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TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
When I said that it isn't significant, I meant that you won't either win or lose any war because you use SIG instead of S&W or vice versa...

Both of them are GOOD ENOUGH and I'm a big proponent of "the best is enemy of good enough"-school of thought...
And this pistol fits that. It's modular and can easily converted to other calibers or changed parts. This is not a all hand fitted pistol like something from Silent arms. It's a modular pistol it's designed to be rebuilt by the end user without needing a gunsmith. MHS-320-v2-images.jpgThe frames of these two pistols could be swapped with each other ( it's actually just a polymer shell), same for the magazines, slides and barrel. The only serialized part is actually a stainless steel assembly that holds the fire control group that sits inside the polymer frame. These are not like the World war 2 Lugers that were all hand machined and parts matched. if a major war came you could subcontract out parts of these and as long as the tolerances matched you could assemble new pistols from the spare parts.ab1280ce42bbca648ec1c06b3fa7ef9e.jpgIt's a gun built like lego blocks.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
The Beretta 92 is very reliable and accurate, what Senator Ernst is talking about is the debate that the 9mm is not a reliable stopper, and the desire for .40 or .45 caliber weapons which are seen as "more potent" due to larger caliber. The down side is in magazine capacity? as you lose significant capacity with either of the larger calibers.

The M&P was in the competition?? but I believe dropped out due to reliability issues??
Still not sure why they were dropped. but after that the M&P 2.0 appeared and we have no idea if the S&W General Dynamics team offered the older M&P or the 2.0 or some other version.
 

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
What want McCain right now the more accurate for see eventuals changes.

Plus 110 bill for FY 2018 with inflation a little less right now Trump i see in general + 80 billions actualy FY 2016 base budget 530 billions.

With 80 billions or a little less yet possible do good things, i don't see need for SOC yet many SFs for terrorists war mainly and the zero losses politic in Western countries for public opinion from Desert Strom 1991... which is in fact except for these very large Victory for some reasons impossible don' t exist wars without losses ofc sadly but it is the true.
In more SF use very expensive materials sometimes almost customised US have largely enough the need now is for conventionnal forces in number Armored Bdes, SSNs etc..;
USMC also have a size very decent. end 1980's has also 180000 pers.

But in 1st breaking the sequestration with increase impossible.
The highest priority for the 115th Congress must be to repeal the Budget Control Act and work with the next President to increase defense spending in line with a new defense strategy. So long as the Budget Control Act is the law of the land, any claims to rebuild our military will be empty.

And to consider US President Is elected for only 4 years and 8 maximum.

Main points for forces size

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Today, the U.S. Navy is 274 ships. This was already short of the joint force requirement of 308 ships. And that was before the Chief of Naval Operations announced that the Navy should grow to 355 ships to address the growing fleet sizes and capabilities of our adversaries.

However, with sufficient funding, the Navy could procure 59 ships for 2022 so to 333

The Navy currently has approximately 830 frontline strike fighters. Its projected shortfall will grow from 29 aircraft in 2020 to roughly 111 aircraft in 2030. The continued delays to the F-35C have exacerbated these shortfalls, while delaying the modernization needed to keep pace with emerging threats. Over the next five years, the Navy should therefore procure 58 additional F/A-18 E/F Super Hornets and 16 additional EA-18G Growlers, while continuing to procure the F-35C as rapidly as possible

The current force of 182,000 Marines is too small. The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 has authorized a force level of 185,000, while the Marine Corps currently conducts an extensive study to determine its ideal force size. Previous studies, such as the 2010 Quadrennial Defense Review, have recommended 202,000 Marines. Others have proposed higher based on historical experience with major wars and extended contingency operations. At a minimum, an active force of 194,000 is necessary to sustain the 1:2 ratio. It is safe to assume that the Marine Corps could grow at 3,000 Marines a year and reach 200,000 by Fiscal Year 2022, with the possibility of exceeding that if operational requirements demand it.

The Air Force has divested over 400 combat fighters in the last five years alone and now has only approximately 1,100 combatcoded fighter aircraft. This is well short of the requirement stated in the 2012 Defense Strategic Guidance for the Air Force to maintain 2,250 total fighter aircraft in order to field 1,200 combatcoded fighters.
Inventory 1950 + 160 bombers ; 1200 fighters in active can be interesting eseverals Sqns 100 - 200 fighters.
In more some A-10 these last years about 60 AF have lost in 2010 254 fighters F-15-16 coz many troops in Irak, Afghanistan about 1500000 and cost in more after crisis economic and sequestration come.


Reshaping the Army must be the priority, but resizing it is also necessary. The Army has been cut by 100,000 soldiers since 2012. It is time to chart a new course. The Army should conduct a study to recommend the optimum size and shape of the future Army. Outside recommendations have suggested an Active Army well above 500,000 soldiers. A realistic objective is to add 8,000 soldiers a year through Fiscal Year 2022. Anything beyond this rate of growth risks diminishing recruiting standards. The Army would then have the option to continue increasing end-strength should requirements demand it. It is assumed that the Army Reserves and National Guard may also increase to correspond with the growth of the Active Army.
This additional end-strength should serve several purposes. First and foremost, it should be used to fill holes in existing formations, increasing the number of trained soldiers available for duty. This will improve readiness for the Army. Additional end-strength could also be used to retain heavier force structure that was set to be eliminated, such as the 11th Combat Aviation Brigade in Korea, and build new heavier forces, such as additional Armored BCTs or a 12th
Army npw 470000 pers need at less + 50000 for have 3 Bdes in the 10 Div, now 6 / 10 also Armored Bde regain her 2 Inf Company lost as before in more several Bde created mainly Armored, Aviation also interesting the 101 Air Assault have 2 logic specialized dvision for airmobile combat.
New combat vehicles MBTs etc.. and mainly a new SPG the M-109 is outdated.

Nuclear forces
Maintaining New START treaty force levels of 400 ICBMs, 240 submarine launched ballistic missiles (SLBM) on 12 nuclear submarines, and 60 strategic bombers;
Replacing the Ohio-class ballistic missile submarine, developing a follow-on ICBM (the Ground Based Strategic Deterrent), and fielding a sufficient number of dual-capable B-21 heavy bombers;
Replacing the Air Launched Cruise Missile (ALCM) with the Long Range Stand-off missile (LRSO) for the bomber force and extending the service life of the B61-12 nuclear bomb, W76-1, W78, W80, and Interoperable Warheads;
Modernizing the nuclear command and control and communications system;
Providing a nuclear capable variant of the F-35;
All is planned not for ICBMs but yes Minuteman III even with warheads from formers LGM-118 Peacekeeper very accurate are old to replaced.


U.S. Senator John McCain Chairman, Senate Armed Services Committee

This paper’s recommended amount of $640 billion for Fiscal Year 2018 is an increase of $54 billion above the current President’s budget. Following Fiscal Year 2018, the defense budget should grow 4 percent annually, which is required to sustain an actual build-up of the military. That would amount to a total of $430 billion over the next five years in additional defense spending above President Obama’s current plan. Annual growth above inflation is necessary to build military capabilities while contending with increasing internal costs like healthcare.
The budget increase would repair the damage to our military in two ways. First, it would address approximately $80 billion of “unpaid bills”—the rosy assumptions about cost growth that the Department of Defense has baked into its current projections. This $80 billion would not actually buy the military any increase in capabilities. Second, the remaining $350 billion of the budget increase would begin to dig the military out of years of budget cuts. It begins the development of capabilities necessary to deter great power competitors. It undoes cuts to capacity that have gone too deep. And it finally provides a path forward to fix readiness.
A budget of $640 billion does not include transferring enduring OCO costs to the base budget. The current abuse of the OCO account is a byproduct of the BCA. It can only be fixed once there has been a complete repeal of the BCA and its discretionary spending caps.

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now I read Navy Engineers, Maintainers to Host ‘Planning Summit’ To Avoid Availability Overruns
The Navy’s surface ship, submarine and aircraft carrier maintenance planning activities will host a summit next month to look for lessons learned in one community that could help the others improve on-time delivery of ships in yard maintenance.

Commander of Naval Sea Systems Command Vice Adm. Tom Moore said last week at the Surface Navy Association’s annual conference that about a third of the fleet is in maintenance at public or private shipyards on any given day and that returning them to the fleet on time is critically important. And yet maintenance availabilities continue to drag on for weeks or months longer than expected, due in part to shipyard workforce shortfalls and a lack of understanding of the full scope of work before the ship enters the yard.

“We have failed consistently over the last 10 years to …, to articulate what that (work) requirement is, so that OPNAV [the chief of naval operation’s staff] can get the funding right,” he said during a maintenance panel discussion.
“We have consistently been on the order of $600 to $700 million a year short in maintenance, and if you’re $600 to $700 million short in maintenance every year, you’re always going to have challenges. So there’s a concerted effort underway, my staff and the fleet staffs and the naval shipyards, to try to get our arms around a better understanding of what the true maintenance requirement is at the time of the availability so we can better align those budgets.”

Once everyone has a correct understanding of that year’s maintenance needs, the OPNAV staff can either fully fund the work or have an informed discussion about how much they can afford, Moore said.

To address this issue, Rear Admiral Moises DelToro, NAVSEA deputy commander for undersea warfare (SEA 07) and commander of the Naval Undersea Warfare Center, said in the panel that a “planning summit” would be held during the second week of February to bring together the planning activities, regional maintenance centers, NAVSEA maintenance organizations and OPNAV staffs to figure out how to reduce lost operational days due to maintenance availability overruns.

A primary goal of the summit “is to determine the root causes of that requirement mismatch, so we’re going to look at … our class maintenance plans and our technical foundation papers amongst the carrier folks, the surface folks and the submarine folks and try to figure out if there are lessons learned amongst that to see how we can get better at the planning piece of our availabilities,” DelToro said.
“And then review our processes that are required to drive those mismatches to zero, so look at our historical patterns by ship class, look at our metrics, what are the right metrics to track. … I know the planning activities talk amongst themselves, but again, the lessons learned, how we can accelerate the lessons learned from one planning activity to another to lessen the lost days of (operational availability) is also a desired outcome of this.”

DelToro added that the warfare centers had spent about $2.5 million over the last two years visiting all the shipyards and looking for innovative ways they attempt to keep ship availabilities on track and avoid lost operational days, in the hopes that those ideas could be applied to other yards around the country. NAVSEA’s Logistics, Maintenance and Industrial Operations (SEA 04) is currently continuing that idea solicitation and implementation effort through a shipyard innovation fund, he added.
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FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Yes, usually it looks like this

Vu13xHk.jpg

The old color pallet for US Armor was Olive drab or a 3 color Green brown black woodland.
because of the Iraq and Afgan wars the US has had to rethink existing camo the color flat dark earth is more universal then the older flat green, It's not perfect but better. However that only works at long range ( same for Camouflage uniforms) when it comes to really trying to hid a object like a tank ( or even a person) you are always going to go to the snipers handbook and assemble a Ghillie suit.

Center European cammo in 1980's with a part stored for units arriving in reinforcement - only troops by air - 3000 M-1/60 in Europe for III, V, VII Corps. M1 arrived in 1981 and M1A1 in 1987 about 500 buld by year to Detroit and Lima.
M1A1.png
 

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Also i have this discussion but not in the good topic for China and USA
https://www.sinodefenceforum.com/plan-type-052c-052d-class-destroyers.t6881/page-159#post-435093

Yet nobody likes to be the second... even in some families can be a problem... and i don' t see China for long term looking for only a 2nd place with all we see...
But quite sure according much experts, watchers US remains number one at less up to 2050.

Allow me for US guys which have Chinese origins i understand completely things as eventualy religions etc... but logicaly and i think same for French which have foreign origins your country is USA you live there, USA welcomed you must defend it.
Exist a diaspora in the world but different if they don' t have nationality of these countries.

China have always a very numerous Army it is a big country with the more numerous population since always at less since we have statistics but have in comparison few energy mainly oïl and gas.
Much coal but it is an energy less used and polluting with actuals concerns for environment...

A very numerous Army less than USSR about in 1980's 2000000 pers, 100 Divisions, about 10000 tanks, AF 3500 fighters-bombers, Navy numerous but very few MSC only DDGs Luda about 70 old or few capable submarines only coastal brown water Navy few capable.
Many armament big majority obsolete again in 1990 - 95.

Remains a thing as have pointed some members mainly politic since always China is a country very closed, no election, few freedoms personnals also, work with military and opacity as French i can' t understand impossible, in more not pleasant especialy for we very few infos ofc.
 
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FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Also i have this discussion but not in the good topic for China and USA
https://www.sinodefenceforum.com/plan-type-052c-052d-class-destroyers.t6881/page-159#post-435093

Yet nobody likes to be the second... even in some families can be a problem... and i don' t see China for long term looking for only a 2nd place with all we see...
But quite sure according much experts, watchers US remains number one at less up to 2050.

Allow me for US guys which have Chinese origins i understand completely things as eventualy religions etc... but logicaly and i think same for French which have foreign origins your country is USA you live there, USA welcomed you must defend it.
Exist a diaspora in the world but different if they don' t have nationality of these countries.

China have always a very numerous Army it is a big country with the more numerous population since always at less since we have statistics but have in comparison few energy mainly oïl and gas.
Much coal but it is an energy less used and polluting with actuals concerns for environment...

A very numerous Army less than USSR about in 1980's 2000000 pers, 100 Divisions, about 10000 tanks, AF 3500 fighters-bombers, Navy numerous but very few MSC only DDGs Luda about 70 old or few capable submarines only coastal brown water Navy few capable.
Many armament big majority obsolete again in 1990 - 95.

Remains a thing as have pointed some members mainly politic since always China is a country very closed, no election, few freedoms personnals also, work with military and opacity as French i can' t understand impossible, in more not pleasant especialy for we very few infos ofc.
Edit

Obviously seems impossible in more with Trump ! things going betwen USA - China and also ofc in near or to medium term joint military operations with Western countries also for military procédures etc... question of trust in more no clear things in some areas...

Last point actualy right now... China "challenge " US, Western interests mainly military near of her coast 1st First chain of islands but not than USSR in 1970's - 1980's in all the world so different but surely with competition things are not going for get better.
 
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FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Burke Flight III and SNA to Washington not White House or Capitol :D


The first DDG 51 Flight III is set to be named the Harvey C. Barnum Jr. DDG 124 built by General Dynamics Bath Iron Works. It will be the 74th Arleigh Burke-class Destroyer overall. HII first Flight III configured ship is expected to be the Jack H. Lucas DDG 125. It will be the 35th Arleigh Burke-class destroyer to be built at Ingalls Shipbuilding in Pascagoula, Mississipi. Production is expected to start in May 2018.

DDG 51 Flight III characteristics
Lenght: 510 feet
Beam: 66.4 feet
Displacement: 9,200 Tons
Speed: 30+ Knots
Crew: 314
Sensors: SPY-6 radar, SPQ-9B fire control radar, MK20 Mod 1 Electro-Optical Sensor System
Weapons: Mk45 Mod 4 main gun, 96x Mk41 VLS cells, 2x Mk38 Mod 2 25mm RWS, 2x Mk32 triple torpedo launchers
Decoys / EW: SEWIP Block 3, 4x Mk53 Nulka decoy launchers

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Full 9800 t but no Phalanx sure ?
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