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Watch the moment a US soldier is reunited with a dog she fell in love with in Iraq

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soldier dog reunion

  • Sgt. Tracy McKithern found a small stray dog wandering around her army base and began caring for her.
  • A crowdfunding campaign through Puppy Rescue Mission raised enough money to bring the dog, named Erby, home.
  • McKithern was deployed again before Erby arrived, but they recently reunited.

For Army Reserve Sgt. Tracy McKithern, it was love at first sight.

While stationed at the Kurdistan Training Coordination Center, the combat photographer took notice of a small, white, stray female dog wandering around the base, according to an Army report.

"She is the sweetest little soul," McKithern said. "She came up to me immediately — probably hungry, but gentle. I think she was looking for love more than anything else."

Other soldiers on the base began caring for and feeding the dog, naming her "Erby" after the Iraqi city of Irbil. Erby started waiting for them to come back and sleeping outside of McKithern's quarters.

soldier dog reunion

As McKithern prepared to return home, she reached out to Puppy Rescue Mission to see it it would be possible to take Erby with her. The organization set up a crowdfunding campaign to pay for the necessary vaccinations, paperwork, and travel arrangements, which reached its goal of $4,500 with most contributions coming from "complete strangers," McKithern said.

McKithern went back home to Tampa, Florida, but was deployed again a month later while awaiting Erby's arrival. Her husband picked up the dog in New York and drove her back to Florida. When McKithern returned home again for their long-awaited reunion, Erby immediately recognized her.

"Hi, do you remember me?" McKithern asked Erby when they finally met again.

In reply, Erby jumped on top of her and began licking her face.

You can watch a video of their reunion as reported by ABC Action News below.

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NOW WATCH: How puppies get trained to be guide dogs


The cause of all war boils down to sex and social status, according to a conflict expert who used to be in the British army

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  • Business Insider spoke with Mike Martin, a former British army officer and conflict expert.
  • Martin's new book, "Why We Fight," is about the evolutionary psychology of warfare.
  • He told us about the two reasons people fight in wars.

Following is a transcript of the video.

Mike Martin: Hi, my name is Dr. Mike Martin. I'm a former British army officer and an expert on conflict, and I've just written a book called "Why We Fight" about the evolutionary psychology of warfare.

The real question is, how have we evolved as individuals to fight for our groups? When you dig into it and you look at the data, there are only two things that are worth risking yourself in war for, as an individual. The first thing is an increase in social status. And the reason why that's worth risking yourself for is, as you rise up the status hierarchy, particularly as a man — and men do most of the fighting — you get more mates, more sexual mates. When you have more mates, you have more children. That's a reason to risk fighting in war.

But there's another reason why people fight in war. That's to ensure that they have membership of an in-group. This in-group could be a tribe or a nation-state. It's the same mechanism. It's the thing that causes us as humans to feel belonging. It's the thing that makes you feel homesick. It's the thing that sends shivers down your spine when you're at a political rally, or a football match, or you're singing in a choir in church. These are the mechanisms in your brain causing you to seek to belong.

In evolutionary terms, we need to belong to groups because they're safe. The main reason that groups exist in evolutionary terms is that they protect us from other humans who are trying to kill us. We fight for status and we fight for belonging. We've got these ideas that these two things, status and belonging, and humans seeking those things are what cause individuals to fight in wars.

Actually, this makes sense. Look around the world. We've got two global-level politicians, and the idea of them seeking status and having status disputes with each other is very obvious in their behaviour. Leaders seek to dominate their own groups, and that's what they do. Running for the presidency of the United States is a massive status contest. It's gruelling.

These people are driven to succeed, and they're driven to achieve high status. The mechanism that guides this seeking status is basically testosterone. The way it works is that the more testosterone you get, the more you seek status. But it's a feedback loop. It's a positive-feedback loop.

When you get to the top of your group — that is, you become the leader of your country or perhaps you become the head of your tribe — it depends what scale we're looking at, you then seek to dominate other leaders who are the leaders of other groups. This is where we see wars as a product of status disputes between leaders playing out.

Belonging comes into play when those who aren't leaders seek to take part in wars. We can see this played out and the rise of identity politics at the moment, particularly in the States, but also across Europe. If why we fight is correct and war is driven by status and belonging, we're entering a very dangerous period of history.

Produced by Charlie Floyd.

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I took portraits of combat-tested soldiers at Fort Bliss — and they told me their incredible stories

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Fort Bliss army soldier

FORT BLISS, Texas — I wanted to ask the soldiers about their stories.

I wanted to ask them why they joined the service, if and where they had been deployed, what their experiences were like overseas, what it was like coming home, and more. 

But it was difficult.

I only had a few chances to speak to individual soldiers in-depth as I toured a number of different weapons systems during my trip to Fort Bliss.

The conversations were sometimes difficult. "I feel like a d--k for asking those questions," I told one of the public affairs officers after interviewing an officer who became emotional while describing an incident in Afghanistan. "But I think it's important for people to know these things."

"Yes, it is," the PAO said.

SEE ALSO: Soldiers don't believe this rare antelope-like animal is roaming around a Texas army base — but we saw one up-close

The first chance I got to speak to soldiers in-depth was when I met a couple of Abrams tank crews.



Name and rank: Sergeant T. Wilder.

Wilder, 27, of Athens, Tennessee, is an Abrams tank commander who said he's been in the service for eight years. 

"I joined right out of high school, like any typical high school kid does to get out of their hometown, pay for college, make something of themselves," Wilder told me. "I got about 12 more years, and I can retire."

Wilder said he deployed to Iraq in 2011 and 2012. 

"I was part of the initial drawdown," he said. "I was everywhere from Kalsu all the way down to Echo and K-Crossing."

"It was fun," he said. "I deployed in an infantry platoon so I was out doing route clearance patrols, patrols, convoy overwatch, and stuff like that."

Wilder said clearing IEDs was "slow, long, about 16 hours at about 20 mph," and that he saw all different kinds. "We saw several that were made out off 155 rounds, 105 rounds, saw one out of a propane tank, bunch of stuff stuck in water bottles and coke cans and stuff."

He said he took "a little bit [of contact], but nothing major."

When I asked him if he'd share any particular stories, he understandably shook his head no.



Name and rank: Specialist Christian Pena.

Pena, 22, told me he has been in the Army for two years.

"I'm originally from Mexico, but I moved to Arizona when I was 10," he said.

"I joined the Army 'cause this country has given me so many opportunities that I'm so grateful for — and it's my way of repaying it," he said.

He said he hasn't deployed yet, but that "it's definitely something I look forward to."

"Man of few words," the PAO said jokingly.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The Army and Marine Corps are checking their M4s and M16s for a dangerous glitch

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US Army M4 rifle

  • Both the Army and Marine Corps are checking their M4 carbines and M16 rifles for a malfunction with the selector switch that causes the weapons to fire without soldiers or Marines pulling the trigger.
  • U.S. Army Tank-automotive and Armaments Command has found the malfunction in 6 percent of 52,000 weapons tested so far, but no Marine Corps weapons have accidentally fired due to the selector switch malfunction.
  • The Army will test a total of 903,000 rifles and carbines over the next 6 months and it expects repairs will take an additional 12 to 18 months.

Both the Army and Marine Corps are checking their M4 carbines and M16 rifles for a malfunction with the selector switch that causes the weapons to fire without soldiers or Marines pulling the trigger.

The Army first issued a safety message about the issue on March 29 following an incident at Fort Knox, Kentucky, where a soldier’s M4A1 carbine went off unexpectedly during troubleshooting, said R. Slade Walters, a spokesman for U.S. Army Tank-automotive and Armaments Command.

The weapon initially failed to fire when the soldier pulled the trigger because the selector switch was in between “semi” and “auto,” Walters said. When the selector switch was clicked back into place, the weapon fired.

“There have been no injuries reported as a result of this issue,” Walters told Task & Purpose on Friday. “The unintended discharge occurred on an M4A1 carbine that had recently been converted as part of a Product Improvement Program. The incident was investigated and another [safety message] was released on April 18, 2018 to address all of the M4 and M16 family of weapons.  The investigation and inspections are ongoing.”

M4A1 marines

TACOM has found the malfunction in 6 percent of 52,000 weapons tested so far, Walters said. The Army will test a total of 903,000 rifles and carbines over the next 6 months and it expects repairs will take an additional 12 to 18 months.

On May 24, the Marine Corps issued its own safety message telling armorers to perform additional function checks during pre-fire inspections of M16A4 rifles and M4A1 and M4 carbines, Marine Corps Systems Command officials told Task & Purpose.

So far, no Marine Corps weapons have accidentally fired due to the selector switch malfunction, said Monique Randolph, a spokeswoman for MARCORSYSCOM.

“The additional function check is a precautionary action taken by the Marine Corps in response to the malfunction identified by the Army,” Randolph said.

SEE ALSO: Here's every weapon the US Army gives to its soldiers

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Marine Corps rifles are passing safety checks after a potentially deadly glitch, but results for Army rifles are more mixed

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M4 marines

Marine Corps M16 rifles and M4 carbines are passing a new safety check designed to catch a potentially dangerous glitch in the selector switch that has surfaced in Army weapons.

The Army's weapons to date have suffered a 6% failure rate out of 52,000 inspected weapons.

The Army sent out safety-of-use messages in March and April, advising all services to perform a new functions check on M16s and M4s after a soldier's weapon fired when the selector switch became stuck between the semi and auto settings.

Officials with the Army's Tank-automotive and Armaments Command said they have received reports that approximately 52,000 weapons have been tested so far. Of those, about 3,155 failed to pass the updated functions check, Slade Walters, a spokesman for TACOM, said June 14.

But the Marine Corps' weapons have fared better.

"The Marine Corps has not received any reports of weapons that have failed the new functions check outlined in the messages," Barbara Hamby, a spokeswoman for Marine Corps Systems Command, told Military.com. The Marine Corps has not responded to a request to provide the numbers of weapon it has inspected.

TACOM provided a breakdown of the M4s and M16s that have been inspected as of June 1.

M16 army rifle

Of the Army weapons checked thus far, most failures occurred in M4A1s. The M4A1s that had been converted from M4s suffered 2,070 failures out of 23,000 inspected — a 9% failure rate.

About 16,000 original M4A1s have been inspected, with failures occurring in 960 of those weapons — a 6% failure rate.

The M4A1 has been in use by special operations forces for about two decades. It features a full-automatic setting instead of the three-round burst setting on the M4, as well as a heavier barrel. The Army is in the process of converting all of its M4s to M4A1s through the M4 Product Improvement Program.

The results also showed that less than 1% of the 4,000 M4s checked failed the updated functions check. And less than 1% of the 8,500 M16A2s checked failed the test.

About 500 M16A4s were also checked, but no failures were reported.

The problem started in late March when a Fort Knox soldier's M4A1 selector switch became stuck between the semi and auto detents. When the soldier pulled the trigger, the weapon failed to fire. The soldier then moved the selector switch and the weapon fired, the TACOM message states.

TACOM officials stress that it is early in the process, and about Army 900,000 weapons still must be checked.

SEE ALSO: Norway wants more US Marines and to station them closer to Russia, and Moscow is vowing to retaliate

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The Army's newest non-lethal weapon basically lets soldiers shoot enemies in the face with hot sauce

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Army_Pepper_ball_gun

  • The Army has a new non-lethal weapon to help soldiers in Afghanistan "irritate and deter" potential adversaries, Army Times reports
  • The weapon fires paintball-like projectiles filled with a hot pepper solution.
  • The projectiles have a range of around 50 yards and leave a "debilitating cloud," impacting the eyes, nose and respiratory system.
  • Weapons like this can help soldiers in urban settings as well as riot-control situations. 

The Army has a new non-lethal weapon to help soldiers in Afghanistan "irritate and deter" potential adversaries with pepper-filled balls, Army Times reports

The non-lethal launcher, known as the Variable Kinetic System (VKS), is made by PepperBall Technologies. It fires projectiles much like paintballs containing a hot pepper solution.

"We are truly honored the US Army has selected PepperBall’s VKS to use as its non-lethal protection in its mission to defending the United States," Ron Johnson, CEO of United Tactical Systems, which owns PepperBall, said in a statement.

"Our VKS platform was the only non-lethal source that was capable of complying to the US Army’s standards," Johnson added. 

The projectiles have a range of around 50 yards and leave a "debilitating cloud," impacting the eyes, nose and respiratory system. The irritant, which is 5% pelargonic acid vanillylamide (PAVA) and a synthetic version of pepper spray, is released when the projectile makes contact. 

The weapon is built like a paintball gun and can carry up to 180 rounds when it's in "hopper mode" and 10 or 15 rounds when it's in "magazine mode." 

The Army awarded a $650,000 contract for the weapons, which reportedly have the same controls and ergonomics of the M4/M16 weapons system, which many soldiers already carry. In other words, it will not be tough for most soldiers to transition into using these non-lethal launchers. 

In total, the Army reportedly purchased 267 of the weapons, which are currently being used in training. 

Weapons like this can help soldiers in high-intensity, urban settings and especially during crowd control situations. 

SEE ALSO: The Army thinks its next war will go underground — and it's spending a half-billion dollars to get ready

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This soldier was finally able to adopt the dog he served with in Afghanistan — and the story will warm your heart

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Mally and Montez

  • A bomb-sniffing military dog named Mally was finally reunited with her former handler in Afghanistan after seven years apart.
  • After US Marine Nick Montez was honorably discharged in 2013, he stayed in touch with the Air Force base to find out when Mally could be adopted.
  • The pair finally reunited stateside, and Montez plans to treat Mally like a princess.

After seven years apart, a US Marine was finally reunited with his former partner in Afghanistan: a dog named Mally.

While in Afghanistan, Nick Montez and Mally were responsible for finding improvised explosive devices together.

Mally Afghanistan

Nick Montez told KREM 2 News that he made sure to take great care of her while the two were on duty. "I'd give her IV's before we'd go out on patrol if it was a hot day, just to make sure she was hydrated." He would also "clip her toenails, massage her pads, clean her ears every week. Work with her, train with her."

Before Montez even knew adoption was a future possibility, he got a tattoo in honor of Mally that depicts her name, a paw print, and her military identification number.

The two had a special bond.

Montez shared that once the pair's tour of duty eventually ended and Mally was reassigned to a new mission, "It was pretty rough, the separation. I wasn't ready for it. It was pretty sudden."

They had worked together for over a year.

Mally tattooAfter he was honorably discharged in 2013, Montez continued to check in on Mally to see if he could adopt her, but she was still needed in the armed forces. According to The Lewiston Tribune, Montez was communicating with the Air Force base to stay updated about Mally's status. Finally, he received a letter from Idaho Senator Mike Crapo, informing him that Mally was finished with her service and ready to be brought home.

Montez flew to Texas to pick her up, as she had just finished serving with the Air Force base there. KREM 2 News reports that a non-profit called Mission K9 Rescue, which focuses on service dogs, paid for his flights. Montez received many other donations to help with Mally's transition, which Montez will give back to the Lewis-Clark Animal Shelter, as well as Mission K9 Rescue.

On Tuesday, Montez and Mally returned safely to his hometown in Lewiston, Idaho. Montez shared with The Lewiston Tribune that he's excited to get into a normal routine with Mally, and he's "surprised our story has affected so many people. That's a pleasant feeling."

You can watch the heartwarming interview with Nick Montez reported by KREM 2 News here:

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These are the worst weapons an army could buy

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Koksan self-propelled howitzer

People like to talk about the best tanks, rifles, and tactical gear. It's a great discussion — there are many sophisticated pieces of tech in the military world, each with various strengths and weaknesses. That said, we rarely talk about the flip side of this coin: What are some of the worst pieces of gear out there?

There are some weapon systems out there whose sole purpose in existence is to act as an example of what not to do. So, let's dive in, without restraint, and take a look at the very worst the world has to offer across several gear categories.

SEE ALSO: Here are all the standard issue weapons given to US Marines

Worst Rifle: Heckler and Koch G36

Heckler and Koch usually makes good guns. The MP5 is a classic submachine gun that's still in service around the world. The G3 rifle was second only to the FN FAL. But then there's the G36.

Intended to replace the G3, the G36 was to be Germany's new service rifle in the 5.56mm NATO caliber. Well, the gun had many problems. First and most importantly, the gun was horribly inaccurate when hot. In temperatures above 86 degrees Fahrenheit or after firing many rounds, the gun was liable to miss a target 500 meters away by as many as 6 meters. Spray and pray is not a tactic known to successfully defeat an enemy.



Worst Machine Gun: Heckler and Koch MG5

Heckler and Koch has the dubious distinction of owning two items on this list. H&K made the under-appreciated G8, which could serve as anything from a designated marksman rifle to a light machine gun in 7.62 NATO. The company's MG4 is a solid 5.56mm belt-fed machine gun — again, the company knows how to make good weapons. Unfortunately, they also made the MG5.

This is a gun that can't shoot straight. Granted, when you're using a machine gun, the task usually involves laying down suppressive fire, but it'd probably help to hit the bad guys occasionally.



Worst Tank: T-72

Two words: Desert Storm. This tank's poor performance speaks volumes. When it fired its main gun at a M1A1 Abrams tank from 400 yards, the round bounced off. Read that again: The. Round. Bounced. Off.

You can't get worse than that. In general, the best anti-tank weapon is another tank, but the T-72 is simply useless. Any crew you send out in this vehicle should be immediately considered lost.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The Army has been quietly pounding ISIS in Syria from a new fire base

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U.S. Army Soldiers with the 3rd Cavalry Regiment fire artillery alongside Iraqi Security Force artillery at known ISIS locations near the Iraqi-Syrian border, June 5, 2018.

  • A U.S. Army artillery unit is pounding Islamic State fighters inside Syria from a remote desert camp just inside Iraq.
  • About 150 Marines and soldiers appear to be stationed at the base, in addition to Iraqi forces.
  • Little has been made public in recent months about the U.S. military's use of temporary fire bases to continue the ISIS fight.

A U.S. Army artillery unit is pounding Islamic State fighters inside Syria from a remote desert camp just inside Iraq.

Soldiers from the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment artillery unit have been operating alongside Iraqi artillery units at a temporary fire support base in northwest Iraq near the Syrian border for the past several weeks, according to a recent Defense Department news release.

U.S. soldiers, Marines and sailors helped Iraqi forces build the camp by as part of Operation Inherent Resolve's support of Operation Roundup, a major offensive by Syrian Democratic Forces aimed at clearing the middle Euphrates River Valley of entrenched, Islamic State of Iraq and Syria fighters.

The U.S. military previously made use of rapidly built fire bases to insert artillery power earlier in the campaign against ISIS. In 2016, a detachment of Marines departed the Kearsarge Amphibious Ready Group to establish such a location, Fire Base Bell, in northern Iraq. The position, which was later renamed and manned by Army forces, helped U.S. troops intensify the assault on the ISIS stronghold of Mosul.

It would come under enemy attack soon after its establishment, resulting in the death of Marine Staff Sgt. Louis Cardin, the first Marine to die in combat against ISIS.

Iraqi Security Forces fire at known ISIS locations near the Iraqi-Syrian border using an M109A6 Paladin Self-Propelled Howitzer, June 5, 2018.

Little has been made public in recent months about the U.S. military's use of temporary fire bases to continue the ISIS fight. But NPR published a brief report Monday about a "remote outpost" on the border of Iraq and Syria that seems to be the one described in the recent Defense Department release.

Some 150 Marines and soldiers are stationed there, NPR reported, in addition to Iraqi forces.

In the release, troops stationed at the fire base described the satisfaction of working side-by-side with Iraqi units.

"The most satisfying moment in the mission, so far, was when all three artillery units, two Iraqi and one U.S., executed simultaneous fires on a single target location," said Maj. Kurt Cheeseman, Task Force Steel operations officer and ground force commander at the fire support base, in the release.

Language barriers forced U.S. and Iraqi artillery units to develop a common technical language to coordinate fire missions that involved both American and Iraqi artillery pieces.

"This mission required the use of multiple communications systems and the translation of fire commands, at the firing point, directing the Iraqi Army guns to prepare for the mission, load and report, and ultimately fire," 1st Lt. Andrea Ortiz Chevres, Task Force Steel fire direction officer, said in the release.

The Iraqi howitzer unit used different procedures to calculate the firing data needed to determine the correct flight path to put rounds on target.

"In order to execute coalition fire missions, we had to develop a calculation process to translate their firing data into our mission data to validate fires prior to execution," Cheeseman said in the release.

U.S. Marines provide additional security for Iraqi Security Forces and coalition partners near the Iraqi-Syrian border, June 4, 2018.

Sgt. 1st Class Isaac Hawthorne, Task Force Steel master gunner, added that Iraqi forces are "eager to work with the American M777 howitzer and fire direction crews and share artillery knowledge and procedures," according to the release.

It’s not clear from the release when the base was created or how long it has been active. With little infrastructure and no permanent buildings, troops face temperatures above 100 degrees Fahrenheit in the desert.

"They are enduring harsh weather conditions and a lack of luxuries but, unlike previous deployments for many, each element is performing their core function in a combat environment," Cheeseman said in the release. "The fire support base is a perfect example of joint and coalition execution that capitalizes on the strengths of each organization to deliver lethal fires, protect our force and sustain operations across an extended operational reach."

Navy, Marine Corps and Air Force units provided planners, personnel and equipment to create the austere base, built on a bare patch of desert and raised by hand. Coalition partners from several different nations participated in the planning and coordination of the complex movement of supplies.

"Supplies were delivered from both air and ground by the Army, Air Force and Marines, and include delivery platforms such as medium tactical vehicles, UH-60 Black Hawks, CH-47 Chinooks, CV-22 Ospreys, C-130 Hercules and a C-17 Globemaster," 1st Lt. Ashton Woodard, a troop executive officer in Task Force Longknife, said in the release. "We receive resupply air drops that include food, water, fuel, and general supplies."

One of the most vital missions involved setting up a security perimeter to provide stand-off and protection for the U.S. and Iraqi artillery units.

"Following 10 days of around-the-clock labor in intense environmental conditions, the most satisfying moment was seeing the completion of the physical security perimeter," said one Marine working security at the fire base, according to the release.

SEE ALSO: This is the huge M777 howitzer that US Marines burned out while fighting ISIS in Syria

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INSIDE WEST POINT: What it’s really like for new Army cadets on their first day

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We got an inside look at what it's like on the first day for new cadets at the United States Military Academy at West Point. Over 1,200 cadet candidates arrived on campus on a sweltering July morning for "Reception Day." After an emotional farewell with their families, the new cadets took the first steps of a rigorous six-weeks-long basic training regimen. Following is a transcript of the video.

Narrator: On a scorching Monday in July, over 1,200 cadet candidates arrived at the US Military Academy for reception day. Also known as R-Day, it marks the beginning of their time at West Point.

Col. Deborah J. McDonald: All day long, the new cadets will do a transformation from their civilian status and at the end of the day, take their oath to serve our nation in the Army.

Graham Flanagan: Why did you decide to come to West Point?

Cadet Candidate: Both my brothers went here and it's a great school and I wanted to join the Army afterward so there's no better school to do that.

Cadet Candidate: All my uncles, they served in the Army and they're telling me that, all about this school and how great it is and all the leaders that came from it so I just wanted to follow in their footsteps.

{The Academy was established in 1802.}

McDonald: West Point is located about 50 miles north of New York City. It's in the Hudson Highlands. It's called West Point because it's located on the western point of the Hudson River where it bends. George Washington recognized this as a strategic point of interest because the British had to tack as they came through the Hudson River. It's the longest continuously garrisoned military installation in the United States.

Narrator: After a short orientation, the cadet candidates have 60 seconds to say goodbye to their families. For the next six weeks, contact with family members, if any, is extremely limited. Once they leave Eisenhower Hall, the cadet candidates are now called new cadets.

McDonald:
In 2018 to be accepted at West Point, you must be a United States citizen in good physical condition, pass a medical exam to be able to be commissioned in the Army, and have a high academic achievement.

Narrator: Tuition at West Point is free, but the cadets commit to years of service after graduation.

McDonald: After their four years at West Point they've committed to five years active duty in the Army with three years in the reserve component.

Narrator: The new cadets are issued physical training, or PT uniforms, along with a bag that holds everything they're allowed to carry for the next six weeks. Their next stop, the barber shop. Only the male new cadets are required to cut their hair. The female new cadets get to keep their locks.

Gen. Mark A. Milley: Hi, how are you? Thinking about West Point?

Narrator: West Point started admitting women in 1976. Today more than 20% of the cadets are female.

McDonald: Over 24% of the class of 2022 are women. So we've seen a huge surge not only in the interest in women applicants, but also the retention of women cadets.

Narrator: The new cadets are assigned to companies where they learn the basics of taking orders and marching in formation.

McDonald: We have upperclassmen from the junior and senior classes that are here leading the new cadets. So, this is a leadership laboratory, not only for our new cadets but also for our upper class as they work on their leadership skills.

Narrator: Everything the new cadets learn on R-Day culminates in the Oath Ceremony. Family members gather for one last look at the class of 2022 before basic training begins.

McDonald: One of the most common traits that I see of West Point applicants is they want to be part of a team that's bigger than themselves.

Narrator: Those who complete the rigorous six weeks of basic training will be formally accepted into the corps of cadets.

Cadet candidate: It's gonna be a long six weeks, I can tell you that. I'll get through just take it day by day but I know it's gonna be long, it's gonna be hard, but I'm prepared for it.

Cadet candidate: I feel like it's gonna suck but in the end it's all worth it.

Cadet candidate: All of us know what to expect really, we just go in there you know, get yelled at a little bit, get on the bus, get yelled at some more.

Cadet candidate: I think it's gonna be fun you know, everybody always talks about it's gonna be a miserable time but I think if you embrace the suck, it's gonna be, it's gonna be okay, you're gonna get through it.

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'Dunkirk spirit': UK banks are preparing billions in emergency lending to support the economy under a no-deal Brexit

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  • Big banks are ready to lend money to UK businesses in order to prop up the economy in the event of a no-deal Brexit.
  • The bank lobbying body, UK Finance, said it was ready to help coordinate lending as it did following the collapse of Carillion and Monarch Airlines, The Telegraph reported.
  • Ministers have drawn up contingency plans for a no-deal exit from the EU and have put the Army on standby to deliver food, medicine, and fuel.


LONDON — Major banks are preparing to support UK businesses with credit if Britain falls out of the EU next March with no deal on future relations with the bloc, highlighting just how disruptive crashing out of the EU could be to the UK economy.

The Telegraph reported on Sunday that CEOs and banking lobbying groups are ready to extend lines of credit to soften the economic blow by blockages in trade and financial flows in the event of a no-deal Brexit. Officials at the Bank of England’s Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) have reportedly begun talks with lenders in recent weeks over how they can help buttress the economy.

The report came on the same day as The Sunday Times reported that the government has put the army on standby in case of a disruptive Brexit, drawing up plans for them to deliver food, medicine and fuel to keep the country moving.

Prime Minister Theresa May’s government hopes to reach a final agreement on Britain's post-Brexit relationship with the EU at a key summit in October. But Europe’s chief negotiator Michel Barnier has called into question the viability of the UK’s proposals, saying there are elements of the government's proposed deal that he doesn’t understand.

The comments raise the risk that Britain could fall out of the EU without a deal when the Brexit deadline is reached next March. This would likely cause huge disruption to everything from medicine and food supplies to car manufacturing.

One executive at a FTSE 100 bank told The Telegraph: "Extending credit to firms impacted is one thing we’re looking at. It’s a bit Dunkirk spirit type of stuff. But banks are in reasonably good shape and can cope."

Banking lobbying body, UK Finance, told the Telegraph it is ready to help coordinate lending from the banks as it did following the collapse of outsourcing firm Carillion and Monarch Airlines. The funding could be used to help firms who are incurring extra costs from supply chain delays or other effects of a no-deal Brexit.

Stephen Jones, chief executive of UK Finance, told the Telegraph: "If the industry, the Government, and the regulator want us to act as a convener of the industry we will, of course, do that."

Neil Wilson, the chief market analyst at Markets.com, told Business Insider that the Bank of England would likely step in if there is a no deal Brexit, rather than leaving it solely to the private sector.

"I think you would get the BoE making an emergency statement to that effect if we get no deal Brexit – as per the immediate aftermath of the vote when the BoE stepped in quite decisively on that front. The Bank would be critical," he said.

Wilson added that interest rate cuts and a restarting of the term funding scheme would also be likely "to maintain credit liquidity."

Banks themselves have concerns over the enforceability of billions of pounds of cross-border contracts, customer data transfers, and access to the European payments system.

The unnamed FTSE 100 banking executive told the Telegraph: "We want to make sure we don’t make a bad situation humongously worse. We’re thinking about what to do in a no deal storm… If there are huge queues of lorries at Calais and Dover, what is the banking equivalent of that?"

SEE ALSO: The British Army is reportedly on standby to deliver food, medicines, and fuel in case of a no-deal Brexit

DON'T MISS: Deutsche Bank is shifting business out of London — and it hints at a troubling post-Brexit future for a $1 trillion industry

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NOW WATCH: The man that won the Nobel Prize in economics for contract theory shares his thoughts on smart contracts

These Bell V-280 videos provide interesting details about the Army's next-generation helicopter

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Bell V-280

On Jul. 31, the first prototype of the V-280 Valor, registration N280BH, performed a flight demo for invited media and dignitariest at Bell Helicopter Amarillo Assembly Center.

The V-280 Valor is Bell’s submission for the U.S. Army’s Joint Multi-Role Technology Demonstrator (JMR-TD) phase, the technology demonstration precursor to Future Vertical Lift (FVL), a replacement for the service’s Sikorsky UH-60 Black Hawk (that have just celebrated its 40th anniversary) and Boeing AH-64 Apache helicopters.

As we have already reported here at The Aviationist, the V-280 will have a crew of 4 (including two pilots) and be capable of transporting up to 14 troops. Its cruising speed will be 280 knots (hence the designation V-280) and its top speed will be around 300 kts. It’s designed for a range of 2,100 nautical miles and an effective combat range of 500 to 800 nmi although the Army’s requirements for the demonstrator call for hot and high hover performance (at 6,000 feet and 95 F), and the ability to self-deploy 2,100 nautical miles at a speed of at least 230 knots.

The flight demo on Jul. 31, was filmed by our friend, journalist and photographer Steve Douglass in slow motion, at 120 fps.

Check them out below. 

SEE ALSO: Watch the Army's futuristic V-280 helicopter flying in cruise mode for the first time

SEE ALSO: Watch France and Germany's next-generation stealth fighter, a 2-engine jet that looks like it'll outclass the F-35

The videos below provide an interesting look from all angles at the Bell Next-Generation Tilt-Rotor Aircraft, including its “famous” T64-GE-419 tilting gearbox design (whose details were blurred images and footage officially released by Bell Helicopter when the aircraft was rolled out and performed its maiden flight): unlike the V-22‘s engines that rotate along with the gearboxes, in the V-280, the gearbox is the only thing that rotates.

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Actually the gearbox was clearly visible since August last year, when we published the very first images of the Valor.



Here below you can find also two lower resolution videos (they should be fine for smartphone viewing) of taken during the same flight demo:

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Here's the second one:

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According to Douglass, the Valor is much quieter than an Osprey tilt-rotor aircraft. During the demo, Bell program manager said they are working on an unmanned version – slightly smaller – same engine layout. They also hope to make gunship versions for the Marine Corp.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Here's what you would need to do in order to pass the new US Army Fitness test

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Army

  • The US Army combat fitness test has been leaked online. 
  • The US Army requires all soldiers to take a 50-minute test that involves strength deadlift; a medicine ball power throw; pushups; a "sprint, drag, carry" event; leg tucks; and a 2-mile run.
  • The results place each soldier in a category of moderate, significant, or heavy based on their fitness, though the US Army is still experimenting with new ways to test soldiers.

 

Soldiers can stop wondering how to pass the Army's new combat fitness test, now that a document showing the initial minimum standards for each of the test's six events has been leaked online.

An Army spokesman confirmed that the document shows the standards that the service will use during the test's trial run; however, the scores and times represent a "first step."

"The field testing will help inform our final test procedures and grading standards," said Lt. Col. Jeffrey Pray, of the Army's Center for Initial Military Training. "Final standards are not expected to be approved until October of 2019, and may be adjusted up until the test is approved for record on/about 1 October 2020." 

All soldiers will be required to take the gender- and age-neutral test by October 2020. The 50-minute test involves a strength deadlift; a medicine ball power throw; a set of pushups, during which soldiers lift their hands off the ground after each pushup; a 250-meter "sprint/drag/carry" event; leg tucks; and a 2-mile run.

Their standards are based on their occupations and units

Soldiers' test requirements will be based on their military occupational specialties or units, which will be classified in one of three categories, depending on how physically demanding they are: "moderate," "significant," or "heavy," the document says.

During the yearlong field test, the minimum requirements for each category will be the following:

Moderate 

Lifting 140 pounds; throwing the medicine ball 4.6 meters; completing 10 pushups; getting through the "spring, drag, carry" event within 3 minutes and 35 seconds; doing one leg tuck; and completing the 2-mile run within 21 minutes and 7 seconds.

Significant

Lifting 160 pounds; throwing the medicine ball 6.5 meters; doing 20 pushups; completing the "sprint, drag, carry" event within 2 minutes and 45 seconds; doing three leg tucks; and finishing the 2-mile run within 19 minutes.

Heavy

Lifting 180 pounds; throwing the medicine ball 8.5 meters; doing 30 pushups; completing the "sprint, drag, carry" event within 2 minutes and 9 seconds; doing five leg tucks; and running 2 miles within 18 minutes.

How the Army assess soldiers

Starting in October, the Army will experiment with different ways to determine which categories a soldier should fall into, Pray told Task & Purpose.

"What we're going to do is go back to Army senior leaders and present that to them and let them decide which way they think is the best way to actually to assess a soldier," Pray said. "Right now, there's no fixed one way of doing it. There are multiple ways that we're looking at."

Pray stressed that the Army is starting with a field test to find out what changes need to be made to the combat fitness test before all soldiers have to take it.

"This whole first year is all about trying to tweak and trying to make sure we have the right standards, make sure we have the right events," he said. "We're just starting out. The first phase is just trying to work through what seems to work the best. The Army's senior leaders are going to make that decision."

SEE ALSO: The Army wants to make basic training tougher to prepare its newest soldiers for a major conflict

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The Army is sending 200 soldiers to combat the wildfires raging across the Western US

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A firefighter watches flames advance up a hill towards homes as crews battle the Carr Fire, west of Redding, California

  • The US Army is preparing to send hundreds of active-duty soldiers to combat raging wildfires in the Western US.
  • The soldiers will come from the 7th Infantry Division's 14th Brigade Engineer Battalion, according to an Army press release.
  • There are more than one hundred wildfires blazing across 11 Western states, and these disasters have already claimed the lives of nine people.

The US Army is preparing to send hundreds of soldiers to fight the deadly wildfires raging in 11 states across the Western US.

Two hundred active-duty soldiers from the 7th Infantry Division's 14th Brigade Engineer Battalion at Joint Base Lewis McChord in Washington state will be mobilized to assist in ongoing firefighting efforts, according to a statement from US Army North, which provides operational control for ground forces deployed in support missions during national disasters.

The Army unit will be sent out this weekend after training. The soldiers will be organized into teams of 20 members and deployed to combat fires in an unspecified area. The 14th Brigade Engineer Battalion reportedly specializes in construction and demolition, skills that the unit has used in Iraq and Afghanistan, according to Fox News.

"More than 127 wildfires are burning on about 1.6 million acres in California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Utah, Nevada, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, Arizona and Alaska," according to a statement from the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho.

At least nine people have died in the wildfires spreading across the Western US, according to CBS News. President Donald Trump declared the situation in California a "major disaster" Sunday, making it easier for local residents to secure access to much-needed government assistance.

In many cases, the state National Guard units are already assisting state and federal agencies working tirelessly to put out the devastating wildfires.

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Watch the Army test its new 105mm 'Hawkeye' Humvee-mounted howitzer

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Hawkeye Humvee-mounted howitzer

  • The US Army is testing a new 105mm 'Hawkeye" Humvee-mounted howitzer designed to lighten a tried-and-true artillery solution enough to allow such a large cannon on a small platform.
  •  It can fire up to three rounds per minute via remote, has a range of 11 miles and can support troops with direct fire, unlike 120mm mortars, which provide indirect fire support. 
  • One downside, however, is that the Hawkeyer’s rate of fire is much lower than the towed and manually loaded howitzer variants, which can put out up to six rounds a minute.

The Hawkeye 105 mm Howitzer mobile artillery system developed by Mandus Group looks like something straight out of Command & Conquer. If you don’t believe me, check out this sweet slow-motion video of some lucky 82nd Airborne soldiers testing out the new hotness that popped up on Twitter on August 5.

Utilizing an inventive hydraulic system to reduce recoil, the Hawkeye was designed to lighten a tried-and-true artillery solution enough to allow such a large cannon on a small platform. It can fire up to three rounds per minute via remote, and the mobility of the Humvee allows a small crew of between two and four to rapidly deploy the suspension system, fire, and get out of dodge within 60 seconds — or before counter-battery fire can hit back.

The lightweight nature of the Hawkeye makes it ideal for expeditionary fire support. Unlike mortars like the 120 mm mobile variant the U.S. Army is currently eyeing for soldiers, the Hawkeye can support troops with direct fire, whereas mortars are only able to provide indirect fire.

The Hawkeye system has other advantages. The deployed suspension system eases wear and tear on the Humvee compared to a 120mm system that shoots from a free chassis. Over time, even the best suspension systems will feel 100,000 lbs of force right to the baseplate; you can see that force punishing the vehicle in the 82nd Airborne footage.

The 105 mm also has a range advantage on 120 mm mortar systems, reaching out to strike enemies at up to 11 miles compared to the latter’s limited accuracy of up to five miles. Interestingly, this is a boon for maintenance and readiness: the Army’s Humvee system and supply line is already well-entrenched in the current force structure, allowing for an easier integration into then a whole new vehicle system. 

But the biggest advantage is the Hawkeye’s ability to cover distance quickly over rough terrain make the classic shoot and scoot a breeze, a key advantage over traditional towed 105 mm systems. An experienced counter-battery team can locate and shoot effectively a bit over a minute after a round lands, but the Hawkeye system looks to be able to pivot from position to position, out-maneuvering counter-battery attempts to eliminate the threat.

One downside, however, is that the Hawkeyer’s rate of fire is much lower than the towed and manually loaded howitzer variants, which can put out up to six rounds a minute. But since the U.S.’s main near-peer threats, namely Russia and China, field artillery that is much longer in range the 105 mm howitzer, this may be less of a problem on a conventional battlefield. In the meantime, the Hawkeye seems like a fine lightweight option for soldiers, if only for the Avengers jokes:

SEE ALSO: This is the huge M777 howitzer that US Marines burned out while fighting ISIS in Syria

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7 things you didn't know about one of the toughest Pacific battles of WWII

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U.S. Marines, with full battle kits, charge ashore on Guadalcanal Island

  • The Guadalcanal campaign of the Second World War was one of the more savage battles in the Pacific theater
  • Between August 7, 1942 and February 9, 1943, tens of thousands of US Marines and soldiers gave their lives in a brutal fight against elite Japanese troops

The Guadalcanal campaign began August 7, 1942 and lasted until February of 1943. During those seven months, 60,000 US Marines and soldiers killed about 20,000 of the 31,000 Japanese troops on the island.

The main objective of the fighting was a tiny airstrip that the Japanese were building at the western end of Guadalcanal, a speck of land in the Solomon Islands. The airstrip, later named Henderson Field, would become an important launching point for Allied air attacks during the Pacific island hopping campaign.

Now check out these 7 interesting facts you didn't know about the battle.

1. Every branch of the U.S. military fought in the battle

The Air Force didn't yet exist, but the Army, Coast Guard, Navy, and Marines all fought in the battle.

The Army provided infantry to assist the Marines in the landings and sent planes and pilots to operate out of Henderson Field. The Navy provided most logistics, shore bombardments, and aviation support. The Marines did much of the heavy lifting on the island itself, capturing and holding the ground while their aviators provided additional support.

 



2. The only Coast Guard Medal of Honor ever bestowed was for service at Guadalcanal

Signalman First Class Douglas Munro was one of the Coast Guardsmen operating landing craft for the Marines. After the initial invasion, the U.S. controlled the westernmost part of the island and the Japanese controlled the rest. A river ran between the two camps and neither force could get a foothold on the other side.

Then-Lt. Col. Lewis "Chesty" Puller ordered a force to move through the ocean and land east of the river. The Marines encountered little resistance at first but were then ambushed by the Japanese. Munro led a group of unarmored landing craft to pick up the Marines while under heavy fire from Japanese machine guns. Just as they were escaping the kill zone, Munro was shot through the head.




3. Guadalcanal was a "who's who" of Marine legends in World War II

In addition to Chesty Puller, many Marine legends were at the island. Gunnery Sgt. John Basilone earned his Medal of Honor there. Master Gunnery Sgt. Leland Diamond drove off a Japanese cruiser with a mortar. Brig. Gen. Joe Foss earned a Medal of Honor and became a fighter Ace after downing 26 enemy aircraft around the island.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

'Peace behind me, war in front of me': China's new Army propaganda video is chilling and viral

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PLA China

  • China's People's Liberation Army released a chilling video last week called "I am a Chinese Soldier."
  • The video emotionally underscores the sacrifices made by service members of the PLA while showing off some of the country's latest weaponry.

China's People's Liberation Army released a chilling video last week called "I am a Chinese Soldier," which was first spotted in the West by the National Interest

The 2:20 minute video, released on August 1 for China's Army Day, emotionally underscores the sacrifices made by service members of the PLA while showing off some of the country's latest weaponry.

At one point in the propaganda video, the narrator says "peace behind me, war in front of me," which The National Interest said could be interpreted to mean war is "inevitable."

The National Interest, which provided a translation of the narration, also pointed out that no female soldiers were depicted in the video — just mothers and wives sending their husbands or sons off. 

Check out the video:

The high-quality video also likely instilled a lot of pride, something which Eric Wertheim, a naval expert with the US Naval Institute, recently told Business Insider is at least in part China's reason for building a fleet of new aircraft carriers that may soon be on par with the US' Nimitz-class carriers. 

But China's grand ambitions for a world-class military likely goes beyond pride and domestic politics, as Beijing continues to set its sights on the East and South China Seas, Taiwan, market access overseas, and more. 

SEE ALSO: A leaked photo shows that China is building a supercarrier that could rival the US' Nimitz-class carriers

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The Army's XM25 'Punisher' airburst weapon is officially dead

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XM25 Counter-Defilade Target Engagement System

  • After years of delays and cost increases, the Army has officially pulled the plug on the XM25 Counter-Defilade Target Engagement System.
  • The 25mm shoulder-fired airburst weapon was lovingly nicknamed ‘The Punisher.’
  • The program was in limbo since May 2017, when the Army’s senior leadership canceled its contract with Orbital ATK after the defense firm “failed to deliver the 20 weapons as specified by the terms of the contract.”

After years of delays and cost increases, the Army has officially pulled the plug on the XM25 Counter-Defilade Target Engagement System, the 25mm shoulder-fired airburst weapon lovingly nicknamed ‘The Punisher,’ Stars and Stripes reports.

Originally touted as a “leap-ahead” enhancement to soldiers’ arsenals in Afghanistan, the XM25  semi-automatic weapon that uses a target acquisition and fire control system to identify targets, determine range, and program specially-designed, high-explosive ammunition to explode in proximity to enemies nearly 2000 feet away.

The program has been in limbo since May 2017, when the Army’s senior leadership canceled its contract with Orbital ATK after the defense firm “failed to deliver the 20 weapons as specified by the terms of the contract,” as service spokesman told Military.com at the time.

The termination of the contract came after Orbital ATK sued Hechler & Koch for more than $27 million the previous February over a breach of contract involving the weapons system, passing the blame for the missing prototypes on the German gunmaker and putting the XM25 contract — and, in turn, the program — in jeopardy. 

XM25 airbust weapon rifle US Army soldier

The Punisher was doomed well before that. The Department of Defense’s Office of the Inspector General released a report in September 2016 urging the Army to cancel the program due to “two years of delays, increased program costs, and an unjustified fielding plan,” per Military.com. Indeed, the OIG report for the system frequently malfunctioned during operational testing:

Part of the problem started Feb. 2, 2013, when the XM25 malfunctioned during its second round of operational testing in Afghanistan, inflicting minor injuries to a soldier, the audit maintains.

The Army halted the operational testing when the XM25 experienced a double feed and an unintentional primer ignition of one of the 25mm high explosive rounds, Army officials said at the time.

The warhead did not detonate because of safety mechanisms on the weapon.

The service removed all prototypes from theater to determine the problem’s cause.

The XM25 had completed one 14-month battlefield assessment and was in the early stages of a second assessment when the double feed and primer ignition occurred during a live-fire training exercise.

Orbital and H&K aren’t totally to blame: as with all other future weapons systems, Army officials “could have managed the schedule, affordability, and quantity requirements of the XM25 program more effectively,” according to the DoD OIG audit.

RIP ‘The Punisher.’ We’re sure you’ll find a second life in the reboot of Demolition Man.

SEE ALSO: Here's every weapon the US Army gives to its soldiers

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US Air Force fighters and Army helicopter gunships killed more than 220 Taliban fighters in Ghazni battle

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US Army Apache helicopter joint air-to-ground missile Yuma Proving Ground

  • US Air Force and Army helicopters engaged and killed more than 220 Taliban fighters in Ghazni, Afghanistan over the past few days.
  • The militants launched a massive offensive on the city, which is located less than 100 miles from the Afghan capital.

U.S. Air Force fighters and Army helicopter gunships have attacked and killed more than 220 Taliban forces in Ghazni over the past several days after militants launched a massive attack on the Afghan city less than 100 miles from Kabul.

"Ghazni City remains under Afghan government control," Lt. Col. Martin O'Donnell, a spokesman for Operation Resolute Support and U.S. Forces Afghanistan, told Military.com on Tuesday.

Afghan forces are conducting clearing operations in the city, but hundreds of civilians have fled, trying to escape the fierce fighting, The Associated Press reported Tuesday.

"The Afghan National Army's 203rd Corps, the Afghan National Police's 303rd Zone and Afghan Special Security Forces are rooting out the remnants of the Taliban within the city," O'Donnell said. "What we observed, as these Afghan-led operations drove a large portion of Taliban from the city over the last day or so, was the retreating Taliban attacking the more vulnerable surrounding districts, which Afghan forces are reinforcing."

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid denied that insurgents had been driven from Ghazni and said the Taliban destroyed a telecommunications tower on the city's outskirts during the initial assault, cutting off landline and cellphone links to the city, the AP reported.

O'Donnell said the Taliban who remain in Ghazni "do not pose a threat to the city's collapse ... however, the Taliban who have hidden themselves amongst the Afghan populace do pose a threat to the civilian population, who were terrorized and harassed."

U.S. Special Forces and 1st Security Force Assistance Brigade advisers are providing advice to Afghan forces on how to effectively conduct clearance operations and combined-arms integration, he added.

"U.S. airpower has killed more than 220 Taliban since Aug. 10," O'Donnell said. "In addition to the initial strike on Friday, U.S. forces conducted five strikes Saturday, 16 strikes Sunday, 10 Monday and none thus far today."

AH-64 Apache helicopters from the 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) Combat Aviation Brigade provided close-air support for Afghan forces on Friday, Sunday and Monday, he said, adding that Brig. Gen. Richard Johnson, deputy commander of the 101st and commander of Task Force South East, advised Afghan leaders in an operational command-and-control center.

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Thousands of children on US Army bases may have been poisoned by lead — and the service is discouraging costly inspections

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Col. John Cale Brown and Darlena Brown pose for a portrait with their sons J.C. and Rider at their home in 2017.

  • The US military began privatizing housing more than a decade ago because it was supposed to protect service members’ families.
  • Instead, some of their children are being poisoned by lead, and inspections are discouraged in part because lead abatement can be costly.
  • From 2011 to 2016, Brooke Army Medical Center in Texas – which processes blood tests from many bases nationwide – registered more than 1,050 small children who tested above the CDC’s elevated threshold, the center’s records show.
  • The thousand-plus blood results, obtained from Army bases through Freedom of Information Act requests, provide only a glimpse of the problem.

Army Colonel J. Cale Brown put his life on the line in two tours of duty in Afghanistan, earning a pair of Bronze Stars for his service. In between those deployments, Brown received orders to report to Fort Benning, the sprawling Georgia base that proudly describes itself as the century-old home of the U.S. infantry.

He was pleased. His wife, Darlena, was pregnant with their second child, and the Browns owned a home in the area. Their 10-month-old son, John Cale Jr, was a precocious baby, babbling a dozen words and exploring solid foods.

Cale’s duties as a battalion commander required him to live on base. So instead of moving into their own house, in 2011 the Browns rented a place inside Fort Benning. The 80-year-old white stucco home had hosted generations of officers.

Like most family housing on U.S. bases today, the home wasn’t owned and operated by the military. It was managed by Villages of Benning, a partnership between two private companies and the U.S. Army, whose website beckons families to “enjoy the luxuries of on-post living.”

The symptoms began suddenly. At 18 months, JC would awake screaming. He began refusing food, stopped responding to his name and lost most of his words.

“He was disappearing into an isolated brain,” Darlena recalls.

For nearly a year, doctors probed: Was it colic? Autism? Ear infections? Then, in late 2012, came a call from JC’s pediatrician: He had high levels of lead in his blood. When Darlena told Villages of Benning of his poisoning, contractors ordered home testing.

The results: At least 113 spots in the home had lead paint, including several peeling or crumbling patches, requiring $26,150 in lead abatement. Villages of Benning moved the Browns into another old house next door.

The heavy metal had stunted JC’s brain, medical records reviewed by Reuters show. At age two, he was diagnosed with a developmental disorder caused by lead. Now eight, JC has undergone years of costly therapy. He excels at reading and swimming, but still struggles with speech, hyperactivity and social interactions.

When a reporter met JC last year, the boy looked away and repeated a phrase from a children’s TV show: “Max, what did you do? Max, what did you do?” Later, JC sat outside and watched sunlight gliding through his fingers, seemingly lost in reverie.

“I’m sad that my son lost his future,” Darlena said. “It was because of where we were that this happened.”

This wasn’t supposed to happen to families like the Browns, who move often between posts for the U.S. armed forces, trusting base landlords and military brass to provide safe shelter for children and spouses.

Cale Brown, a 46-year-old active-duty colonel, now works on detail to the White House on the National Security Council, helping to protect the country from complex threats like North Korea’s nuclear program.

For years, he has told the Army of failures to defend children on U.S. bases from lead poisoning, a preventable household health hazard. Ingesting the heavy metal can severely affect mental and physical development, especially in children, causing brain damage and other potentially lifelong health impacts. But poisoning is avoidable if old homes containing lead paint are properly monitored and maintained.

“There is no acceptable number of children that the Army can allow to be so egregiously hurt,” Cale wrote in a letter to the Army Office of the Inspector General last year, describing the poisoning of JC and hundreds of other military kids he was aware of. He hasn't received a response to the letter's concerns.

The Browns’ story and others, told publicly for the first time here, reveal a toxic scourge inside homes on military bases. Previously undisclosed military and state health records, and testing by Reuters for lead in soldiers’ homes, show problems at some of America’s largest military installations.

Federal law defines lead-based paint as containing 0.5 percent or more lead by weight. Sales have been banned since 1978. But many older homes still contain lead paint, which is particularly dangerous when it peels, chips or turns to dust – easy for kids to swallow or breathe in.

Reuters tested five homes at Benning, using a methodology designed with a Columbia University geochemist. All five contained hazardous levels of deteriorating lead paint within reach of children, in one case exceeding the federal threshold by a factor of 58.

Testing turned up problems elsewhere as well. At West Point, New York, home of the United States Military Academy, paint chips falling from a family’s front door contained lead at 19 times the federal threshold.

At Kentucky’s Fort Knox, whose vaults hold much of America’s gold reserves, Reuters found paint peeling from a covered porch where small kids play. It contained 50 percent lead by weight, or 100 times the threshold.

The Army requires abatement when certified testing identifies deteriorating lead paint in base homes. Yet it also “discourages” this type of lead-paint inspection, in part because lead abatement can be costly.

These homes put military kids at risk. Reuters obtained medical data from the Army showing that at least 31 small children tested high for lead at a Fort Benning hospital over a recent six-year period. All tested above the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s threshold for elevated lead levels – 5 micrograms per deciliter of blood. Any child who tests high warrants a public health response, the CDC says.

Army data from other clinics showed at least 77 more high blood-lead tests for children at Fort Polk in Louisiana, Fort Riley in Kansas, and Fort Hood and Fort Bliss in Texas.

From 2011 to 2016, Brooke Army Medical Center in Texas – which processes blood tests from many bases nationwide – registered more than 1,050 small children who tested above the CDC’s elevated threshold, the center’s records show.

The thousand-plus blood results, obtained from Army bases through Freedom of Information Act requests, provide only a glimpse of the problem. A $10 finger-prick test can spot a child exposed to lead, yet millions of U.S. children are never screened. Just how many are tested across all military bases isn’t clear. But for those who are, the results often go unreported to state public health agencies that attend to poisoned kids.

Reuters found that Fort Benning in Georgia was not reporting lead results for small children tested at the base’s hospital. Nor was Brooke Army Medical Center in Texas. Georgia and Texas, like most states, require the reporting of all these lead testing results to state health authorities.

The Army declined to comment on the lead hazards Reuters detected at base homes. Asked about the broader findings of this article, a spokeswoman said the Army conducts yearly visits to ensure housing is safe and follows the recommendations of the CDC and the American Academy of Pediatrics when responding to children with high lead tests. Housing managers classify resident complaints about lead paint as “urgent” and seek to respond within hours, she said.

“We are committed to providing a safe and secure environment on all of our installations,” Army spokeswoman Colonel Kathleen Turner said in a written statement, “and to providing the highest quality of care to our service members, their families, and all those entrusted to our care.”

The two contractors that operate Villages of Benning – Clark Realty Capital and Michaels Management Services – didn’t respond to requests for comment.

The military’s lapses in lead safeguards leave legions of kids at risk. Private contractors house some 700,000 Americans at more than 100 military installations nationwide, including an estimated 100,000 children ages 0 through 5.

Benning alone is home to some 2,000 small children. Of its 4,001 family homes, 2,274 “have lead-based paint present in them,” according to a Villages of Benning memo from November 2017. The mere presence of lead paint doesn’t make a home dangerous, but when the paint deteriorates, it is a “hazard and needs immediate attention,” the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency says.

“These are families making sacrifices by serving,” said Dr. Bruce Lanphear, a toxicity researcher at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia who reviewed Reuters’ findings. “It appears that lead poisoning is sometimes the cost of their loyalty to the military.”

Reuters began examining lead poisoning at U.S. bases last year, and in April began seeking interviews with Army officials. The Army declined to talk at the time.

After Reuters informed the Army and families that reporters had found hazards on bases, Fort Benning’s garrison commander, Colonel Clinton W. Cox, wrote to residents that “unknown persons” were seeking to test homes for lead and advised them not to cooperate. In a June 30 “Resident Safety Alert,” Cox told families to call 911 or base security to report such “suspicious behavior.”

Cox said he was unaware of who had done lead testing in base homes when he sent the letter. “What we’re most concerned about is our residents’ security,” he said in a brief phone interview.

But behind the scenes, the Army also began quietly addressing some of the problems.

After reporters asked why it often wasn’t informing state health departments about poisoned children, the Army overhauled its practices to comply with state laws. When Reuters found unsafe conditions at Fort Knox, contractors announced a neighborhood-wide lead abatement program. After reporters found the neurotoxin in a child’s bedroom at Benning, base command approved the family’s move to another home.

A HISTORY OF NEGLECT

For most military families, living on base is an option, not a requirement, though it can be enticing. The gated enclaves are considered safe havens that build esprit de corps. They offer support for spouses of deployed troops, access to military schools, lodging for low-income families. About 30 percent of service families live on bases.

By the 1990s, the U.S. stock of military family housing – nearly 300,000 homes in all service branches – was decaying and starved of funding. “Continuing to neglect these issues runs the risk of collapsing the force,” the Department of Defense warned in a 1996 briefing document presented to a congressional sub-committee.

The same year, the military began privatizing its homes. The initiative was the largest-ever corporate takeover of federal housing. It was meant to rid bases of substandard accommodations and save taxpayers billions by having contractors foot the rebuilding bill. In return, contractors would enjoy a steady flow of rental income over 50-year leases.

The military knew hazards lurked in its housing. In 2005, the Army released an environmental study that said 75 percent of its 90,000 homes nationwide didn’t meet its own standards of quality or safety. Of Benning, it said: “As homes deteriorate, the risk of children’s being exposed to hazardous materials … would increase.”

Twenty years after privatization began, in 2016, a DOD Inspector General report found that poor maintenance and oversight left service families vulnerable to “pervasive” health and safety hazards.

An increase in Pentagon housing funds – $133 million – was earmarked this fiscal year, largely for overseas bases, where the military still owns its housing. Meanwhile, in recent years the Defense Department has reduced the housing subsidies that fund upkeep of privatized homes on U.S. bases, leading to fewer maintenance staff, the Army has noted.

The age and condition of base homes vary, and lead hazards are hardly exclusive to military housing. A two-year Reuters investigation identified more than 3,800 neighborhoods nationwide – mostly in civilian settings – with alarming levels of poisoning.

Military families can face special difficulties if they complain about hazards in their homes, however. They are taking on landlords who are in business with their employer. Among the 60 interviewed for this story, more than half expressed fear that being identified could hurt a military member’s career.

But in private, some trade stories about unsafe homes. Darlena Brown helped create a private Facebook group with nearly 700 members. Many have shared photos of peeling paint, mold or other toxins at home and tales of unresponsive base landlords.

Reuters devised a plan to test for hazards in the homes and yards of some of these concerned families. Working with Columbia University scientists, reporters provided home lead testing to 11 families on seven bases. Eight homes had blatant hazards in children’s play areas – visibly peeling patches of lead-based paint.

Deteriorating paint from these houses – in Georgia, Texas, New York and Kentucky – had “very high” or “extremely high” lead content that puts children at immediate risk, said Alexander van Geen, a research professor of geochemistry who oversaw the lab analysis at Columbia’s Lamont Earth Observatory.

The true number of children exposed on bases is hidden by factors including the military’s spotty blood-testing and lapses in reporting to civilian authorities.

To prevent further exposure, most state health departments track lead-poisoned children and mandate inspections in their homes.

Yet when Georgia health officials repeatedly sought test results from Benning, the base refused to share them, alluding to exemptions for federal facilities, state email records show. No such exemptions exist.

“They do not report to us,” the head of Georgia’s lead-poisoning prevention program, Christy Kuriatnyk, vented about Fort Benning in an internal email to colleagues last year. “I’ve tried to get them to voluntarily report but that went nowhere.”

In April, Reuters presented the Army with evidence of its reporting lapses. In late July, the Army said it had “instituted new procedures to ensure that all reporting requirements are properly observed” nationwide.

’NOTHING TO WORRY ABOUT’

At Benning, private contractors took over the base’s family housing in 2006. They pledged to demolish thousands of dilapidated homes and build almost 3,200 new ones within 10 years. Estimated cost: $602 million. At the time, 99 percent of Benning homes predated the 1978 U.S. ban on lead paint.

The contractors were also required to maintain nearly 500 historic Benning homes, and agreed to control lead, asbestos, mold, basement flooding and other risks.

In 2011, a Villages of Benning agent took the Browns on a home walk-through before they moved in. Darlena expressed concern about lead paint.

“You have nothing to worry about, Mrs. Brown,” she recalled being told. “We’ve never had any problem with lead.”

The same year, Benning Martin Army Community Hospital recorded seven high lead results for small children, hospital records show. The hospital says it doesn’t know whether children tested there lived on or off base.

After moving in, Darlena asked maintenance to fix paint chipping around windows, but was told by a supervisor that the crew couldn’t work on historic windows, she said.

In 2012, JC and as many as five other children had high lead tests at Benning’s hospital.

After JC was poisoned, Cale Brown pleaded with base leaders to enforce regular home inspections, test more kids and scrutinize contractors. “A few small changes could mean the difference between a child having life-altering developmental problems or being completely healthy,” he wrote Benning’s garrison command in December 2012.

“Bottom line, we will do everything necessary to make sure this is addressed thoroughly and quickly,” Colonel Jeffrey Fletcher, the garrison commander at the time, responded in an email. Fletcher declined to comment.

The next year, 2013, Benning’s hospital recorded seven more high lead-test results for children. One child had lead levels more than double JC’s, hospital records show.

Villages of Benning began replacing some old leaded windows and garage doors around the base that year, but left others in place, state and Army records show.

STALKED BY LEAD, GOING TO COURT

Even after the Browns moved to another Benning home, JC wasn’t safe.

In 2013, he began special education preschool classes at Benning’s Dexter Elementary School. Months later, Darlena received a frightening note on Defense Department letterhead: Drinking water taps in JC’s classroom had tested high for lead.

One had 2,200 parts per billion lead – 147 times an EPA safety threshold and higher than all but a few of the worst taps found during the recent water crisis in Flint, Michigan. It isn’t clear how many students may have been exposed. Benning didn’t require or recommend they get screened.

The Army said the contamination was limited to individual taps around the base and didn’t affect the underlying water system. The tainted taps were shut, and parents who wanted testing for their children were given the option, the Army said.

In 2014, the Browns filed suit in Georgia federal court against Benning’s housing contractors, alleging their negligence caused JC’s poisoning and seeking compensation for his disability. The contractors denied any wrongdoing and contested the suit.

Cale deployed to Afghanistan the same year. There, he pushed for housing repairs at U.S. bases in a meeting that November with Katherine Hammack, the Army’s top official in charge of military installations.

She seemed to favor bold action, Cale said: preventing small children from living in older base homes altogether. Cale said his follow-ups went unanswered.

Hammack, who left the Army last year, told Reuters she explored such a plan, but Army lawyers said it could be discriminatory against families with children. “It is up to the soldier to make a choice,” she said.

Families who rent pre-1978 housing on bases are given lead disclosure forms before signing a lease, as required of all U.S. landlords by federal law, and can opt to live elsewhere, the Army said.

Two days before Christmas 2014, Darlena learned that JC’s lead levels, which had declined over time, were rising again. Her younger son’s levels were up, too, though below the CDC’s elevated threshold. The agency says there is no safe level of lead in children’s blood.

She removed the boys from their second Benning home that night. Nine time zones away, Cale boarded a chopper out of Forward Operating Base Gamberi in eastern Afghanistan. He was granted emergency home leave to help his family resettle.

The next year, in 2015, the Defense Department’s Inspector General found that a Clark and Michaels partnership had failed to correct lead paint hazards in homes at Fort Belvoir in Virginia. The Army pledged to address the issue with contractors, IG records show.

At Benning, meanwhile, children had 14 more high lead tests.

DANGER ON RAINBOW AVENUE

Fort Benning’s Rainbow Avenue seems a perfect spot for families, the yards of its 1920s homes filled with toys, American flags fluttering from front porches.

Behind this idyll, children face poisoning risks.

Since 2015, state lead inspectors have visited at least three of the 33 houses on the street in response to calls from worried residents, state environmental records show. “The homes all have high levels of lead,” inspectors wrote in an internal memo last year.

In one Rainbow home, they found leaded dust at 93 times the EPA’s hazard level.

In another, inspector William Spain of the state Environmental Protection Department visited a mother of three in 2016. He found paint chips throughout the home and later emailed colleagues: “Her youngest will be 5 in July and did not appear normal.”

The mother had grown concerned after the mysterious deaths of family pets. But she hesitated when the state offered additional help, pleading with Spain not to conduct lead testing in the home or to speak with neighbors.

Spain, who has since retired, said in an interview that Benning families expressed concern that notifying outsiders might anger commanders and harm careers.

“Something became obvious to me as I worked there,” he said. “You and your family cannot make trouble for base command.”

State environmental records show that Jana Martin, another mother on the block, had a four-year-old son who suffered for months from severe vomiting and belly pain – common symptoms of lead exposure. She and the doctors were mystified. “I couldn’t even get a job because my kid was so sick,” Martin said. She had put in two maintenance requests to fix chipping paint, but Villages of Benning didn’t respond for months, Martin said.

When Martin’s husband met Cale Brown, the colonel urged the family to act. The Martins bought testing swabs online. They lit up bright red, indicating exposed lead paint.

Finally, in October 2016, housing managers moved the Martins out temporarily and replaced their windows. State inspectors only learned about the case when Martin called seeking assistance.

By the time Rainbow resident Dana Sackett left a voicemail on a state lead hotline last year, inspectors knew the street well.

“Another Rainbow row site at Ft. Benning,” one wrote.

Sackett, a mother of two, is a PhD toxicologist. Her husband is a lawyer with the Army Rangers. After moving to the street, she spotted paint hazards and complained.

Villages of Benning initially declined to fix them, state files say. Then mold spread in an upstairs closet, and repairs for that problem went ahead while Sackett and her girls temporarily relocated. She demanded the workers address paint hazards, too.

The landlords hired workers to scrape lead paint off the home. They lacked the required safety certifications and protective gear to conduct lead abatement, Army records show.

The Army says it has since taken steps to ensure all Benning workers dealing with lead paint are properly certified.

Last fall, Villages of Benning told Sackett the work was done and her family could move back. She found paint scrapings and dust, the records show, and refused to return unless housing managers could show the home wouldn’t poison her girls.

Days later, Villages of Benning declared the property a “contamination area” and had Sackett sign papers promising not to enter. “It was one of the most stressful things I’ve been through,” she said.

Six months later, 103 Rainbow Avenue stood vacant. At another Rainbow Avenue home, paint was peeling from doors and a window by a child’s bed. A bathroom faucet leaked brown goop. A pizza-sized black mold bloom covered a ceiling. Outside, old paint crumbled from window frames, steps and a garage.

Lab testing at Columbia showed four of six paint samples from the home exceeded lead safety standards, including one from beside the child’s bed. The family reported the findings to Benning officials and is now moving.

‘SILENCED VERSION’

About a mile from Rainbow Avenue lies Perkins Village, a cluster of drab mid-century homes that isn’t supposed to exist.

Benning’s development plans called for all 180 Perkins houses to be razed years ago and replaced with 228 new Mission-style homes. Just a handful of the old homes were torn down, and none of the new ones have been built. Reuters tested two homes in Perkins Village. Both had visibly deteriorating paint with lead above federal safety standards.

The Benning contractors wound up building just over half of the 3,185 new homes that were promised back when the housing was privatized. As a result, records show, nearly three out of five Benning homes still contain lead.

The Army said it’s satisfied with the results of the building project. It said it doesn’t know whether any children living in Benning’s older homes have tested high for lead in recent years. The base’s data system can’t track where children with elevated lead levels were living when they were tested.

Darlena Brown said Villages of Benning wasn’t aware of JC’s poisoning, either, until she spoke up.

Court records show the Browns’ lawsuit was settled earlier this year. As a precondition of settlement talks, the Benning contractors demanded the Browns stop communicating with Reuters and stop mentioning the dispute publicly.

This January, on the private Facebook page where military families share their worries, Darlena Brown revised an earlier post. It still recounts her son’s poisoning but omits any mention of the landlords.

She changed the title, too. It’s now called “Darlena’s Story (The silenced version).”

SEE ALSO: I took portraits of combat-tested soldiers at Fort Bliss — and they told me their incredible stories

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