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Russian marines are smashing things with their heads as part of a charm offensive in the Philippines

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Russian marines attached to the anti-submarine ship Admiral Tributs show their skills during a demonstration at a park in Manila on January 5, 2017

Manila (AFP) - Russian Marines shattered glass bottles with their heads and smashed burning wooden planks against each other Thursday as part of an eye-catching charm offensive in the Philippines, a traditional US ally.

The camouflage-clad Marines showed off their pistol-shooting, knife-fighting and martial arts skills to the Filipino public in Manila's central park as part of a "goodwill visit" spearheaded by two warships following Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte's announced pivot away from the United States.

As bewildered passers-by watched, the Russians smashed boards with their fists, had cinder blocks crushed on their stomachs and endured beatings from flaming planks.

The show culminated with them smashing glass bottles on their heads without any visible effect.

Russian marines Philippines tricks feats of strength

After the display, eager Filipinos rushed to take "selfies" with the beret-wearing Russians.

"The performances were great, the stunts were quite impressive," gushed student Antonio Chua.

Filipinos were also allowed to attend an open house on the submarine-hunter Admiral Tributs, one of the two ships making what was only the Russian Navy's third-ever port call in the Philippines.

Duterte, who calls himself a socialist, has championed a move away from the United States and towards US rivals Russia and China following American criticism of his bloody war on crime that has claimed thousands of lives.

"America has lost," Duterte said on a visit to China in October last year.

Russia marines Philippines

"I've realigned myself in your (Chinese) ideological flow and maybe I will also go to Russia to talk to (President Vladimir) Putin and tell him that there are three of us against the world: China, Philippines and Russia. It's the only way."

Russia's ambassador to the Philippines Igor Khovaev said Thursday he expected a planned visit by Duterte to Russia in April or May to be "a milestone."

"It will be a very successful visit that will give a powerful impetus (to our) cooperation in different fields," Khovaev told reporters at the Marines' display. 

SEE ALSO: There's one aspect of the Philippine drug war that Rodrigo Duterte doesn't seem interested in fighting

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NOW WATCH: 'I have done this before, why would I not do it again?': Philippines president says he once threw a man out of a helicopter


300 US Marines to deploy in Afghanistan this spring

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marines

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — Approximately 300 United States Marines will be deployed to train, advise and assist Afghan security forces in the southern province of Helmand.

A Resolute Support Mission spokesman, U.S. Navy Capt. Bill Salvin in Afghanistan, said Sunday that the deployment will take place in the spring.

Salvin said in a statement that the marines are scheduled to deploy for approximately nine months and will be working with the Afghan National Army's 215th Corps and the 505th Zone National Police.

Taliban spokesman Qari Yusouf Ahmadi, in a statement sent to media, said the deployment is meant solely to boost the spirits of demoralized Afghan troops in hopes they can hold out against the Taliban until the spring.

SEE ALSO: 19 of the best photos of the US military at work in 2016

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Welcome to the suck: Here's what life at Marine boot camp is like

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Bootcamp

Established in 1915, Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island churns out 20,000 new Marines every year.

Every Friday, a new crop of Marines leaves the base, and they leave happily.

The 12-week program is widely considered the most hellish of all recruit training regimens in the U.S. Military.

Here at Parris Island, the legendary drill instructors (DIs) make sure every waking moment of a recruit's life is jam-packed with training.

This article was originally written by Geoffrey Ingersoll.

SEE ALSO: The most elite special operations forces in the US

There's only one major road running into Parris Island.



Gorgeous marshlands stretch for as far as the eye can see all around the island.



Recruits who want to run away can't take the only road and are unlikely to brave the alligators in the swamp.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The F-35C vs. the F/A-18 Advanced Super Hornet and the future of carrier aircraft

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f 35c f 18

A week after Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis called for a review of the F-35 program to "determine opportunities to significantly reduce the cost," top US military brass are arguing for the Joint Strike Fighter's place in the future of carrier aircraft.

Mattis' review calls for an investigation of the cost of the entire F-35 program, but specifically for the carrier-based F-35C to fly off against Boeing's F-18 Advanced Super Hornet package.

"My stake," in the review "is only four squadrons,” or 67 aircraft, that will operate alongside the Navy aboard aircraft carriers, US Marine Corps Lt. Gen. Jon Davis, who presides over Marine Corps aviation told reporters, as Breaking Defense notes. The Marine Corps has its own version of the Joint Strike Fighter, the F-35B, but as a vertical-takeoff variant, it faces no risk of being replaced by the F/A-18.

But for the military at large, the stakes seem much higher. Hundreds of billions of dollars and 16 years of time have gone into the F-35 program, which was intended to provide planes for the Air Force, Marines, and the Navy. As of today, only the Marine and Air Force variants have been declared initially capable.

Meanwhile, the F-35C, the least numerous and most expensive variant of the family, has seen yet another major setback. A Pentagon report, made public by Inside Defense, stated that rough carrier launches physically hurt pilots and disoriented them during the crucial moments when they take off.

f35c aircraft carrier

Mattis' fly off would "oversee a review that compares the F-35C and F/A-18E/F operational capabilities and assess the extent that F/A-18E/F improvements (an advanced Super Hornet) can be made in order to provide competitive, cost effective, fighter aircraft alternative," according to his statement. 

Dan Gillian, Boeing's vice president of F/A-18 and EA-18 programs, told Business Insider that even with the coming F-35C naval variant, US carrier air wings would consist of a majority of  F/A-18s into the 2040s. In fact, Boeing has contracts currently underway to update the F/A-18s in service with a reputation for bringing these projects in on time and on cost, which one could contrast with Lockheed's costly, late F-35 program.

But no matter how the F-18 advances, one aspect of the F-35 remains truly beyond its grasp — stealth. 

Davis, speaking to reporters on Wednesday, seemed to think that the F-35C's stealth and connectivity would outclass any possibly updates on the Advanced Super Hornets.

“I’m highly confident we’re on the right track ... My sense is we’ll probably end up validating the imperative to have a fifth generation aircraft out there,” said Davis.

Boeing advanced super hornet f-18

In an interview with Business Insider, Lt. Col. David Berke, a former F-35 pilot and squadron commander, also asserted the need for all aspect stealth in today's threat environment, saying that "the price of admission to a fifth-gen war is a fifth-gen airplane." He added that because the F-35 program doesn't have its fully operational software yet "we don’t even know 50-80% of what this airplane can do."

But stealth is a hotly debated topic in the defense community. As countries like Russia and China develop increasingly powerful counter-stealth abilities, Dr. Malcolm Davis of the Australia Strategic Policy Initiative told Business Insider that "numbers matter."

"The question in my mind is how long does the stealth advantage last for us? How long does that give us a real advantage before it’s eroded by adversary capabilities and brought to a level playing ground?" asked Dr. Davis. 

In total, the Navy only plans to buy 260 F-35Cs, and according to Dr. Davis, the US can no longer count on getting more done with fewer planes as adversaries begin to close the qualitative gap between their capabilities and the US's.

F 35C F 18F lockheed boeing

Most likely, the Navy will look to strike the perfect balance between the two airframes, combining the stealth and sensors of the F-35Cs with the raw numbers and power of Advanced Super Hornets. “We’re going to use the F-35 more as an enabler and a strike lead and as a command and control platform than as a fighter platform on its own,” Bryan Clark, naval analyst Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, told USNI News

So while the F-35C may provide carrier air wings with unprecedented capabilities, just how many of them and how soon they can hit the field remains a mystery. Meanwhile, Boeing stands poised to deliver a significant portion of advanced capabilities with an F/A-18 update. 

Mattis' review will likely leave a mark in the future of carrier aircraft, but it seems highly unlikely that the F-35C will get chopped altogether. Instead, look for the review to balance emerging operational needs with market availability and affordability. 

SEE ALSO: The Trump administration just put Iran 'on notice' — but the Pentagon has no idea what that means

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A Navy SEAL explains why you should 'test your will' at least once a year

The U.S. Marine Corps is looking into a nude photo scandal involving a closed Facebook group

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Facebook logo in glasses

(Reuters) - The U.S. Marine Corps is looking into the suspected distribution of nude photographs of female members of the service among military personnel and veterans via a social media network that promotes sexual violence, the Marine Corps Times said on Sunday.

A Marine Corps spokesman told the independent newspaper specializing on the Corps that military officials are uncertain how many military personnel could be involved.

Officials from the Marine Corps Naval Criminal Investigative Service were not immediately available for comment.

The paper published an internal Marine Corps communications document with talking points about the issue, describing the social media network as a closed Facebook group with about 30,000 members. The network solicited nude photos of female service members, some of whom had their name, rank and duty station listed, it said.

The site talked of misogynist behavior, the document said, and the photos were on a secure drive in cloud storage, which has been removed.

The document advised a response along the lines of: “The Marine Corps is deeply concerned about allegations regarding the derogatory online comments and sharing of salacious photographs in a closed website. This behavior destroys morale, erodes trust, and degrades the individual."

Representative Adam Smith, a Democrat from Washington State, and ranking member of the House Armed Services Committee, called for a complete investigation and for proper care of the victims.

"This behavior by Marines and former Marines is degrading, dangerous, and completely unacceptable," the congressman said in a statement.

In an annual report the Pentagon released in May 2016, the U.S. military received about 6,000 reports of sexual assault in 2015, similar to the number in 2014, but such crimes are still underreported.

 

(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz in Austin, Texas; Editing by Frank McGurty and Nick Zieminski)

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US Marines just deployed on the ground inside Syria

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us marines firing shooting

A Marine detachment from an amphibious task force has left its ships to deploy to Syria near Raqqa, defense officials told The Washington Post.

While special-operations advisers have been on the ground in the country for some time, the move shifts more conventional personnel into the country and represents a new escalation of the US's involvement there.

Two officials, speaking anonymously, told The Post that the troops were part of the 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit out of San Diego. The units on the ground include elements of an artillery battery that can fire 155-millimeter shells from M777 Howitzers. Other infantrymen will provide security and other members of the expeditionary unit will deal with supplies.

Other Marines have been redeployed from Djibouti to Syria for support, another defense official told The Post.

That official said the deployment into Syria did not originate with President Donald Trump's call for a new plan to deal with ISIS. Rather, it was some time coming.

"The Marines answer a problem that the [operation] has faced,” the official told The Post, adding that they would provide "all-weather fires considering how the weather is this time of year in northern Syria."

The estimated maximum range of the M777 howitzer is about 20 miles, meaning the artillery base must be about that distance from the operation it is supporting. Some artillery rounds Marines have used in the past, however, can cover closer to 30 miles.

The deployment comes days after a convoy of US troops crossed into Syria from Iraqi Kurdistan.

The troops, comprised of US Army Rangers, were sent to Manbij in northern Syria purportedly to keep peace among the array of militias and other groups that have come together to combat ISIS.

“It’s a visible reminder, for anybody who’s looking to start a fight, that the only fight that should be going on right now is with ISIS,” Pentagon spokesman and Navy Capt. Jeff Davis told the Associated Press.

SEE ALSO: US-backed fighters turn territory over to Syrian government to create buffer between Kurds, Turks

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The Marine Corps' nude-photo-sharing scandal is even worse than first realized

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Female Marines

The scandal that prompted an investigation into hundreds of Marines who are accused of sharing naked photographs of their colleagues in a private Facebook group is much larger than has been reported, Business Insider has learned.

The practice of sharing such photos goes beyond the Marine Corps and one Facebook group. Hundreds of nude photos of female service members from every military branch have been posted to an image-sharing message board that dates back to at least May. A source informed Business Insider of the site's existence on Tuesday.

The site, called AnonIB, has a dedicated board for military personnel that features dozens of threaded conversations among men, many of whom ask for "wins"— naked photographs — of specific female service members, often identifying the women by name or where they are stationed.

The revelation comes on the heels of an explosive story published on Saturday by the journalist Thomas Brennan. He reported on a Facebook group called Marines United, which was home to approximately 30,000 members who were sharing nude photos of colleagues along with personal information and even encouragement of sexual assault.

The report led the Marine Corps to open an investigation, spurred widespread outrage in the media and in Congress, and prompted sharp condemnation from the Corps' top leaders. According to the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, investigators are considering felony charges that could carry a maximum penalty of seven years in prison.

An official familiar with the matter told Business Insider that the Marine commandant, Gen. Robert Neller, would brief members of the House Armed Services Committee next week on the scandal.

"We're examining some of our policies to see if we can make them punitive in nature," the official said, adding that the Corps was taking the issue very seriously.

A Facebook-group exodus leads to a message board's popularity

marine general nellerBrennan's story also led to an apparent exodus of members from the private Facebook group, though some appeared to have found the publicly viewable message board soon after — with the express intent of finding the cache of nude images that Marines in the Facebook group were sharing.

"Come on Marines share the wealth here before that site is nuked and all is lost," one anonymous user said in a post on Monday, two days after Brennan's story was published. Follow-up replies offered a link to a Dropbox folder named "Girls of MU" with thousands of photographs.

Dropbox did not respond to a request for comment.

Members on the board often posted photos — seemingly stolen from female service members' Instagram accounts — before asking others if they had nude pictures of a female service member.

For example, after posting the first name and photograph of a female soldier in uniform on January 21, one board member asked for "Army chick went to [redacted], ig is [redacted]." Another user, apparently frustrated that no pictures had yet been found, posted a few days later: "BUMP. Let's see them t------."

On another thread, a member posted a photograph on May 30 of a female service member with her breasts exposed and said, "She is in the navy down in san diego, anyone have any more wins?"

us navy guamOne user followed up on June 13, offering another nude photo of the woman.

"Keep them coming! She's got them floating around someone [sic] and I've wanted to see this for a while," another user wrote in response.

Some requested nude photographs by unit or location.

One user asked in September for photos of women in the Massachusetts National Guard, while another requested some from the Guard in Michigan. Other requests included nude pictures of any women stationed at Fort Hood in Texas, Fort Bragg in North Carolina, McConnell Air Force Base in Kansas, or Naval Medical Center in San Diego, along with many more US military installations around the world.

In statements to Business Insider, military branches denounced the message board and promised discipline for any service members who engaged in misconduct.

"This alleged behavior is inconsistent with our values," Lt. Col. Myles Caggins, a spokesman for the Department of Defense, told Business Insider.

Capt. Ryan Alvis, a spokeswoman for the Marine Corps, told Business Insider that the service expects the discovery of the Marines United page will motivate others to come forward to report other pages like it.

"Marines will attack this problem head-on and continue to get better," Alvis said.

Lt. Col. Jennifer Johnson, a spokeswoman for the Army, told Business Insider: "The Army is a values-based organization where everyone is expected to be treated with dignity and respect. As members of the Army team, individuals' interaction offline and online reflect on the Army and its values. Soldiers or civilian employees who participate in or condone misconduct, whether offline or online, may be subject to criminal, disciplinary, and/or administrative action."

Air Force spokesman Zachary Anderson told Business Insider: "We expect our Airmen to adhere to these values at all times and to treat their fellow service members with the highest degree of dignity and respect. Any conduct or participation in activities, whether online or offline, that does not adhere to these principles will not be tolerated. Airmen or civilian employees who engage in activities of misconduct that demean or disrespect fellow service members will be appropriately disciplined."

The Navy did not respond to a request for comment.

'Hope we can find more on this gem'

The image board hosts disturbing conversations that in many cases appear to be between active-duty personnel.

"Any wins of [redacted]?" read one request, which shared further details about a female Marine's whereabouts, indicating the user likely worked with her in the past.

Another thread, posted in November, that had dozens of follow-up comments from users acting as cyber-sleuths to track down the victim started with a single photograph of a female Marine, fully clothed, taken from her Instagram account.

"Any wins?" that user asked, telling others the Marine's first name and where she had been stationed.

One user hinted at her last name as others scoured her Instagram account, posting more photos they had found. One photo of the victim and her friend prompted one user to ask for nude photos of the friend as well: "Any of the dark haired girl in the green shirt and jeans next to her?"

American soldiers are seen at the U.S. army base in Qayyara, south of Mosul
REUTERS/Alaa Al-Marjani

The thread carried on for months.

"Amazing thread," one user wrote. "Hope we can find more on this gem."

In December, a nude photo was finally posted. "Dudeee more," one user wrote in response. Many others responded by "bumping" the thread to the top so that others on the board would see it and potentially post more photos. Indeed, more photos soon appeared from the victim's Instagram account, which was apparently made private or shut down numerous times.

On the board, users complained that her Instagram account kept disappearing, apparently because she was trying to thwart her harassers. But others quickly found her new accounts and told others, and the new Instagram account names were shared throughout February.

"Oh god please someone have that p----," one user wrote.

blurred1

The site that hosts the message board seems to have little moderation and few rules, though it tells users "Don't be evil." Its rules instruct members to not post personal details such as addresses, telephone numbers, links to social networks, or last names.

Still, many users on the board do not appear to follow those rules.

In one popular thread, started on January 9, an anonymous user posted non-nude pictures of a female airman, telling others in the caption: "Anyone know her or have anything else on her? I've got a lot more if there is interest. Would love for her friends and family to see these."

The user, who suggested in the accompanying captions that he was a jilted ex-boyfriend, posted many more photos in the hours and days after.

"She knows how to end it all. If she does get in contact with me I won't post anymore. So get it while it's hot!" he wrote.

Later in the thread, the man even referred to the airman by name and told her to check her Instagram messages.

air force"Wow, she blocked me on Instagram!" he later wrote. "Stupid c--- must want me to post her s--- up. I gave her a choice, it didn't have to be this way. I'm not a bad guy, she had a choice. Oh well, no point in holding back now. I want you all to share this everywhere you can, once I start seeing her more places I'll post her video."

Aside from those on active duty, some users who identified themselves as cadets at some military service academies started threads to try to find nude photos of their female classmates.

In a thread dedicated to the US Military Academy at West Point, some users who appeared to be cadets shared photos and graduation years of their female classmates.

"What about the basketball locker room pics, I know someone has those," one user said, apparently referring to photos taken surreptitiously in a women's locker room. "I always wondered whether those made it out of the academy computer system," another user responded.

In 2012, an Army sergeant who helped train and mentor cadets was discovered to have secretly filmed more than a dozen women in the bathroom and shower areas at West Point. The soldier pleaded guilty in the case and was sentenced in 2014 to 33 months in prison.

A representative for West Point did not respond to a request for comment.

marines"Bumping all 3 service academies' threads to see who can post the best wins in the next 7 days. Winning school gets the [commander's cup]," one user wrote. "Go Army, Beat Everyone."

'This has to be treated harshly'

The existence of a site dedicated solely to sharing nude photographs of female service members is another black mark for the Pentagon, which has been criticized in the past for failing to deal with rampant sexual harassment and abuse within the ranks.

A 2014 Rand Corporation study estimated that more than 20,000 service members had been sexually assaulted in the previous year. Nearly six times as many reported being sexually harassed. In some cases, the military has pushed out victims of sexual assault who reported it, instead of the perpetrators.

"I'm kind of surprised. I'm still naive, I think, on some level," said Kate Hendricks Thomas, a former Marine Corps officer who is now an assistant professor at Charleston Southern University. "I am really disappointed to hear that the reach is broader than 30,000 and a couple of now-defunct websites."

Thomas criticized past responses to the problem, in which some had indicated the issue was too difficult for the military to wrap its arms around.

"This renders us less mission-effective. It's got to be a priority," she said.

"These websites are not boys being boys," she added. "This is a symptom of rape culture."

The message board also presents a challenge for military leaders, who may face an uphill battle in trying to find — and potentially prosecute — active-duty service members who shared photos on the site. Unlike the Marines United Facebook group, where many users posted under their real names, the message board's user base is mostly anonymous, and the site itself is registered in the Bahamas, outside the jurisdiction of US law enforcement.

Brad Moss, a lawyer who specializes in national-security issues, told Business Insider that the military may have a hard time persuading the internet service provider to shut down the website. Instead, he said, the victims themselves may have more legal standing if they were to contact the ISP to remove the photos.

Still, Moss said he believes the military could squash the behavior if it adopted a "zero-tolerance" posture.

"I think that absolutely, 100%, should be the policy if they catch the main perpetrators who are sharing these photos around and essentially engaging in revenge porn," Moss said. "They should have a zero-tolerance policy and boot them from the military with a dishonorable discharge.

"If they do anything less, it's only going to incentivize this behavior in the future," he added. "This has to be treated harshly."

SEE ALSO: Marine commandant to troops sharing nude photos: 'Do you really want to be a Marine?'

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A Navy SEAL explains how to make your home more secure

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Former Navy SEAL Clint Emerson, author of "100 Deadly Skills: The SEAL Operative's Guide to Eluding Pursuers, Evading Capture, and Surviving Any Dangerous Situation," explains how you can make your home more secure. Following is a transcript of the video. 

We tend to look at home security as just our home, the locks, and the alarm system. But the reality is there’s more layers than that that start well outside your front yard. So first is communicating with your neighbors and becoming friends again. That way if you see an odd car or a person that doesn’t belong there someone can make a phone call to either 911 or to you while you’re at work and let you know “Hey, there’s something going on in your driveway.”

It’s not so much about the bolt that goes in the door as it is the door frame. Reinforce your door frames with two and a half inch to three-inch wood screws. That’ll basically turn the door into a one kick and open to a five kick and open. Your illumination on your house, you want to light it up. Anytime I was operating against bad guys and the target was lit up. It makes you feel almost naked and it’s the last thing a bad guy wants to feel when he’s approaching your home.

Burglars can not stand animals or kids, both are unpredictable. So if you can litter your yard with toys, that’ll keep a lot of daytime burglars away or if you can put up some hint that you have a dog, whether you do or not, will also keep them away.

 

 

 

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Senators grilled US military leaders over nude-photo-sharing scandal

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Commandant of the Marine Corps General Robert Neller testifies during a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing on the Marines United Facebook page on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S. March 14, 2017.  REUTERS/Aaron P. Bernstein

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Senators grilled the Navy and the Marine Corps' top leaders on Tuesday amid a growing scandal involving a private Facebook group and its surreptitious distribution of explicit images of women in the armed forces - often with obscene, misogynist commentary.

The Facebook group, called "Marines United," is reported to have nearly 30,000 followers, including active-duty U.S. Marines, Marine Corps veterans and British Royal Marines.

"If we can't crack Facebook, how are we supposed to be able to confront Russian aggression and cyber hacking throughout our military?" Democratic Senator Kirsten Gillibrand asked during a Senate Armed Services Committee Hearing.

Gillibrand said online harassment had become evident as early as 2013 and military leaders were made aware of it but have still been unable to stop

"I don't have a good answer for you," the Commandant of the Marine Corps General Robert Neller said. "We've got to change, and that's on me."

Neller has vowed to hold those responsible for the photo sharing accountable and change the culture behind it.

Republican Senator Lindsey Graham said that the scandal could have an impact on recruiting women, and called it "devastatingly bad."

The Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) has opened an inquiry into the matter.

Acting Navy Secretary Sean Stackley said more than 50 calls had been received on an NCIS tip line so far and that the scandal could involve more websites.

U.S Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said in a statement last week that personnel involved in any alleged sharing of nude photos of female colleagues were guilty of "egregious violations of the fundamental values."

The U.S. Code of Military Justice explicitly outlaws distribution of sexually explicit photos of others without their consent as an offense punishable by court-martial.

(Reporting by Idrees Ali; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)

SEE ALSO: The Marine Corps has no idea how to fix its nude-photo-sharing scandal

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A Navy SEAL explains why you should end a shower with cold water

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Former Navy SEAL Clint Emerson, author of 100 Deadly Skills: The SEAL Operative's Guide to Eluding Pursuers, Evading Capture, and Surviving Any Dangerous Situation, explains why it can be healthy for you to end a shower with cold water. Following is a transcript of the video. 

Cold water will wake you up, without a doubt, and it will keep you awake. But it has more health benefits than anything else. In SEAL training you spend a lot of time in cold water and there’s actually some science to the madness of putting us in cold water. One, the reason professional athletes do it all the time after a workout is it increases recovery. It vasoconstricts the entire body, squeezing out all of that lactic acid so that you can feel good to go the next day and be ready for the next day training.

That cold water is therapy. Even though it was torture, it’s therapy so that it keeps you healthy, keeps your joints and inflammation down, vasoconstricts everything down and allows you to keep moving forward, hopefully without any more injury.

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A Navy SEAL explains how you can escape a carjacking

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Former Navy SEAL Clint Emerson, author of 100 Deadly Skills: The SEAL Operative's Guide to Eluding Pursuers, Evading Capture, and Surviving Any Dangerous Situation, explains how to escape if you're being carjacked. Following is a transcript of the video. 

Carjackings can be volatile, and the situation really dictates, but there are some general rules that you can follow. One of which is leave gaps. Leave yourself room to escape. Meaning don’t ride the person’s bumper in front of you. Give yourself enough distance between the cars and know that all terrain is driveable.

A lot of people feel confined to the yellow and white lines or the sidewalk. You can drive over those lines, you can drive over that sidewalk in order to escape a threat. Keep that in mind, but you can only do it if you’ve left the gaps there for yourself.

Second, keep your windows rolled up. If you keep them down it gives them an opportunity to get physical with you before you know it and you can’t do anything about it or it’s too late. Acceleration, the gas pedal is your friend. Don’t feel like you just have to sit there. Once again, if you’ve left the gaps, punch the pedal and move out of the way.

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A Marine reveals how to earn respect fast

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"Spark: How to Lead Yourself and Others to Greater Success" author and Marine veteran Angie Morgan shares great advice for establishing credibility fast when you are new or young. Following is a transcript of the video. 

If you’re seeking to establish yourself as a credible leader, and maybe you’re new to an organization, or perhaps you’re younger than everyone there, I would say this is the perfect opportunity to stop and observe what successful people in the organization are doing, and try and seek to understand those behaviors, and reflect upon yourself and say, “How am I, or how am I not, demonstrating those behaviors?”

You can observe, “Wow this organization really values people who take initiative.” And just ask yourself, “How can I get on that path so I can be influential in this environment.” And through that process you can start to understand how you can develop your credibility. And those are behaviors you too can develop. So it’s really important to isolate out the behavior, though, because we can develop those behaviors.

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The Marines have a new helicopter — and it costs as much as an F-35

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James Jim Mattis

Besides a nagging scandal over photos of naked Marines being shared on Facebook, life is good for the Corps.

Ex-Marine General Jim Mattis, who is revered by his former warriors, is now Defense Secretary, and troop levels could expand by some 12,000 under President Donald Trump.

And as a fighting force, the Marines are on track to become even more potent – backed up by F-35 fighters and now one of the most powerful and expensive helicopters ever built, the CH-53K King Stallion.

How costly is the whirlybird scheduled to be operational by 2019?

The current estimate is about $122 million per unit – about 22 percent higher than initially projected. That makes it the world’s most expensive military helicopter by a long shot.

Here’s how the new helicopter compares with:

  • $122.8 million for the Marine version of the Joint Strike Fighter, the F-35B. The price tag for the lowest-cost version of the fighter, the F-35A, is expected to decrease to about $80 million after production ramps up.

  • $149 million for the entire 2016 budget of the National Endowment for the Humanities, which the Trump administration wants to eliminate entirely.

  • $12 million for the four trips Trump has taken to his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida since becoming president – or about $130 million a year if he keeps jetting south at the same rate for the rest of the year.

  • $250 million in proposed budget cuts to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

In testimony before the House Armed Services Committee on March 10, Marine Lt. Gen. Gary Thomas said the per-unit cost of the King Stallion is expected to drop to below $89 million when it is in full production between 2019 and 2022.

There is little doubt that the King Stallion, built by Lockheed Martin’s Sikorsky division, will be a workhorse. It can lift 13.5 tons, carry a couple of dozen combat troops and transport a Humvee. The Marines want about 200 of them.

SEE ALSO: US Marines just deployed on the ground inside Syria

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Meet the puppies that are trained by the military to find bombs on the battlefield

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Before they become pros at sniffing out improvised explosives devices for soldiers in combat, military working dogs learn the skills they need at Lackland Air Force Base in Texas.

In honor of National Puppy Day, the Department of Defense published a video showing the puppies that may one day go on to save soldiers' lives by sniffing out bombs and weapons caches on the battlefield.

After six weeks, the Belgian Malinois puppies are handed over to trainers, who test the puppies' ability to jump, play, and detect noises before deciding whether they are suitable to accompany soldiers in combat.

The Department of Defense also selects the strongest and fittest dogs for its breeding program.

Check out the video to see what their training is like:

 

SEE ALSO: 20 Things You Never Knew About America's War Dogs

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Here's footage of the US military's new helicopter that'll cost as much as an F-35

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