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Special Forces

Loadout Room photo of the day | Emerald Warrior 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne)

Loadout Room photo of the day | Emerald Warrior 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne)

HURLBURT FIELD, FL, UNITED STATES

A 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne) (7 SFG (A)) Green Beret waits to be jump master pre-inspected (JMPI) before conducting a High Altitude Low Opening(HALO) parachute jump Hurlburt Field, Fla., April. 23, 2013. Green Berets from 7SFG (A) participated in Halo jumps during Exercise Emerald Warrior, Emerald Warrior is an exercise designed to provide irregular training at the tactical and operational levels. The exercise involved all branches of the U.S. military and elements from allied countries. (U.S. Army photo by Spc. Steven Young)

Courtesy of DVIDS

MTM Special Ops Watch | Gray Falcon Review

MTM Special Ops Watch | Gray Falcon

There are phrases, parables and colloquialisms abound that deal with time.  Being in the right place has only ever been half the recipe for success.  The accurate keeping of seconds and minutes is imperative to many, but of the utmost importance to some.  With that in mind, it is easy to see a thriving niche in the marketplace for those who require an precise, durable timepiece.

I’ve had a few watches over the years that I can say met my expectations but my favorite has spent considerable time off my wrist as the OEM strap is prone to breaking.  When MTM Special Ops passed along one of their Gray Falcons for review, I was really excited to get a hold of it.  A dependable watch is an important piece of the puzzle when it comes to being prepared.

MTM watches are designed with input from US Army Special Forces and Navy SEALS.  Working hand in hand with elite warfighters, MTM wants to provide a hardcore watch for any mission profile.

The Falcon comes in an impressive waterproof hard case.  While awesome, it did seem a tad unnecessary for a product that is intended to live on my arm.

This series of watches are built as rugged as they come.  The case is milled out of a solid block of titanium, lending to the watches weight of 5.8 ounces.  This is about 3 oz lighter than the steel variant. This is still a hefty watch despite the titanium frame.  Waterproof to 330 feet, when you get to the depth where you’re worried about popping the seal on your watch, you may want to worry about the kraken you’re fighting instead.

The case is 44mm x 14mm.  I found this to be bigger than I prefer, by a good margin.

The sapphire crystal glass is both anti-reflective and scratch resistant.  By resistant I mean unless you’re juggling chunks of shrapnel you’re not likely to mar up the face of your timepiece.  The dial is NASA type carbon fiber and the hands are luminous.  A quick recharge from an external light or the included internal lights (more on those in a second) and those hands will be glowing bright all night long.

MTM Special Ops Watch | Gray Falcon Review

The three features that really make the MTM Falcon stand out among other mil-watches are these:

  1. The lights.  Featuring five inward facing blue LED’s and three outward facing LED’s, this watch has the capability to double as an effective flashlight.  The blue “stealth mode” lights recharge the luminous hands as well.  The blue LED’s are still pretty bright despite facing inwards.  There are multiple illumination   modes such as five seconds on, twenty seconds on and emergency flashing mode.  I’ve found myself using these lights more and more every night.
  2. The rechargeable battery system.  The internal ten year rated lithium-ion battery is recharged by placing the watch on an small pedestal.  The magic of electromagnetic fields does the rest and your watch is recharged while in close proximity to the charging stand.  No plugs, no unscrewing the back to dig out a battery.  This prevents you from opening up a part of the sealed watch which invites both seal failure and contaminant entrance.  This is somewhat offset by the one-to-two month expected battery life.  I’ve been on deployments where we went months between electrical plug-ins.
  3. The band.  While the online store shows thirty-eight different watchband options for the Falcon, the one included with my T&E unit was the NATO band, in green.  Most of the band is just fine but the joining clasp has some seriously sharp edges that stick out a good ways.  Being carved from stainless steel, these corners are punishingly sharp.  Not just a minor annoyance, the band snagged on many an object and scratched up people walking in my bubble.  If I owned this watch I’d be ordering a different band.

MTM Special Ops Watch | Gray Falcon Review

All things considered, there is no doubt MTM has built a watch meant to keep you on time when the bombs are droppin’ and the boots are marchin’.  While the Gray Falcon is built tough and the lights are useful, the size, weight and band are issues for me.  If you enjoy a certain G.I Joe aesthetic and leave discretion to the spies, this may be the timepiece for you.  The Gray Falcon can be found here and retails for $695

Watch: The ruck workout

Watch: The ruck workout

Photo courtesy of GORUCK Instagram

With the fall season upon us, that forces some of us indoors for workouts. For those of us without gym memberships or just flat out don’t want to go to a gym, there are options. I like the idea of working out at home with minimal equipment. I’ve done other body weight routines as well as workouts with weighted vests and dumbbells. GORUCK offers another unique option if you’re looking to switch things up a bit. Check out the following Ruck Workout!

From the GORUCK website

Rucking is the foundation of Special Forces training. Green Berets are well versed in shouldering heavy rucks through cities, mountains, jungles and deserts, in war and in peace — alone when they must, together whenever possible. Rucking requires strength, endurance, and character — and builds it, too.

The best way to get better at rucking is to go out and do it, but you can use your rucksack for a lot more than rucking. Supplement your ruck with these exercises or add some weight to your normal routine. Try rucking a few miles, doing a ruck workout, then rucking back to where you started.

 

Loadout Room photo of the day | Special Warfare Medical Group (Airborne) trains special-operations combat medics

Loadout Room photo of the day | Special Warfare Medical Group (Airborne) trains special-operations combat medics

FORT BRAGG, NC, UNITED STATES

Special Forces Medical Sergeant students participate in a field-training exercise focused on performing medical care in a combat zone. The exercise, run by the Special Warfare Medical Group (Airborne) at Fort Bragg, N.C., tests the medical students’ skills before they graduate the Special Forces Qualification Course and join operational detachment-alphas across the globe.

Courtesy of DVIDS

Loadout Room photo of the day | 1st Battalion, 10th Special Forces Group M4 rifle range

Loadout Room photo of the day | 1st Battalion, 10th Special Forces Group M4 rifle range

STUTTGART, BW, GERMANY

U.S. Soldier assigned to 1st Battalion, 10th Special Forces Group (Airborne) takes aim with his M4A1 rifle at Panzer Range Complex in Boebligen, Germany, on Jan. 23, 2015.(U.S. Army photo by Visual Information Specialist Adam Sanders/Released)

Courtesy of DVIDS

Special Operations Forces Backpack Nukes

Special Operations Forces Backpack Nukes

Though it sounds like the plot of a movie the reality is that select Army engineer, Special Forces, Navy SEALs and select Marines were once trained to employ backpack nukes.

The scientists of Los Almos Scientific Laboratory created the W54 atomic warhead in the late ‘50s.  It was one of the smallest nuclear warheads ever fielded at under 11″ diameter (270 mm), about 16″ long (400 mm) and a little over 50 pounds (23 kg).  The fuse allowed for one to select a yield from a tenth of a kiloton to a full kiloton.  The W54 was also a pretty dirty bomb.  People out to a quarter-mile away were likely to receive a deadly dose of radiation.

About 400 W54s were built. The Air Force employed some on AIM-26A Falcon AAM and the AGM-45 Walleye ASMs (to take out Russian bombers and subs, respectively). The Army employed them on the M-29 Davy Crockett, a jeep-mounted recoilless cannon tactical nuclear weapon with about a 3 km range.  That left a couple hundred to be used by SOF as the MK54 Special Atomic Demolition Munition or SADM.  The SADM was designed for a time where the US saw tactical nuclear weapons as a cheap and easy way to make up for capability.

The SADM had a combination lock covering its mechanical timer, which was EMP-proof, mounted in a shockproof case that was waterproof to 200 feet, packed onto a padded ruck.  Total weight of the SADM was a little over 160lbs.

Nuclear weapons at the small-unit level might seem pretty alien today, but early in the development of nuclear weapons their effects were underestimated and utility overestimated.  While most know what Mutually Assured Destruction is, many don’t know the nuanced history and development of US nuclear doctrine.  It evolved from one that promised massive retaliation in the event of a Soviet conventional attack to one of a flexible response.

Massive retaliation was exemplified when Secretary of Defense Forrestal wondered to National Security Council members, in reaction to the Soviets putting barrage balloons up during the Berlin Airlift, “if a reduction of Moscow and Leningrad would be a powerful enough impact to stop a war.”  While promising massive retaliation allowed the US to not have to invest in stronger conventional forces, it became apparent over time that a strategic nuclear exchange was not a solution to many contingencies.  This realization, along with a continued early underestimation of the impact of nuclear weapons, resulted in the development described above of “small” nuclear weapons applied to largely conventional targets.

Special teams chosen from Special Forces units, Navy SEALs, select Marines and Army engineers were trained in the employment of the SADM.  The Atomic Demolitions Munitions School was located at the U.S. Army Engineer Center on Ft. Belvoir, Virginia and was three-weeks long.  Army Special Forces teams attended a compressed weeklong course at Ft. Benning.

SADMs were seen at first as simply super-sized explosives.  Counter-mobility doctrine routinely uses explosives to slow the enemy’s advance, and in Europe, with the overwhelming conventional capability of the Warsaw Pact, any and every advantage to slow down communist forces was considered.  Bridges, tunnels and natural chokepoints were valid targets.  Engineers also envisioned “landscaping” on a huge scale with SADMs creating craters impossible for tanks to traverse, and blowing or creating dams to inundate avenues of approach.

US plans for the worst situations included destroying rail yards, airports, powerplants and infrastructure to keep it from assisting the Soviets.  The fact that these targets were primarily in Germany did not endear the approach with the Germans who, while allowing for the planning of the employment of SADMs, would not allow site preparation for the employment of the weapons.  Simply digging a shaft to slide a warhead into a hillside would exponentially increase the effectiveness of the munition, but for the Germans, it was seen as making the use of nuclear weapons on German soil even more likely.

SOF employment of SADMs included “landscaping” missions especially to obstruct enemy follow-on forces moving west, but SADMs were also seen as capable of taking out high-priority targets like command bunkers, ammunition depots or air defense nodes to clear the way for friendly aircraft.  The plan was to insert these select teams by parachute or helicopter.  The teams would move to the targets, set their explosives and be extracted, escape and evade, or, using prepositioned caches, conduct operations in the enemy’s rear.  SEAL employment of SADMs could include the above, but were more focused at coastal targets.

At first glance, the employment of SADMs seems innovative and creative, but the realities of employing these weapons as described were extremely unlikely.  SADMs were secured, as specific ammo depots very likely already known to the Soviets.  These were primary targets for persistent chemical munition strikes, as well as Spetsnaz operations.  In the event of war, the ability to draw these weapons from a bunker, get them to SOF units and then transport that unit behind enemy lines would have likely been extremely difficult, if not improbable.  Assuming a SADM could be successfully drawn from the bunker, transported to the team and the team was successfully inserted, hauling a 160lb pack anywhere is no easy task.  SOF would have been very vulnerable moving any distance on foot.  Some of the stories of the men that conducted training missions are fascinating as are the difficulties they overcame.

What were the factors that worked most strongly against the employment of SADMs? There are very few targets that could be attacked better with a man-employed nuclear weapon than one delivered by a plane or missile.  Secondly and thankfully, it became apparent that numerous small nuclear warheads going off would escalate to larger and larger warheads, as well as reducing the threshold for the employment of nukes.

Special Operations Forces Backpack Nukes

The Atomic Demolitions Munitions School was closed in 1985, and by 1989 all SADMs were withdrawn from Europe and decommissioned.  In September of 1997, 60 minutes did an expose where Colonel Stanislav Lunev, the highest ranking GRU officer ever to defect, stated that the Soviet Union had also built small nuclear weapons that could fit in a suitcase, and were a fraction of the weight of a SADM.  Unlike the US approach, Soviet plans featured smuggling these weapons to their targets during peacetime.

I’d bet we make them smaller now, too…


Courtesy of Special Operations.com and written by WILL RODRIGUEZ

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