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6 reasons to fear the knife-hand

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Drill Instructor Yelling Marine Corps

The “knife-hand” is the multi-tool gesture of the military. Actually, you can think of it as a Swiss army knife – pun intended.

The knife-hand is used in a plethora of ways ranging from administrative to instructional and even to gauge anger, according to Terminal Lance creator Maximilian Uriarte. “Never, anywhere in the Marine Corps, have I ever seen the knife-hand so flagrantly used. I always took note, however, that the higher the knife-hand is on the drill instructor, the more pissed off he is.” 

Perhaps the reason the knife-hand commands so much attention is because they’re deadly, according to Duffel Blog. Here are six videos showing knife-hand devastation:

1. A Marine demonstrates the knife hand knockout on his curious buddy.

2. Another Marine nearly hits the deck after a knife hand attack.

3. This guy takes two hits but is still able to walk.

4. Of course, civilians are fascinated by the knife hand as well.

5. It’s a good way to stop friends’ annoying shenanigans (if you know what you’re doing).

6. This nice couple practices their knife hands in front of their kids.

 

 

SEE ALSO: We now know more about American volunteers fighting ISIS in Iraq and Syria

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NOW WATCH: China has been upgrading its military and is now stronger than ever


One Marine killed, 9 hurt in helicopter landing in North Carolina

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CH-46 during exercise at Camp Lejeune October 2007

(Reuters) - One U.S. Marine was killed and nine injured when a helicopter made a hard landing at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina, the Associated Press reported on Thursday.

The helicopter landed during a training exercise on Wednesday night, AP said. Those hurt were taken to the hospital, and the landing is being investigated, it reported.

The name of the Marine who was killed will not be released for 24 hours, said AP, which cited a statement from Captain Ryan Elizabeth Alvis.

Reuters could not immediately confirm the report.

In March, four soldiers and seven Marines from a special operations unit from Camp Lejeune were killed when a UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter plunged into waters off the Florida Panhandle during a training exercise.

SEE ALSO: ISIS has claimed responsibility for an attack on Russian military barracks

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Here's how military combat training is evolving

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ft benning combatives competitionNote: This is part of a series. You can read parts one, two, three, four, and five here.

In 2001, the Army opened the Combatives School at Ft. Benning, Georgia, and began formulating training and protocols for this new mixed martial arts-based combatives system, further analyzing and preparing the soldier for close-quarters battle. 

In 2002, the U.S. Army officially adopted MACP and issued the first Army MACP FM manual, FM 3-25.150. This was a major step up for the Army and allowed major improvements.

MACP is modular and adaptable to unit needs and training time constraints. MACP instructor selection is unique to each unit and is based on who is on hand and what they know.

Although still lacking in the way of standardization, this was still much better than what existed previously. But, as good as MACP is, in time it became clear to Special Forces that MACP was a good fit for the Army, but not for SF. Not completely.

Combatives FMs

The story of Army combatives manuals offers some insights. FM 21-150 COMBATIVES was first published in 1954 and last published in 1992. It had evolved over the years, but still retained its traditional influences of bayonet (Repeat after me: “Parry! Thrust!”) and e-tool, pit construction, obstacle courses, pugil stick training, and some new and old judo and karate influences and techniques such as punches, throws, pressure points, and even a six-foot pole many martial artists refer to as a “Bo.”

“Stick with what we know,” must have been the dominant logic. A major problem with 21-150 was that it was too vague in the training of qualified instructors or to serve as a system for fluid implementation across all units, and relied too much on the “commander’s discretion.” It did not put everyone on one sheet of music.

ft benning hand to hand training combatives self defense

FM 3-25.150 replaced 21-150, was first published in Jan 2002, and was last published in April 2009. The current manual is TC 3-25.150 and is, essentially, the FM without the competition rules. It is not available for public access. Army military police have their own combatives manual, which derives much from the influence of MACP. It is known as ATP 3-39.35.

SOCP hand-to-hand combatives

In 2007, SWC officially adopted MACP. A year later, in 2008, the Special Warfare Center (SWC) officially dropped LINE, adopted MACP, and Matt Larson was put in charge of that effort. Around that same time, Greg Thompson was training various units on Bragg in combatives.

Matt and Greg met and discussed adapting MACP to fit SF. Greg had already developed many of the tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs) that would become SOCP. Matt took many of those back to MACP. Karl Haskins also entered the picture around this time. Karl had been teaching combatives to various SOF units on Bragg using the SPEAR system, a system devised by Tony Blauer in Canada in the 1980s, based on natural human reflex actions.

It was this collaboration between Greg, Karl, and Matt that led ultimately to SOCP, which was fine-tuned MACP for SF. The SOCP evolution and development out of MACP persists to this day, as the two systems, and their instructors, share a mutually beneficial relationship which allows them to cross-pollinate and improve one another. 

 Also in 2007,U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC) issued a concept of operations (CONOP) stating, “The CSA (Army chief of staff) has directed that every soldier will experience actual hands-on combatives training prior to deploying.” USACS, U.S. Army combatives school, had been instructing 20,000 soldiers per year since 2001. That number was about to escalate dramatically.

In 2008, AFSOC picked up LINE. They never officially adopted it, but some AFSOC units did use it for several years. They dropped LINE when that system’s gaps and shortcomings came to light in public and military reports. In light of that, the Air Force chief of staff shut down all Air Force combatives training and formed a review committee to determine how training should move forward.

Eventually the Air Force came out with AFCP, which derived from MACP. It was adapted for their culture and units, particularly for their spec-ops units. Two Air Force personnel recently told me that they have seen it and trained with it, but only rarely.

Their SOCOM units train with it regularly. Ground game was lacking in previous combatives programs of the SOF and across the entirety of the military. They had not taught operators to go to and grapple on the ground. Throws allow for the soldier to take his enemy to the ground, but no one ever allowed for inevitability of the soldier and his enemy both going to the ground in a jumble of arms and legs, weapons and equipment, and the tactical chaos this presents.

socp training

Matt Larson and Greg Thompson did one key thing in their program that no previous combatives program did, as far as I can tell: They did a lot of talking and listening.

From thousands of post-deployment interviews with soldiers, SOF, and other units, they gathered information and insights that helped them to constantly improve their programs, just as they expect their soldiers and students to do—to adapt and innovate. Previous systems and programs—possibly with the exception of Sykes and Fairbairn—relied on instructors and masters in traditional, non-military systems to build their systems.

MACP and SOCP, LINE and MCMAP, they all continue to have critics. The most common criticisms are that they do not teach enough striking, especially hands and feet, and that they teach soldiers too much ground fighting—that in combat one does not want to go to the ground too easily—and that none of them include dirty tricks in their training, such as eye-gouging, biting, hair pulling, groin attacks, throat/trachea strikes and snatches, etc.

When I went through Special Forces training in 1982, we were taught three primary hand-to-hand strike zones: the eyes, throat, and groin, and we were to use them in combat only—not in bars. Traditional martial arts systems are indeed focused on fighting and self-defense. 

Savannah Georgia

But most assume and train for one-to-one scenarios. Combat hand-to-hand is another animal entirely, not like being in a ring or on a mat, and is often not one-to-one. You don’t have time to slug it out or have a wrestling match with an opponent. You have to quickly and efficiently prevail over your opponent, meaning restrain or kill him, until your guys show up, or before his do.

In combat, he who gains or maintains control of the weapon, or weapons, even if the struggle goes to the ground, usually survives. In how many karate dojos have you seen that particular insight taught? Senseis in traditional systems such as karate and TKD rarely seek their student’s input and insights in improving, changing, their system. Karate does not traditionally provide for gaining control of a pistol or rifle because when karate originated, there were no pistols or rifles.

(Note: I realize that many karate instructors do include weapons drills, to include knives and pistols. But that is outside traditional protocols, and when done, it is only because someone within that lower chain of command recognized the need. And most karate dojos still teach their students in the use of antiquated weapons, such as sais, kamas, andnunchaku, for the sake of tradition. But, never take a nunchuck to a gun fight, and especially not on a combat deployment.)

Women Marine Karate

There are still many non-sanctioned systems being taught throughout SOF units, to units that have connections to instructors—guys who are often former SF, SEALs, or whatever. That will not change, and some do not like that.

But, if the goal is to get all soldiers, Marines, and special operators acquainted with and trained up in some sort of hand-to-hand or combative system that will help them to survive and prevail in the battlespace, then one has to wonder if it matters all that much just what system each operator is trained in, as long as he is trained and has the requisite skills.

There is also the logic that combatives are like languages: The more languages you speak, the deeper your understanding of languages in general, and the use of words in particular. Traditional systems have not typically seen it in their interest to open up their houses to innovation and change, to provide for modern combatives. (This is ironic since all were devised out of necessity, intended to be combatives in their inception.) Therefore, they are deficient in providing the necessary skills for modern combatives.

Traditional martial arts systems, just like traditional cultures, are not concerned with adapting. They are concerned with preservation. They do not want change. They want control. This is, to a great extent, responsible for the proliferation of hybrid systems throughout U.S. martial arts and throughout the U.S. military and SOCOM. All of the SOF martial arts and combatives instructors who I know and have talked to for this article have developed their own system.

japan karate kick

There two reasons for this. One: Traditional, older systems did not fill the needs of the modern warrior, not entirely, and thus needed to be adapted to do that. And, two: When one masters an art, whether it be music or martial arts, at some point that individual is driven to create or develop his or her own style or system in response to the weaknesses or shortcomings of the systems or styles from whence his or her skills were trained and formed. 

The needs of the current battlespace require operators and all soldiers to be masters of CQB, which requires solid combatives skills, without the training process taking many years. In CQB situations, even with rifles and pistols hot, there will be some putting of hands on the enemy, and it doesn’t always go the way the soldier hopes or plans. So, he or she needs to be ready, mentally, to adapt and respond to whatever happens.

Thus, creativity and adaptation are keys to effective combatives training—the freedom to innovate and adapt, to go outside the training and find what works. Most traditional systems do not allow for that. They demand obedience and control.

The reason? Most of them are more interested in building business and retaining clients than they are in teaching students to survive. This has given rise to a large community of SOF instructors and systems, both officially sanctioned, like MACP and SOCP, and unsanctioned, and that list is long. There are also those who are training SOF units and operators across the SOCOM spectrum, some of whom are, of course, critics of the sanctioned systems.

bruce lee

No system, instructor, politician, movie, or song will ever please everyone. The key is to touch and train as many as possible, effectively. So, current SOF combatives programs, SOCP, MCMAP, AFCP, MACP, and whatever else is brewing out there, continue to adapt and evolve to fit the current battlespace, and will continue to do that until some new weapon, tactic, or factor requires a new set of tactics and techniques, such as the robot or cyborg apocalypse. 

Have any ideas on how to effectively engage a robot in hand-to-claw close combat? Really? You do? Hold onto that, because Matt, or Greg, or their successors, may someday want to talk to you.

SEE ALSO: Hand-to-hand combat is as old as time — here's how it evolved

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NOW WATCH: This $200 million plane is called the 'most lethal fighter aircraft in the world'

Training accident at Marine base kills 1 Marine, injures 18

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Camp Pendleton Marine Camp Training

SAN DIEGO (AP) — Marine Corps officials say six Marines are in critical condition a day after a rollover accident at Camp Pendleton, California, killed one Marine and injured 18.

The Marine Corps said in a statement Friday that the Marines are being treated at five area hospitals in San Diego County.

Officials say eight of the Marines are in stable condition and four were treated and discharged from medical facilities.

The Marine who was killed was from the 1st Marine Division, and that person's name will not be released until 24 hours after relatives are notified.

A vehicle rolled over during routine training at Camp Pendleton, killing one Marine and injuring 18 others, officials said.

First Lt. Colleen McFadden said she had very few details to release on Thursday's crash, including what type of vehicle rolled over or the extent of the injuries involved.

Several patients from the accident were taken to Palomar Medical Center in Escondido, hospital spokeswoman Bobette Brown said. She would not say exactly how many or give any further details them, citing legal restrictions.

The Marine who was killed was from the 1st Marine Division, and that person's name will not be released until 24 hours after relatives are notified, McFadden said.

"The command's priorities are to take care of the Marines, Sailors and families of the unit," McFadden said in a statement. "We want to ensure the Marines and their family members are being provided for during this difficult time."

Camp Pendleton, a vast seaside base north of San Diego, is the major West Coast outpost for the U.S. Marine Corps.

In November 2013, four Marines were killed there while clearing explosives in a Camp Pendleton training area.

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The A-10 'sparks panic' in ISIS fighters, so why does the Air Force want to kill it?

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Warthog A10 aircraft Air Force Al Asad Air Base Iraq.JPG

The A-10 Thunderbolt II (often called the "Warthog" for its aggressive look) is beloved by the troops who need its close-air support and by its pilots, who hear the calls for that support from the controllers on the ground.

"We have this close, personal connection with the guy on the ground," one pilot said in a recent video touting the A-10's capabilities. "We hear him getting scared. We hear him getting excited. We hear the bullets flying … it becomes a very personal mission. It hits very close to home."

ISIS forces met the A-10 for the first time in 2015. In an area near Mosul, the A-10 caused ISIS fighters to break and run as four USAF Warthogs wreaked havoc on ISIS forces there.

a-10 warthog

"The aircraft sparked panic in the ranks of ISIS after bombing its elements and flying in spaces close to the ground," Iraqi News quoted an Iraqi army source as saying. "Elements of the terrorist organization targeted the aircraft with 4 Strela missiles but that did not cause it any damage, prompting the remaining elements of the organization to leave the bodies of their dead and carry the wounded to escape."

The A-10 also gets love from its pilots. The plane flies close to the ground but is protected by a titanium "bathtub" shell that surrounds the cockpit and allows the pilot to get low and hit the opposing forces with the plane's seven-barrel, 3,900-rounds-per-minute, depleted-uranium ammunition. Its designers made it to be the most survivable aircraft ever built. It also features three sets of backup controls and a foam-lined fuel tank. Ground fire is not going to get this bird easily.

The A-10's GAU-8 30mm gun "really does scare people, and that's nice to know," Air National Guard Col. Michael Stohler, an A-10 pilot who is flying air missions against ISIS forces, told Military.com. "I can tell you we know there's a real threat there," he says. "A lot of people have handguns and things to shoot at aircraft."

A10 Aircraft Iraq 2003

The Warthog, however, is as popular with senior Air Force leadership as it is with ISIS. In a fight that already cost one major general his job, the Air Force brass is looking to send its battle-hardened, reliable A-10 fleet to the boneyards to save $4 billion, probably so it can put that money toward the new overly expensive and accident-prone F-35 Joint Strike Fighter.

In January, Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James said the A-10 had flown only 11% of the 16,000 manned air missions against ISIS. That would be significant if the Warthog arrived in theater at the same time as other combat platforms — F-16s, F-15Es, B-1 bombers, and the F-22 Raptor all started missions against ISIS in August 2014. The A-10 didn't arrive until November 2014.

a-10 warthog brrrrt gif

The evidence shows the A-10 works and it's cheap. As early as 2012, the Air Force's cost to operate per hour for the A-10 was $17,716. There was no data available for the F-35, but the F-22's cost per hour is $68,362. So while the Air Force actively tries to kill the program, it is still deploying more A-10s to the theater because Congress will not let the USAF kill the ground troops' favorite plane until it comes up with a viable close-air-support replacement.

 

SEE ALSO: The awesome A-10 video the Air Force doesn't want you to see

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NOW WATCH: This $200 million plane is called the 'most lethal fighter aircraft in the world'

The Marine Corps says it’s not trying to keep female Marines out of combat

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female marine

Last week, the Marine Corps released a summary of results on a nine month study on gender-integrated units in combat situations.

Called “Ground Combat Element Integrated Task Force,” the four-page summary described how all-male units performed significantly better on 69 percent of tactical tasks and how female Marines were injured at twice the rate of men.

All-male units were faster, stronger, and had less body fat. They were also more accurate with every standard individual weapon, like M4 carbines and M203 grenade launchers.

The sh-tstorm started as soon as the preliminary results were announced. Accusations of gender bias and counteraccusations of political motivations were fired between the Department of the Navy and the Marine Corps. Navy Secretary Ray Mabus, a proponent of opening combat roles to women, disagreed with what he saw as gender-biased results of the study.

“At the end, they came out in a different place than I do,” said Mabus. “because they talk about averages, and the average woman is slower, the average woman can’t carry as much, the average woman isn’t quite as quick on some jobs or some tasks… we’re not looking for average.

There were women that met this standard, and a lot of the things there that women fell a little short in can be remedied by two things – training and leadership.”

Capt. Phillip Kulczewski, a public affairs officer for the Marine Corps says the study, which was overseen by George Mason University with physiological tests conducted by the University of Pittsburgh, was not politically motivated or an experiment to discriminate against women. The Corps says it was the first step to creating a gender-neutral standard for combat jobs.

female marine

“Before he left office, [former Secretary of Defense Leon] Panetta said we are opening up all jobs to all genders and that the new policy will be gender neutral,”Kulczewski says. “There were a lot of questions about how to go about changing the standards to be gender neutral. Secretary Panetta said we need concrete scientific data to back up the new standards, so this was our first step in our marching orders.”

“The aim was to break down each task to find out what factors affect the Marines in combat,” Kulczewski continues. “Then ultimately, we want to take gender out of the equation and look for ideal physical traits that help all Marines perform these tasks, male or female.”

The study’s summary noted the performance of female Marines in individual combat situations and in current overall combat operations, saying: “Female Marines have performed superbly in the combat environments of Iraq and Afghanistan and are fully part of the fabric of a combat-hardened Marine Corps after the longest period of continuous combat operations in the Corps’ history.” But the Capt. Kulczewski says the nature of combat is different from a ground combat MOS and the two are separate ideas.

“Anyone close to the front can be in combat. We know men and women both have the same mental capacity and the capacity for courage. When its an everyday job, everyone in an MOS has to perform certain everyday tasks and we want Marines who can do that.” That’s where the study came in. The Marines took physiological data with the help of the University of Pittsburgh to help determine what those Marines will have to do for their respective job, to ensure “they’re in the right job for their career.”

female marine gunner

Meanwhile, some female Marines think they’ve found the right job. An article in the Washington Post found female Marine participants who believe the Navy Secretary’s comments were insulting when he said the women probably should have had a “higher bar to cross” to join the task force, even though Marines in the study, men and women, were trained to the same standard before it started.

“Everyone involved did the job and completed the mission to the best of their abilities,” Sgt. Danielle Beck, an anti-armor gunner, told the Washington Post. “They are probably some of the most professional women that anybody will ever have chance to work with, and the heart and drive and determination that they had is incomparable to most women in the Marine Corps.”

The same Post article found that women in the study performed better than men on the Marine Corps-wide physical-fitness test. The average score for the men was 244 out of 300 while women’s was 283. The average all-male infantry unit scores in the 260s. Both men and women who volunteered for the study had to fulfill all requirements and pass the service’s MOS school, be it infantry, armor, or artillery schools, before qualifying for the study.

female marines

The study, was not without its problems. The Washington Post also found Marines involved could drop at any time and many did throughout the experiment because they were promised an assignment to any unit in the Marine Corps just for participating. For this reason, the gender-integrated company shrank considerably from its initial strength.

The current gender-neutral employment policy in the Defense Department requires military specialty areas to request an exemption to the policy. The exemption has to be signed off by the Defense Secretary and by the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Marine Corps infantry, Navy SEALs, and all other combat jobs in the Navy Department (which includes the Marine Corps) will be open to women by the end of 2015, and no exemptions would be granted, according to Mabus. Neither the Navy’s SEAL units or Marines asked for such an exemption.

The complete results of the study have yet to be released. 

SEE ALSO: Mike Huckabee is bashing Obama for nominating an openly gay Army secretary

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NOW WATCH: Marine biologist explains why the pro surfer attacked by a shark didn't actually get bit

The heroic last stand of 2 Marines In Ramadi

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Ramadi map

Lance Cpl. Jordan Haerter and Cpl. Jonathan Yale bravely sacrificed themselves to stop a suicide bomber, saving the lives of 150 comrades.

On April 22, 2008, in Ramadi, Iraq, two Marine infantrymen stood their ground and opened fire on a truck carrying 2,000 pounds of explosives as it barreled toward their post and the 150 Marines and Iraqi police officers inside the perimeter.

The truck stopped just shy of Cpl. Jonathan Yale and Lance Cpl. Jordan Haerter, its driver killed and its windshield blown away in a hail of gunfire. Then it detonated, killing the two Marines and leveling a city block.

The attack, the Marines' final stand, and their sacrifice all took place in a matter of seconds.

Haerter and Yale were posthumously awarded the Navy Cross for their actions, which were later recounted by Iraqi police officers who were present that day and captured on a security camera, according to Business Insider.

Before that day, Yale and Haerter had never met. They came from different backgrounds and deployed with different units, with Yale preparing to head home with the rest of 2nd Battalion, 8th Marines, and Haerter just beginning his seven-month tour with 1st Battalion, 9th Marines. But their final act of courage, defiance, and selfless sacrifice bound the two together forever.

According to a 2009 CBS News report, 21-year-old Yale had a rough upbringing in Virginia, and Haerter, who was 19 when he was killed, came from a middle-class family in Long Island, New York. If not for the Marines, the two probably never would have met.

But they did meet, and that same day they made a split-second decision to stand, fight, and ultimately die together.

Lance Cpl. Jordan Haerter Cpl. Jonathan Yale

"I was on post the morning of the attack," said Lance Cpl. Benjamin Tupaj, a rifleman with 1st Battalion, 9th Marines, in a May 2008 article released by the Department of Defense. "I heard the [squad automatic weapon] go off at a cyclic rate and then the detonation along with a flash. It blew me at least 3 meters from where I was standing onto the ground. Then I heard a Marine start yelling, 'We got hit, we got hit.'"

Shortly after the attack, Gen. John Kelly, the commander of all American and Iraqi forces at the time, met with those present that day, which he later described in a speech at the Semper Fi Society of St. Louis, published by Business Insider.

isis ramadi

"By all reports and by the recording, they never stepped back. They never even started to step aside," Kelly said in the speech. "They never even shifted their weight. With their feet spread shoulder width apart, they leaned into the danger, firing as fast as they could work their weapons … Not enough time to think about their families, their country, their flag, or about their lives or their deaths, but more than enough time for two very brave young men to do their duty … into eternity. That is the kind of people who are on watch all over the world tonight — for you."

SEE ALSO: REALITY CHECK: Russian bombing in Syria is actually helping ISIS

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NOW WATCH: China is ramping up its military with a show of force in and outside the country

The US military took these incredible photos this week

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US Army Rangers Canine Afghanistan

The military has very talented photographers in its ranks, and they constantly attempt to capture what life as a service member is like during training and at war.

This is the best of what they shot this week:

 

SEE ALSO: Here's how America's most secret, elite warrior units operate

AIR FORCE: A sunset is seen through the nose of a B-25 Mitchell during a military tattoo held at Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling in Washington, Sept. 16, 2015. The “warbird flight” consisted of two B-25 Mitchells, two P-40 Warhawks and a P-51 Mustang.



A P-51 Mustang flies over Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling, Washington, during a military tattoo Sept. 16, 2015.



ARMY: Soldiers in Basic Combat Training low crawl through the final obstacle during the Fit to Win endurance course at Fort Jackson, S.C., Oct. 1, 2015.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The US military took these incredible photos this week

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BGM-71 lava viper marines missile fire

The military has very talented photographers in its ranks, and they constantly attempt to capture what life as a service member is like during training and at war. This is the best of what they shot this week:

 

SEE ALSO: 9 weapon systems that troops absolutely love

AIR FORCE: Airmen from the 33rd Aircraft Maintenance Squadron load a missile-guided bomb into an F-35A Lightning II at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla., Oct. 16, 2015. Flightline munitions load training allows crews to practice in a realistic work environment.



Staff Sgt. Christopher Rector, a 459th Airlift Squadron special missions aviator, keeps his eyes on the water off the coast of Tokyo Oct. 28, 2015. The crew delivered simulated medical supplies to Miakejima Island, showcasing Yokota’s ability to augment the Tokyo Metropolitan Government’s disaster relief efforts.



ARMY: U.S. Army Soldiers, assigned to 1st Battalion, 4th Infantry Regiment, act as opposing forces during react-to-contact training, part of Exercise Combined Resolve V at U.S. Army Europe’s Joint Multinational Readiness Center in Hohenfels, Germany, Oct. 29, 2015.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Happy birthday, Marine Corps! Here are 37 powerful pictures of the Corps through history

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marie birthday

The Marine Corps, which turned 240 years old on Tuesday, has served a role in every conflict in US history.

That's because the Marines operate on sea, air, and land — unlike the other service branches — and can respond to a crisis in less than 24 hours with the full force of a modern military.

Today there are more than 220,000 active-duty and reserve Marines. To celebrate the Corps, we've pulled some of the best photos from the archives.

SEE ALSO: WELCOME TO THE SUCK: Here's what life at Marine boot camp is like

Created in 1798, the Marine Corps Band was called "The President's Own" by President Jefferson during his inaugural ball. Since then, the band has played at every presidential inauguration. Here's the band in 1893.



In the early 1900s, Marine forces were active in China and in the Philippines. This photo, from 1907, shows Marines posing in front of the Great Sphinx in Egypt.



World War I was characterized by trench warfare and the use of poison gas. Mortars were useful in muddy trenches because a mortar round could be aimed to fall directly into trenches, unlike artillery shells. These Marines are posing with a German trench mortar captured in France in 1918.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Incredible photos from the Korean War campaign that showed what the US Marine Corps is made of

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Chosin korea marines

The Chosin Reservoir Campaign of the Korean War is the stuff of legend in the Marine Corps.

During the pivotal battle, which lasted from late November to mid-December of 1950, 15,000 US soldiers and Marines, alongside another 15,000 UN soldiers, fought through a force of 120,000 Chinese soldiers to reach the sea some 78 miles away.

During the campaign, US forces successfully evacuated 98,000 refugees while inflicting heavy losses on the Chinese army.

The Marine Corps led the push against a numerically superior Chinese force. They broke through an enemy encirclement, and even rebuilt a bridge that the Chinese had destroyed.

In the process, they also saved the UN's army in Korea from total defeat.

The campaign is one of the defining events of the Marine Corp's modern history, but it remains largely unknown outside of military and historical circles.

In 2014, Marine Corps veterans Brian Iglesias and Anton Sattler have released an award-winning documentary, CHOSIN, that details the operation and includes interviews with veterans from the battle.

Here's a look at one of the pivotal campaigns of the Korean War, and one of the US Marine Corps' finest hours. 

By the middle of 1950, the Korean War seemed all but won. The communist Korean People's Army was routed and UN forces were quickly advancing up through the northern half of the Korean Peninsula



Then, on October 19, 1950, Chinese leader Mao Tze Tung secretly sent large formations of troops into North Korea in an attempt to rescue the communist war effort.



On November 2, Chinese forces encountered US Marines. The Chinese suffered heavy casualties and withdrew to the Chosin Reservoir in an attempt to lure allied forces into a trap.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

A war hero, this former Marine and star MBA is leading an ambitious biomedical startup

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Derek Herrera

On June 14, 2012, a Taliban sniper shot Marine Corps Captain Derek Herrera in the back during an ambush in Helmand Province, Afghanistan. Herrera had been leading a patrol in the area when his Marines came under attack. He continued to give orders during the firefight, even after getting shot.

Herrera's quick thinking moments after suffering the battlefield injury contributed to the safe evacuation of his team and a fellow Marine who was wounded alongside him. The act of valor earned Herrera a Bronze Star. 

The wound left Herrera a paraplegic. He's been spurred on by his experience, and by the leadership skills that he learned in the Marine Corps during his service from May 2006 until November 2014.

After leaving the Marines, Herrera enrolled in UCLA's executive MBA program at the Anderson School of Management, which he graduated from in the summer of 2015. Towards the end of his enrollment, he co-founded Spinal Singularity, a medical startup focusing on potentially groundbreaking spinal health research. 

Spinal Singularity proposes what the company believes to be a revolutionary new model for biomedical research. Herrera founded the for-profit company with two friends from UCLA, Alex Shen, who has a PhD in mechanical engineering, and Zach McKinney, who will soon complete a PhD in biomedical engineering. At the moment, Spinal Singularity is aiming to create a smart catheter system for people dealing with neurogenic bladder dysfunction— a condition in which an individual lacks bladder control for reasons ranging from spinal cord injuries to extreme ADHD. Spinal Singularity's main project now is the creation of what they call the Connected Catheter — an alternative to the roughly eight to 10 catheters a day currently used by patients with spinal cord injuries.

"We haven't followed the traditional model of biomedical research within the industry," Herrera told BI. "We're the opposite. I went out, found a problem, tried to find a solution, and we went out and built it." 

Captain Derek Herrera

There's more to Spinal Singularity than just its individual projects. The company wants to change the way the medical devices are developed. Herrera notes that while traditional industry research can be cumbersome, time-consuming, and expensive, Spinal Singularity is making quick strides towards creating a product that is accountable to the public, and that's developed through through feedback from a range of doctors, engineers, and potential users. 

Herrera launched an IndieGoGo crowdfunding campaign for Spinal Singularity which reached its goal of $50,000 in contributions on October 27. Fundraising through this campaign has allowed the company to make quick strides. It's helped that it's already racked up awards from the UCLA Anderson School of Management, Knapp Business Plan Competition, and the UCLA Institute for Technology Advancement (ITA) Student Engineering Venture Competition. The company was also  a semi-finalist in the MedTech Innovator Accelerator program.

Captain Derek Herrera

"The money from this fundraiser will help us build a prototype and test the device," Herrera said. "It's critical, but it allows us to not just sit on our hands for a year fundraising and waiting for grants and research money."

Herrera wants to move quickly once the catheter is past the prototype stage. "The goal is to have a clinical trial for the first iteration, which will have the plastics but not the full electronics, in the next six months or less." 

He's encouraged by the response to far — especially from people whose lives have also been impacted by spinal injuries. "We have plenty of people who reached out unsolicited saying that this project is great," Herrera told BI. "They said that their aunt or uncle would love this product, or even people saying that this could change their lives. 

"So many people are talking about the problem, either validating the need or offering feedback," he adds. 

Herrera has earned an MBA and launched a medical research company from nothing. He says his drive and motivation is rooted in his experience as a Marine. 

"I've spent my adult life leading people towards a goal, so that's the easy part," says Herrera. "Now that I've got a team, the background that I have is essential to any success to moving forward." 

Herrera is quick to credit others for Spinal Singularity's success. "We didn't get anywhere by ourselves. We've had a lot of help from the military, UCLA, doctors, clinicians, and supporters," Herrera said. "Hundreds and hundreds if not thousands have helped us achieve what we have so far." 

You can learn more about Spinal Singularity and become a financial backer of the campaign here»

You can watch Herrera discuss Spinal Singularity and the Connected Catheter below: 

SEE ALSO: This man takes WWII relics and turns them into baby carriages and bathtubs

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The military's efficient way of deploying high-speed inflatable boats to special forces anywhere in the world

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Screen Shot 2015 12 09 at 8.50.42 AM

The picture in this post shows an MC-130J Commando II belonging to the 9th Special Operations Squadron airdropping a Rigid-hull Inflatable Boat (RIB) Maritime Craft Aerial Delivery System over the Gulf of Mexico on Nov. 12, 2015.

MCADS enable special operations forces members to rapidly deploy anywhere around the world in a maritime environment: anti-pirate ops, beach assault, forces infil and exfil missions may require the use of airdropped vessels.

Produced by Airborne Systems, the MCADS is the only system capable of delivering large RIBs by parachute-dropping them into the water. It is made of the PRIBAD and PURIBAD airdrop platforms, attached to an extractor parachute used to pull the load from the aircraft cargo bay.

The boat and platform separate immediately after leaving the aircraft and both descend to the water under their own parachutes. Special forces parachute from the aircraft following the load, and land near the ready-for-use boat in the water.

SEE ALSO: What it takes to serve in the Navy's elite warfare boat crew

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The 5 most beloved sidearms in US military history

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US soldier military police platoon M9 Beretta pistol Italy

When ground fighting gets close, warfighters reach for their sidearms to save the day. Here are five of the most widely used and beloved pistols in U.S. military history:

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1. Harper’s Ferry Model 1805

The first pistol manufactured by a national armory, the Model 1805 was a. 54 caliber, single-shot, smoothbore, flintlock issued to officers. Known as “horsemen’s pistols,” they were produced in pairs, each one bearing the same serial number.

The “brace,” as the pair was labeled, was required for more immediate firepower since each pistol had to be reloaded after a single shot. The heritage of the pistol is recognized today in the insignia for the U.S. Army Military Police Corps, which depicts crossed Model 1805s.



2. Colt Revolvers (1851 Navy and M1873)

A widely manufactured sidearm with over 250,000 made, the 1851 is the pistol that gave Confederate officers the in-close firepower they preferred. This .38 caliber six shot revolver was used by famous gunslingers like Doc Holiday and Wild Bill Hickok as well as military leaders like Gen. Robert E. Lee and Gen. Nathan B. Forrest.

Although the pistol used the “Navy” name as a tribute to the mid-19th Century Texas Navy, it was mostly used by land forces, including the pre-Civil War Texas Rangers.

Another popular Colt revolver was the M1873, known as the pistol that won the west because of its wide use among U.S. Army cavalry forces across the American frontier. The M1873 (with a pearl handle) was also famously carried by Gen. George S. Patton during World War II.



3. Remington M1911 pistol

Arguably the most popular military sidearm in the history of warfare, the M1911 is a single-action, semi-automatic, magazine-fed, recoil-operated pistol.  The M1911 (more commonly known as “the forty-five,”) was the U.S. military’s standard issue sidearm from 1911 until 1986, which means it saw action in every major war and contingency operation from World War I until near the end of the Cold War.

The M1911 was replaced as standard issue by the Beretta M9, which was for the most part a very unpopular decision across the military because of the associated reduction in firepower. Modernized derivative variants of the M1911 are still in use by some units of the U.S. Army Special Forces, the U.S. Navy and U.S. Marine Corps.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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Thousands of US armed forces will be away from their families this holiday season, but they're still celebrating with cheer

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This holiday season, many United States Marines are training coalition forces in Iraq.Those that are, are stationed at Al Asad Airbase in Iraq, which is the closest Marine base to the Syrian border.

The deployed Marines still celebrate the holidays with cheer; bases are decorated, and a turkey feast is provided to the men and women serving in the Middle East.

Marines enjoy the longer break they get during the holidays, but still miss their loved ones. One Marine, on his 7th deployment, remembers his first, in which he used phone cards to call home.

"Modern technology makes it easy to connect," the corporal said. These days, they are able to connect to wireless internet on the base and FaceTime their families.

Story and editing by Adam Banicki

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SEE ALSO: We went inside the giant desert base where Marines are trained in artillery warfare

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