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China plans to fly its fifth-generation stealth fighter by 2019

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J-31 stealth fighter

A year after unveiling the FC-31 stealth fighter, Chinese officials say a production version of the fifth-generation aircraft — the country’s answer to the American-made F-35 Joint Strike Fighter — will fly by 2019, according to multiple news reports.

Li Yuhai, deputy general manager at China’s Aviation Industry Corp., known as Avic, and Lin Peng, the FC-31’s chief designer, were on hand at the Dubai Airshow this week to talk about the program.

Tony Osborne, a reporter for Aviation Week & Space Technology, reported:

“With a first flight planned for 2019, an initial operating capability would occur in 2022 or 2023, and the aircraft would be fully operational two years later.”

What’s more, the FC-31 is apparently no longer simply intended for export, as the officials said talks were underway to supply the aircraft to the People’s Liberation Army Air Force, the article states.

The state-run China Radio International reported that Peng said fighter can be tailored to suit specific requirements from customers:

“The users can designate domestic or International suppliers to provide communications equipment, sensors and guided weapons.”

The aircraft, also known as the Shenyang J-31, was unveiled at the 2014 Zhuhai Air Show. It was the event’s star attraction, marking the first time Chinese authorities allowed a plane that was still in development to be displayed to the public.

FC 31 dubai air show j 31 china stealth fighterA model of the aircraft was displayed abroad for the first time this week at the Dubai Airshow in the United Arab Emirates (see photo above).

The plane is made by Shenyang Aircraft Corp., a subsidiary of Avic, and resembles the U.S. military’s F-35 Joint Strike Fighter manufactured by Lockheed Martin Corp., though with two engines rather than one. The pair of Russian-made Klimov RD-93 engines are a variant of the propulsion systems found on the Mikoyan MiG-29.

Pakistan is considering buying between 30 and 40 of the Chinese aircraft to replace American-made F-16s for close air support, air interdiction and other missions.

SEE ALSO: The Pentagon's acquisition strategy may cause the US military to lose its technological edge in 5 years

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


8 weird ‘off-the-books’ traditions in the US military

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Cobra Gold 2015

The U.S. military is awash in regulations, laws, and official traditions. How troops march and salute, what uniform to wear to what event, or what you are supposed to say when greeting a superior are all examples of “on-the-books” behaviors expected of service members.

And then there are the “off-the-books” traditions. They are the unwritten rules: traditions that go back way before the books were printed. These activities — especially the ones involving hazing — are often frowned upon, but still continue to happen, usually without any official recognition.

Here are eight examples.

 

SEE ALSO: 5 bad luck military events that happened on Friday the 13th

1. Fighter pilots (or members of flight crew) get hosed down after their final flight.

The “fighter pilot mafia” is definitely a thing in the Air Force and Navy, which is the nickname for the pilot sub-culture within each service. Soon after aviators get to a new unit they will go through an unofficial ceremony of receiving their callsigns, and they usually are not very flattering.

On the flip side is the final flight. Much like a football coach gets a giant cooler of Gatorade dumped over their head at the end of a game, pilots sometimes will get hosed down with water by their comrades. In some cases, they’ll be doused with champagne.

In the case of Maj. Vecchione (shown below), his peers also threw string cheese, flour, and mayonnaise on him. Personally, I would’ve thrown in some ketchup and mustard, but hell, I wasn’t there.



2. At a military wedding with a sword detail, the wife gets a sword-tap to her booty to “welcome her” to the family.

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Nothing like a little tradition that allows some dude to tap your brand new wife on the butt. When a service member wants to go through the pageantry of having a “military wedding” — wearing their uniform at the altar and bringing along a sword detail — they can expect that at the end of it all, some random dude will be sexually harassing his wife for the sake of tradition.

It goes like this: On the way out right after the ceremony, the couple passes over an arch of swords on both sides. They go through, kiss, go through, kiss, then they get to the last one. Once they reach the final two and pass, one of the detail will lower their sword, tap the bride, and say “welcome to the Army [or Marine Corps, etc]!”Here’s the Navy version:



3. When a Navy ship crosses the equator, sailors perform the “crossing the line” ceremony, which frankly, involves a lot of really weird stuff.

The Crossing the Line ceremony goes far back to the days of wooden ships. According tothis Navy public affairs story, sailors were put through this hazing ritual designed to test whether they could endure their first time out at sea.

These days, sailors crossing the line for the first time — called Pollywogs or Wogs for short — can expect an initiation into the club of those who have done it before, referred to as Shellbacks. During the two-day event, the “Court of Neptune” inducts the Wogs into “the mysteries of the deep” with activities like having men dress up as women, drink stuff like a wonderful mix of hot sauce and aftershave, or make them crawl on their hands and knees in deference to King Neptune. I swear I’m not making any of this up.

In the modern military that is decidedly against hazing rituals, the events have toned down quite a bit. In 1972 a sailor may have expected to be kissing the “Royal Baby’s belly button,” which again, is totally a real thing.

Nowadays however, there’s much less of that sort of thing, and the Navy stresses that it’s all completely voluntary (ask any sailor, however, and they’ll probably tell you it’s “voluntary” with big air quotes).

Photo: Wikimedia Commons


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Army football team honors the victims of Paris terrorist attacks by running on to field with French flag

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Army Football

Prior to their game against Tulane on Saturday, the Army football team paid tribute to the victims of the Paris terrorist attacks with a simple message.

As the team ran on to the field, one of the cadets, junior defensive back Caleb McNeill, carried the French flag as a sign of support for the people of France (see video below).

The flag was later added to a small tank on the sideline.

Army Football

Here is a video of the flag entering the stadium, via YouTube user Brandon Hubschman.

 

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The US military took these incredible photos this week

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veterans coast guard

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: Obama rules out US troops on the ground to fight ISIS in Iraq and Syria

AIR FORCE: This F-16A Fighting Falcon, tail No. 80-0504, was last assigned to the 174th Attack Wing at Hancock Field Air National Guard Base, N.Y., as a ground maintenance trainer before it was retired from service and disassembled Nov. 5, 2015. The aircraft is set to be reassembled and placed at the main entrance of the New York National Guard headquarters in Latham.



Airmen from the 305th, 514th and 60th Air Mobility Wings demonstrated the United States’ air refueling capabilities by simultaneously launching eight KC-10 Extender aircraft to air refuel seven C-17 Globemasters.



ARMY: Capt. (Ret.) Florent Groberg receives the Medal Of Honor from President Obama at The White House, Nov. 12, 2015, for his heroic actions during Operation Enduring Freedom.

“And at that moment, Flo did something extraordinary — he grabbed the bomber by his vest and kept pushing him away. And all those years of training on the track, in the classroom, out in the field — all of it came together. In those few seconds, he had the instincts and the courage to do what was needed,” said President Barack Obama, speaking about Groberg’s selfless act in Afghanistan.



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SpaceX is currently the only entrant in a $70 billion rocket contest

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spacex rocket

Elon Musk's rocket company, SpaceX, just became the only player in a government competition worth about $70 billion.

The money comes from the US Air Force, which pays private companies to launch its spy satellites into orbit.

For nearly a decade, United Launch Alliance (ULA) had a comfortable monopoly on the high-paying military business. But in 2019, a US law will forbid the use of Russian-built rocket engines to launch military satellites — and ULA currently relies on those foreign engines.

ULA has been phasing out Russian engines to stay in business with the US military, but in the meantime this has led to a major opening for SpaceX.

When the Air Force called for bids to launch a new global positioning (GPS) satellite in 2018, for example, ULA had to pull out: The company wouldn't have enough Russian engines left to power its Atlas 5 rocket by then. ULA also lacks a financial accounting system that can show it is compliant with a second important piece of the law, which requires that no funds from other government contracts benefit US military launches, according to Reuters.

The Pentagon didn't waive the law for ULA, and the bids were due on November 16. So now SpaceX is all but guaranteed to win the launch bid. It's the only other company certified for military launches, and the only one that submitted a bid for launching the new satellite, called GPS 3.

The US Government Accountability Office estimated that military satellite launches are worth about $70 billion through 2030, Bloomberg reports, and the GPS 3 launch is the first of several bids that the Air Force will offer over the next few years. If SpaceX gets the contract and the launch goes well, it's likely to get tapped again and again.

ULA will have to figure out a new engine source, or hope that the law changes, if it wants to get back in the competition.

SpaceX winning the bid could be good news for military budgets, since Musk's company will likely charge less than $100 million for each satellite launch. That's much cheaper than ULA's $160-million-or-more price tag. (Back in 2012, however, SpaceX submitted a bid to the Air Force demonstrating it could launch satellites for about $80 million. It's also working on a reusable rocket that'd bring down the launch cost even more.)

Still, the US Air Force says it needs at least two certified competitors, just in case something goes wrong with one of the companies before an urgent satellite launch. More direct competition would also further drive down the cost.

For now it's unclear what ULA's plan is going forward.

"We look forward to working with the Air Force to address the obstacles to ULA's participation in future launch competitions to enable a full and fair competition," Tory Bruno, ULA's CEO, told Bloomberg.

We've reached out to ULA and will update this post if we hear back.

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NOW WATCH: This is how Elon Musk wants to drastically reduce the cost of space flight

The 7 enlisted jobs with awesome entry-level salaries

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US military army american soldiers

Serving in the military can be very rewarding personally and professionally, but a lot of potential recruits want to know which jobs make the most cash. The military pay tables are here, but in the meantime, here are seven of the most lucrative military jobs for new enlistees:

 

SEE ALSO: The 14 most powerful world leaders

1. Army Military Working Dog Handler

Military working dog handlers train and work with dogs that specialize in finding explosives, drugs, or other potential threats to military personnel or law and order. They train for 18 weeks after the Army’s 10-week basic combat training.

Starting annual salary: $18,561.96 plus benefits.



2. Air Force Histopathology Specialist

Histopathology specialists in the U.S. Air Force prepare diseased tissue samples for microscopic examination, aiding doctors in the diagnosis of dangerous diseases.

Starting annual salary: $18,561.96 plus benefits



3. Marine Corps Engineer

Engineering Marines build and repair buildings, roads, and power supplies and assist the infantry by breaching enemy obstacles. There are different schools for different engineering specialties including Basic Combat Engineer Course, the Engineer Equipment Operator Course, and the Basic Metal Workers Course.

Starting annual salary: $18,561.96 plus benefits



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The US military took these incredible photos this week

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USS Chung-Hoon SM-2 missile

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: Iraq closes northern airspace over Russian missiles launched at Syria

AIR FORCE: An F-15E Strike Eagle sits on the flightline at Incirlik Air Base, Turkey, on Nov. 12, 2015. Six F-15Es from the 48th Fighter Wing deployed in support of Operation Inherent Resolve and counter-ISIS missions in Iraq and Syria.



Aircrew with the 20th Special Operations Squadron and combat controllers with the 26th Special Tactics Squadron execute an aerial and ground demonstration for US Air Force Academy cadets Nov. 10, 2015, in Colorado Springs, Colo.



An F-15E Strike Eagle from the 48th Fighter Wing at Royal Air Force in Lakenheath, England, lands at Incirlik Air Base, in Turkey, on Nov. 12, 2015. Six F-15Es are deployed in support of Operation Inherent Resolve and counter-ISIS missions in Iraq and Syria. As an air-to-air and air-to-ground fighter aircraft, the F-15E specializes in gaining and maintaining air superiority.



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Retired US General Petraeus is warning the US to keep troops out of Syria

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david petraeus

Retired U.S. Army General David Petraeus, the man who oversaw the (temporary) restoration of order in Iraq following the Sunni awakening and the subsequent surge of American troops there, doesn’t see much hope for a similar process in Syria.

In an interview with PBS host Charlie Rose, Petraeus warned against putting American troops on the ground in the war-torn country, saying the country “may be a Humpty Dumpty that can't be put back together again … One doesn't know what the various outcomes could be.”

Petraeus, who was forced to resign as CIA director after acknowledging that he supplied classified materials to his biographer, with whom he was having an extramarital affair, is still remembered by many as the most successful U.S. general in recent generations, even as the two wars for which he is best known, in Iraq and Afghanistan, resulted in states that can’t successfully govern themselves.

Petraeus said that introducing a large U.S. ground force to establish order in Syria is not “sustainable” and that any force on the ground there supported by the U.S. would have to be made up of moderate Sunni fighters – and there currently aren’t enough of those to present an effective opponent to counter the terror group ISIS or the government of dictator Bashar al-Assad, whose forces are backed by the Russian military.

“There are some there. We have been enabling them, supporting them and assisting them for some time,” he said of the moderate Sunnis. “Clearly, if we really get behind them and vow to protect them again from Bashar's air force and so on, I think you would see a lot more.”

In his comments, Petraeus seemed to be describing a no-fly zone in at least part of the country, which would allow Sunni fighters the freedom to organize without being attacked. This would appear to put him in line with a number of presidential candidates, including Hillary Clinton, the former Secretary of State, who has called for establishing such a zone.

However, Petraeus was plainly not supportive of the suggestion by other candidates, such as former Florida governor Jeb Bush, who have called for more U.S. troops on the ground.

soldier

Asked about introducing U.S. troops, he said, "I would not at this point. Again, you need to have a hold force that has legitimacy in the eyes of people that has to be Sunni Arab forces.”

“Again, you can envision — you should have some contingencies if there's some real urgency beyond what we even have now, which is quite a great deal, have some contingencies for taking action, but I would not, I wouldn't take that at this point," he said.

However, he said, "I would make sure that there is a headquarters established, a joint task force, say, up in … Turkey, that is unifying all of the efforts in Syria under a combined joint task force commander.”

Petraeus’s interview with Rose was conducted prior to the news that Turkish fighter planes had shot down a Russian fighter jet on the Turkey-Syria border, an event that, most agree, is likely to greatly complicate the situation in the region.

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The coolest phrases only people in the military use

The US military took these incredible photos this week

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coast guard USCG Station Islamorada, Florida

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: Top Metrojet official says 'only possible explanation' of Russian aircraft crash 'could be an external impact on the airplane'

AIR FORCE: A C-130 Hercules receives fuel from a KC-135 Stratotanker Oct. 22, 2015, over the Atlantic Ocean. The two aircraft, assigned to Royal Air Force Mildenhall, England, were training in Trident Juncture, an exercise designed to help militaries respond more effectively to regional crises with NATO allies and partners — improving security of borders, ensuring energy security and countering threats of terrorism.



Two pilots, assigned to the 71st Rescue Squadron at Moody Air Force Base, Ga., fly a C-130J Super Hercules during rescue and refueling training near Beja Air Base, Portugal, Oct. 23, 2015. The training was in support of Trident Juncture 2015, the largest NATO exercise conducted in the past 20 years, involving more than 35,000 troops from over 30 NATO member nations and partners.



ARMY: Soldiers, assigned to the 173rd Airborne Brigade, and Italian soldiers, assigned to Folgore Brigade, Esercito Italiano conduct a combined airborne operation at Lidia Drop Zone, Siena, Italy, during Exercise Mangusta 15, Oct. 26, 2015.



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A Green Beret shares his best productivity tips

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green beretsThis post by Michael Martel appeared originally on Quora as an answer to the question "What was the best advice you ever received on being productive?"

Don't worry about being productive ...

Focus on your goals

Everyone wants to do more in their life. They want a better business, to make more money. They want to be able to manage their time more effectively. They want to get things done well and move on to the next task, project quickly and effectively.

Many people can never seem to get their time management under control.

But productivity and time management isn’t the real problem. The truth is the real problem is lack — lack of reasons you have to.

There is no real connection between what you want in life and the steps necessary to get there.

The Mission

I am often asked why the Special Forces are known for getting things done. We improvised, adapted, overcame what ever necessary to get the mission accomplished.

We trained for and executed missions where people's lives depended on the success of the mission — our own lives included. I know it sounds trite, but failure was not an option.

The steps (tasks, projects) we took were all tied to the success of the mission. That meant we had to get them done. The key is necessity.

Your Goals

How would it be if you established some BAGs (Big A-- Goals) in your life? Then changed your mindset where you knew those things that have to get done are tied to the BAG. How do you think that would affect your productivity and time management?

Take the time to sit down and think about what you want — really want. Is it to take your business to the next level? It might be more time with the family, either at home or on a special vacation. It might be a better house, a new car.  It might be a different lifestyle. These are your mission. Mission comes first, everything else comes last.

Whenever I am asked about being productive, I ask about a person’s goals. With great goals, people tend to get 'er done.

SEE ALSO: A retired Navy SEAL commander breaks down his morning fitness routine that starts before dawn

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This $71 million military transformer is half-plane and half-helicopter

These are the best US military photos from the past week

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snake eater snake blood us troops malaysia

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: The US military is spending $1 trillion on something it hopes to never use

AIR FORCE: An MC-130J Commando II from the 9th Special Operations Squadron airdrops a Maritime Craft Aerial Delivery System over the Gulf of Mexico during a training exercise on Nov. 12, 2015. This was the first time aircrews from the 9th SOS successfully completed an MCADS airdrop.



Maj. Cristina Moore Urrutia, the commander and conductor of the US Air Force Band of the Pacific, walks to a podium during the Japan Self-Defense Force Marching Festival at the Nippon Budokan Arena in Tokyo, Japan, Nov. 13, 2015.



ARMY: An Army tank crew assigned to 2nd “Black Jack” Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division, fires an M1 Abrams tank during gunnery at the Rodriguez Live Fire Complex in South Korea on Nov. 23, 2015.



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2 Army pilots killed in Apache helicopter crash near Fort Campbell, Kentucky

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A U.S. Army Apache flies past the moon in the Zharay district of Kandahar province, southern Afghanistan June 11, 2012.  REUTERS/Shamil Zhumatov

Two Fort Campbell, Kentucky, soldiers were killed Wednesday evening when an AH-64D Apache helicopter crashed during a routine training flight in a rural area in Tennessee about 12 miles south of the base, Army officials said early Thursday.

Officials did not release the names of the soldiers because their families had not yet been notified. The accident is under investigation.

The crashed occurred around 7 p.m., officials said. Army officials did not start monitoring the situation until 8:05 p.m., a Fort Campbell spokesman told local media.

Fort Campbell is home of the 101st Airborne "Screaming Eagles"— the Army's only Air Assault Division, according to the Military.com base guide. The installation is located on the Kentucky-Tennessee border.

The base is also home to the Army's 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (Airborne), also known as Night Stalkers, which fly such helicopters as the CH-47 Chinook, the UH-60 Black Hawk, and assault and attack configurations of the MH-6 Little Bird.

The accident is the latest in the string of at least three Army helicopter training crashes in the past 11 days.

On November 23, two Army pilots were killed when their Apache crashed during training in South Korea. And on November 24, four crew members were killed near Fort Hood, Texas, when the UH-60L Black Hawk they were flying crashed. Both accidents are under investigation.

SEE ALSO: PUTIN: More sanctions are coming to Turkey than just 'some measures concerning their tomatoes'

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NOW WATCH: This $71 million military transformer is half-plane and half-helicopter

Defense Secretary Carter to open all combat jobs to women in historic change

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United States Secretary of Defense Ash Carter

The Associated Press has learned that Defense Secretary Ash Carter will order the military to open all combat jobs to women, and is giving the armed services until Jan. 1 to submit plans to make the historic change.

Carter's announcement is expected later Thursday.

It rebuffs arguments from the Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman that the Marine Corps should be allowed to exclude women from certain front-line combat jobs, citing studies showing that mixed-gender units aren't as capable as all-male units.

A senior defense official says all the services will have to begin putting plans in place by April 1.

The official was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Previously, General Joseph Dunford, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff contended that some combat jobs should stay male-only, reportedlysubmitting a report about five-inches thick outlining why he believes women should not be allowed to compete for certain Marine infantry and front-line jobs.

Dunford was, however, the only service cheif to issue such a recommendation. 

Earlier this year, First Lt. Shaye Haver of Copperas Cove, Texas, and Capt. Kristen Griest of Orange, Connecticut became the first two females to graduate from one of the military's most challenging courses, the Army's elite Ranger School.

army ranger woman

In early October, Carter told the troops at Naval Air Station Sigonella in Sicily, "You have to recruit from the American population. Half the American population is female... So I'd be crazy not to be, so to speak, fishing in that pond for qualified service members."

SEE ALSO: Report: Russia is building a second military airbase in Syria

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NOW WATCH: This $71 million military transformer is half-plane and half-helicopter


A US Army colonel explains how to build trust up and down the corporate ladder

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us army students

There is a saying repeated often in the US Army: “Where you stand is where you sit.” It means, in essence, that your perspective depends on the position you occupy in an organization.

When 19th century general Braxton Bragg was serving simultaneously as a company commander and company quartermaster — the officer tasked with approving requisitions — he famously wrote a memo in his commander role requesting resources, then wrote a memo as quartermaster refusing that order.

Bragg-as-commander appealed, was again refused by Bragg-as-quartermaster, and finally Bragg requested that the post commander intervene and settle the dispute.

Bragg represented an extreme case, but in making each of these decisions, he was looking out for the interests of his team. They were just different teams.

His story resonates with Col. Brian Halloran, US Army Chief of Staff Senior Fellow at the Kellogg School, as a reminder of how leadership changes one’s — and how being in one leadership role versus another can have a profound impact on decisions.

For Col. Halloran, more than two decades in the military have included many roles, and many shifts in function. Along the way, he has had to master situational leadership, adjusting his goals to become known as a leader who gets things done.

The tools Halloran uses include recognition and sensitivity, a healthy dose of pragmatism, and the ability to communicate effectively beyond the constraints of a leadership position.

In the US Army, becoming an effective situational leader — understanding that where you stand is where you sit—is accomplished through a “Two Up/Two Down” model.

“When I get my assignment, I not only have to understand my mission,” Halloran says. “I’ve got to understand my boss’s mission — and my boss’s boss’s mission — and where my goals fit into that. What that does is it helps prevent me doing something that works great at my level but ends up causing a bigger problem for the overall organization.”

By the same token, becoming versed in the goals and responsibilities of your direct reports — and their direct reports — acts to open communication and increase strategic alignment throughout the organization.

“When you’re circulating and getting to know people in your organization two levels down, you have a better flow of information,” Halloran says. “You can make sure that people understand why certain tasks are being asked to be done, where it fits in the big picture, and how we’re all actually going to benefit.”

Leaders rising through the ranks need to be aware that promotions are essentially changes in — and with new mandates come new cultural expectations.

US Army Reserve

When he was a lower rank, Halloran found it easier to do things informally — such as reach out to the people across the organization that he knew could perform. After being promoted to colonel, his ability to approach junior officers who worked under other commanders was seriously curtailed by Army etiquette, which says that if you want to use another commander’s resource — even if that resource is the opinion of a colleague — permission is a must.

The new role did not just change whom Halloran could communicate with — it also shifted how decisions were reached. Halloran learned that failing to coordinate with other colonels or general officers could lead to trouble.

“As operations officers, we would come up with plans and tell people how to execute,” Halloran says. “So saying, ‘This is what we’re going to do. This is why we’re going to do it. This is how we’re going to do it.’ If I showed up at the Pentagon and did that, people would have looked at me like I was insane. In the Pentagon, you’re going to build consensus so people feel like they are a part of the process.”

New positions additionally require leaders to make a conscious effort to focus on the job at hand. “You’ve got to be very, very careful not to do the job you used to do, but the job that you’re there to do,” Halloran says.

Strong situational leadership skills are not just about taking decisive action, but about getting the detailed information needed to make good decisions. But the more someone ascends in an organization’s leadership, the more the people around him will be inclined to “protect him” from details that that they feel are not worth his time.

The problem is that in many cases this amounts to withholding information. Often the withholding stems from a desire to respect a leader’s time — to not bother him or her with pesky details — but it still can isolate the leader from important information. Halloran calls this the “glass cone” of leadership. Breaking that glass cone is essential to making informed decisions.

“Especially the more senior you are in an organization, [the more] you’ve got to ask,” Halloran says. “If you don’t ask the people you’re working with what’s going on in their lives, generally speaking, they’re not going to tell you. And you can’t be the typical guy lost in the middle of the city who doesn’t want to ask for directions.”

If “where you stand is where you sit,” after all, acquiring other perspectives is essential to making decisions that are in the organization’s broader interests.

“Even if you don’t agree with a colleague, when you can understand the why behind it, you can usually find a common ground,” Halloran says. “By doing that, you understand how the whole organization works. That’s when you gain that reputation of somebody who is going to look at a way to solve a problem, not just at a way to further what’s best for your internal cog in the organization.”

SEE ALSO: Dell's CMO explains why men need to step up at work to reduce gender bias

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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:

SEE ALSO: Germany just took its first major step in the battle against Islamic State

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.



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A US general just gave a stark assessment of the situation in Eastern Europe

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Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges

In a press briefing on Wednesday, Lt. General Ben Hodges of the US Army painted a stark picture of the military tensions and readiness in Europe.

"We're playing catch-up a little bit," Hodges declared during the 45-minute conference which covered a wide range of subjects, mostly focused on the theme of increasing NATO and EU readiness for possible Russian aggression.

There are currently 30,000 troops in US Army Europe routinely engaged in multi-national drills, such as Trident Juncture that took place earlier this year.

Despite the continued effort from the US and allied nations, Russian capabilities in the region remain a very real threat.

Specifically, Hodges pointed to Russia's Baltic exclave of Kaliningrad and their anti-ship missiles as being able to effectively keep US-led forces out of the Baltic sea.

Hodges also mentioned the estimated 25,000 Russian troops illegally stationed in Crimea, who are accompanied by significant air defenses and Russia's Black Sea Fleet. "They have the ability to really disrupt access into the Black sea," said Hodges.

Hodges also addressed some of Russia's nuclear Sabre-rattling that has the US's European allies on edge.

"Senior Russian officials have talked about Denmark as a nuclear target, Sweden, Romania, sort of an irresponsible use of the 'nuclear' word if you will, you can understand why certain allies of ours on the Baltic side are nervous," said Hodges.

nato v. russia

According to Hodges, the US Army just started the training of five battalions in Ukraine, and they have stationed an entire armor brigade's worth of tanks and vehicles across Lithuania, Bulgaria and Germany. But despite the frequent drills, and increased access to heavy artillery Russia still holds an important advantage over NATO and EU states — speed.

For the US and it's NATO allies, troops and supplies are constantly moving across state borders, which despite being streamlined as cooperation increases between the allies, still lags in speed when compared to Russia, who has unfettered mobility within their own borders and the Kaliningrad enclave.

The many governments involved in the US's cooperation with NATO also slow down political decisions to act, and the speed with which a multi-national force could possibly assemble.

Hodges expressed worries about the "cohesion of the EU," amid the refugee crisis and in the aftermath of an ISIS-claimed attack on Paris, but he ultimately concluded that "I have confidence that the EU will get this right."

NATO Trident Juncture

In perhaps the most troubling revelation of the briefing, Hodges reflected on the decline of US air superiority in Europe. "It's been a very long time since American soldiers have had to worry about [an] enemy up in the sky ... having the ability to drop bombs... I mean, our Air Force has protected us for decades,” said Hodges.

“Now, what we're seeing from the Russians, they've got tiered, multi leveled [unmanned aerial systems] of all types," He continued. "So they're able to see us just the way we've enjoyed the advantage of being able to see others.”

Unlike the ongoing conflict in Syria, the US Army in Europe faces a Russian military with drones, radar jamming technology, precision-guided missiles, and credible threats from the air.

Recently, top Air Force officials have echoed this sentiment from Hodges. “The capability gap that we’ve enjoyed here in the United States for years is closing, and it’s closing fast,” Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mark A. Welsh III said on Dec. 1, as noted by the MilitaryTimes.

“If we don’t pay attention to this, air power will no longer be an asymmetric advantage for the U.S. military. The impact of that could be catastrophic,” Welsh added.

ukraine

But the US has been able to get valuable information from its allies which have led to a greater understanding of Russia's military operations. Hodges said the Ukrainians have been especially helpful in detailing Russia's offensive strategies. 

“What the Ukrainians would tell you is that, when they see certain UAVs or they hear them, they know there's a rocket coming right behind it, because they've been 'acquired'... and so they've learned how to survive in that sort of environment,” said Hodges.

Despite the numerous challenges faced by the US and NATO in Europe, Hodges ended the breifing by restating the US Army's purpose in Europe."We don't want Russians to miscalculate that we're not capable or willing to respond," Hodges said. 

Watch the full press conference with Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges below:

SEE ALSO: Europe may start collecting personal data on all passengers traveling in and out of the continent

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This is the Marine Corps' monstrous new assault vehicle

The Army's $30 billion plan to replace the Humvee has gone off road

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U.S. soldiers stand near a Humvee vehicle during the NATO Force Integration Unit inauguration event in Vilnius, Lithuania, September 3, 2015. REUTERS/Ints Kalnins

The $30 billion effort to replace the U.S. Army’s Humvee fleet took an unexpected turn on Tuesday.

The Government Accountability Office dismissed a protest by Lockheed Martin, which lost the chance to develop the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle (JLTV) to Wisconsin-based Oshkosh earlier this year when the defense giant caught everyone by surprise and went to court to make its case. Lockheed Martin filed a “Notice of Post-Award Bid Protest” with the U.S. Court of Federal Claims on December 11.

“Our office will not decide a protest where the matter involved is the subject of litigation before a court the U.S. Court of Federal Claims stating its intent to file a protest with the court involving the same subject matter as the protests pending our Office, we are closing our files without further action.”

While filing a protest over such a big-ticket program isn’t unusual – a similar one has been posted for the Air Force’s budget-busting bomber effort — the timing of Lockheed’s court filing is suspect. The company submitted an initial protest with the GAO back in September, freezing work on the tactical vehicle program until the agency determined if the Army followed government acquisition rules to the letter.

Lockheed also filed two “supplemental protests,” according to the GAO decision, suggesting the company was fired up over losing the initial development contract — $6.7 billion for around 17,000 vehicles — to Oshkosh. Indiana-based AM General was also passed over for the JLTV contract but didn’t file a protest.

A GAO decision was expected before the end of this week. That Lockheed went to court suggests the firm suspected it was about to lose and decided to plead its case in federal court, which could prove more costly on a few fronts.

Any company that wants to challenge the award of a federal contract can file a protest with the purchasing agency, the GAO, or the Federal Claims court, according to U.S. code. But only the GAO provides for an automatic stop-work order during the protest period; in court, the judge must be convinced to issue an injunction, according to a source. In addition, GAO is also widely seen as an inexpensive option, while court proceedings can prove more expensive, the source said.

humvee fleetTo that end, the agency averages around 2,600 protests per year, documents show. Meanwhile the Claims court averages around 1,000 protests annually, the source estimated.

The Army wants to buy around 49,000 vehicles, with acquisition slated to wrap up in 2040. The Marine Corps hopes to purchase 5,500 trucks and finish production in fiscal 2022. The first wave of JLTVs aren’t expected to hit the field until 2018.

GAO’s decision allowed the Army to lift the stop-work order that had been placed on the program when Lockheed filed its protest.

“We are pleased that the JLTV production contract, awarded to Oshkosh in August, is now moving forward to deliver the world’s most capable light tactical vehicle,” John Urias, Oshkosh Defense’s executive vice president, said in a statement.

“The Army conducted a thorough, methodical procurement including exhaustive testing and evaluation to ensure our troops get the best vehicle,” he added.

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