Aviation Week reports that a robotic helicopter has successfully landed on a French warship.

Saturday, October 18, 2008

SAS in Northern Ireland

The Washington Post has a column that mentions several operations run by the SAS against the IRA.  The one involving the laundry sounds plausible but I'm not sure about the car bugging.

Friday, October 17, 2008

US Marines don't like MRAPs

Danger Room reports that US Marines in Afghanistan do not like the MRAP mine resistant vehicle.

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Obituary: Don Blakeslee, American fighter pilot

The Telegraph has the obituary of Colonel Don Blakeslee who was a Second World War fighter pilot who served with the RCAF, the RAF and the USAAF.
His greatest asset was his outstanding ability as a leader in the air. One eminent aviation historian wrote: “He was everywhere in the battle, twisting and climbing, bellowing and blaspheming, warning and exhorting. His ability to keep things taped in a fight with 50 planes flying at 400mph was a source of wonder.” One of his pilots described Blakeslee as “George S Patton Jr in a P-51 Mustang”.

Monday, October 13, 2008

New US Air Force ground combat uniform

The Air Force Times has an article about the US Air Force's new ground combat uniform.

Friday, October 10, 2008

Canadian Reservist returns to Afghanistan as civilian

The Canadian Press has the story of Luc Saint-Jean a Canadian Army reservist who completed a tour in Afghanistan then returned as a civilian aid worker to continue to help Afghans.

Tuesday, October 07, 2008

Roleplaying Iraq

The Times has an article about an American training base where actors play the parts of everyday Iraqi's and insurgents.

What happens over the course of the 14-day training period depends on how a unit behaves from day to day.

If US troops storm a calm village, kicking down doors and shooting on sight, for instance, they’ll face snipers and IEDs the next time they visit. If they hire an interpreter (using real dinars shipped over from Iraq) and respect local customs, though, they might just learn about an Al-Qaeda cell shipping guns into the area.

Friday, October 03, 2008

US Navy to stay away from shore

Danger Room reports that the US Navy has decided not to go closer than 25 miles to the coast when putting US Marines ashore.

Wednesday, October 01, 2008

Comparing the Canadian and US Armies

Stars and Stripes has a short article which anecdotally compares the Canadian and US armies.

For example, the Canadians assume that they must be observing a route for it to be "clear" whereas the Americans consider it clear once it has been checked for roadside bombs.

And the armies have different caveats constraining the way they operate downrange. Americans allow any soldier to question a person who has been detained, whereas the Canadians have trained personnel charged with questioning detainees, Callis said.