Phantom Lights

Staccato 2011 Introduces the All-New Staccato HD P4X

July 4th, 2026

Optimized for professional use, the latest Staccato 2011 HD pistol features a steel frame, full-size grip and compensated barrel for enhanced control and shootability.

FLORENCE, Texas – (July 4, 2026) – Staccato 2011®, creator of the 2011® pistol platform and a leading developer of precision firearms, ammunition and shooting facilities, today announced the introduction of the Staccato HD P4X, the brand’s most advanced mission-ready pistol.

Built on the same 4-inch compensated platform as the widely popular Staccato HD C4X, which is optimized for concealed carry with a compact aluminum frame, the HD P4X features a precision-machined steel frame and full-size grip, making it ideal for professional deployment, duty belts and overt carry.

Key features of the Staccato HD P4X include a 4-inch DLC flush-fit compensated barrel that reduces muzzle rise and improves shootability, a 4140 DLC steel frame that absorbs recoil and improves shot-to-shot consistency, and a full-size Staccato HD grip that enhances stability and capacity with 18-round magazines. The result is a duty-ready pistol built for control and hard use, delivering the performance and confidence the Staccato HD line is known for.

“Every Staccato product is built to elevate human performance, and the HD P4X is the clearest expression of that yet,” said Paul Smith, Senior Vice President of Product at Staccato. “We engineered a hybrid full-size grip, 4” compensated pistol that delivers more control, more rounds and the kind of shootability the world’s most elite professionals demand. This configuration was one of our most requested, and the result is the most shootable, reliable, mission-ready handgun we’ve ever built.”

The Staccato HD P4X, like all models in the Staccato HD line, represents the most advanced evolution of the 2011 pistol platform. It’s crafted in Texas with American steel and offers exceptional versatility to match its performance. Strategic design features include ambidextrous controls with a dual-sided safety and slide stop, a reversible magazine catch, Glock®-pattern magazine compatibility, an active firing pin block, and Staccato’s HD HOST™ optic-mounting system.

Additionally, every Staccato HD pistol delivers proven performance by passing the federal Ballistic Research Facility standards, a rigorous set of protocols developed to simulate real- world defensive encounters that are the benchmark for evaluating handgun ballistic performance.“Everything we make is aimed at elevating the standard,” Smith added. “From the materials and technology to our development and testing teams, every piece works to give Staccato customers the reliability and shootability they count on.”

The Staccato HD P4X is chambered in 9x19mm and will be available in three configurations, with a starting MSRP of $3,599. It will be offered through Staccato authorized dealers beginning July 13, 2026.

To learn more about the Staccato HD P4X or to locate an authorized Staccato dealer, visit www.staccato2011.com or follow @staccato2011 on social media.

Party Like It’s 1776

July 4th, 2026

This is a big one for the United States…250 years of independence. In this day in 1776, the formal text of the Declaration of Independence was ratified by the Continental Congress. A total of 56 delegates from the 13 colonies signed the document which still inspires freedoms around the world.

I was around for the bicentennial celebration in 1976 and everyone was had the patriotic spirit.

Enjoy the day! We earned it!

Silent Professionals Set the Conditions for Red Flag Success

July 4th, 2026

EIELSON AIR FORCE BASE, Alaska — In the brisk Alaskan air, on a steep hillside overlooking the vast terrain, U.S. Army Special Forces Soldiers assigned to 3rd Special Forces Group (Airborne) are preparing for one of the region’s most demanding combat training exercises: Red Flag-Alaska.

For decades, Red Flag-Alaska has provided aircrews with the opportunity to train against realistic threats under contested conditions, building experience and confidence before facing real-world adversaries. Yet while fighter aircraft streak across the sky above the Joint Pacific Alaska Range Complex, another fight begins long before the first jet takes to the air.

Inside a nondescript room on Eielson Air Force Base, Green Berets huddled around maps, terrain imagery and mission graphics covering nearly every available table and wall space. Tactical communications equipment fills the corners of the room while planners refine timelines and routes. A briefing slide advances across a wall-mounted television, detailing the next day’s mission.

The ground force commander spoke with precision, pointing to a route displayed on the screen. It was a surprising shift. Moments earlier, the team had been smiling, joking and laughing with each other. Now, they were all business, shifted into attentive and deliberate professionals. Routes, contingencies and communications plans were discussed with the matter-of-fact tone of a team who had rehearsed the process countless times before. The mission is part of Operation Close Shave, the ground component executed by the Green Berets in support of the large scale combat operations exercise scenario.

While fighter aircraft may be the most visible element of Red Flag, they are rarely the spearhead of the operation, Green Berets shaping the battlefield before they leave the runway.

Before aircraft can operate freely in contested airspace, special operations forces work deep within contested or enemy territory to identify threats, gather intelligence and create conditions that allow the joint force to maneuver. An ODA, or Operational Detachment-Alpha, the foundational unit of action for U.S. Army Special Forces, provides commanders with the information required to help clear a path for the aircraft and paratroopers that follow.

A two-hour trip south, near Delta Junction, brings the ODA to a pothole-filled side road, Denali’s peak reaching out of the horizon like someone painted it onto the sky. Alaska’s natural beauty served as a somewhat dangerous distraction while in the opposing force’s territory; the simulated country borders indicated that the team was well behind “enemy” lines.

A group of individuals on the roadside approached the lead vehicle, the driver became cautious before realizing these were allied counterparts, operators and paratroopers from the Belgian 3 PARA (Regiment). From wary to relieved, all are smiling as introductions were exchanged and the Belgians offered to show the way to the “safe house.” Safe houses act as bases of operations for Special Forces operators; while not necessarily a house in many cases, they act as both a command center, shelter, cover, and concealment from enemy forces and civilian populations, respectively.

This particular safe house, The Alaska Flour Company is a real-world business and working farm that would function as the team’s base of operations for the next week, playing into their scenario simulated cover story as seasonal farm workers in the area; an effort to blend in with the local populace. Equipped with fake IDs and cover stories, the option to fight was only ever considered as a last course of action.

The wooden structure housing the teams was not much more than a long, wide, dark, open corridor used for grain processing, the structure being colder inside than it was out. The Belgians had set up a barrel fire outside to warm their extremities from the frigid interior of the flour plant. One of them said something in Dutch as the others around the fire laughed, stoking the flames. It was a moment of relaxation and comfort before the long days ahead.

Hours later, vivid colors painted the Alaskan sky as the multinational team of special operators moved quietly along a riverbank, carrying the equipment they would need for days of reconnaissance.

The absence of darkness during the far north’s summer nights increased the risk of detection during their no-fail reconnaissance mission. Heavy animal activity in the form of large predator’s leftover meals served as constant reminders of the dangers posed by the wildlife surrounding them. With the high-risk environment in mind, the operators set up fallback positions, established communications with rear command elements and edged toward their objectives.

Using a mix of fieldcraft and technology, the teams split into two-man elements and traversed through thick woods toward the scenario’s air defense objectives.

Through the brush, a fenced-off compound emerged ahead, revealing large mockup integrated air defense systems depicting surface-to-air missile launchers, radars and other mobile air defense equipment. The mock missile launchers hidden among the trees represented exactly the type of threat Red Flag planners wanted the ODA, and their allied counterparts, to confront.

In the exercise scenario, a network of integrated air defense systems, radar sites and command-and-control nodes formed layered barriers, designated to deny access and maneuvering capability to coalition aircraft. These systems force pilots to contend with threats capable of detecting and engaging their aircraft long before they reach critical objectives.

Finding those threats is where special operations provide a critical advantage. Small teams, specializing in operating in hostile, denied and contested environments, infiltrate challenge areas to observe targets, evaluate and/or confirm intelligence and develop a comprehensive picture of the operational environment. The information they collect helps commanders distinguish between suspected targets and verified threats, reducing uncertainty before air assets are committed.

In an era increasingly defined by technological advantages such as satellites, drones and electronic sensors, it may be tempting to assume technology alone can provide every answer. However, modern battlefields remain environments of constant adaptation, where adversaries actively employ camouflage, deception, electronic warfare measures/countermeasures and other techniques designed to obscure themselves and their operations. A target detected by one sensor may prove to be a decoy when observed from the ground. Even the most advanced collection platforms can produce incomplete or conflicting information when confronted by a determined adversary. In the end, commanders often still rely on someone physically confirming at the target site and reporting accurate and timely information.

“The problem with satellite sensors is they have a harder time maintaining eyes on,” said one of the Special Forces Soldier. “If we are able to get behind enemy lines and conduct an operation like this, there’s a constant ground sensor.”

For ODAs, fieldcraft, observation and direct confirmation remain indispensable tools. The ability to physically verify with eyes on a target provide joint forces commanders a level of certainty that technology alone cannot always deliver. In a contested environment, that assurance can mean the difference between a successful air campaign and aircraft flying into unknown threats.

“We are deep behind enemy territory trying to open the air corridor and allow conventional forces to parachute in and gain control of this area,” the Soldier said. “We’re here in support of the main effort, which is the joint force entry of the 11th Airborne Division, so they can jump in, get boots on the ground and begin taking control of key terrain or infrastructure.”

The ODAs remained concealed among moss-covered logs and dense vegetation bordering the clearing, quietly observing and transmitting information while remaining mindful of OPFOR operating in the area.

“No troop transport planes, C-17s or anything like that, can gain access to this airspace to conduct an air operation until these are taken out,” the Soldier declared. For the next several days, reconnaissance and observation remained the primary mission. Operators relied on their advanced knowledge of wilderness survival skills, keeping fire going, supplementing field rations with food gathering and demonstrating basic shelter construction. Despite the constant sunlight, temperatures plunged into the low 30s overnight. Frigid hours bundled in waterproof clothing without a heat source were but a glimpse into the conditions special operations personnel endure during real-world operations.

Although they had not yet encountered OPFOR, the implications of doing so remained top of mind.

“… The risk is detection and compromise,” the Soldier explained. “A mission like this in real life is extremely dangerous.” The Soldier emphasized, in no uncertain terms, just how perilous a task this can be. It was a sobering assessment. But how do operators mitigate that risk? “That’s why we do training like this,” he continued. “To figure out where our gaps are. Figure out where we need to improve. The only way you can infiltrate this deep, in my opinion, is by blending in, maintaining a very low signature and a very low pattern of life.”

During a quiet moment of the perpetual daylight, around 3 a.m., coffee simmered in a portable carafe one operator had carried into the field. A reminder that even among highly trained professionals, caffeine remains less a luxury than a necessity.

It was much the same for the next few days — observing and reporting — though it was hardly monotonous in the beautiful Alaskan wilds, especially when broken up by the appearance of wandering wildlife in the distance.

The day of the culminating event arrived, having moved to a mountainside near Fort Greely. Another Special Forces Soldier sat at an observation post overlooking an FLS, or field landing strip. Although runway-sized, was more or less a stretch of dirt that had been flattened and cleared of the pervasive brush that blanketed the rolling terrain.

The Soldier could see the opposing forces’ vehicles moving along the strip, ant sized from the nestled vantage point amongst the thick shrubbery adorning the mountainside. Crouched still while waiting for word on a strike mission, he discussed the role of the Belgian counterparts.

“So they’re going to be at the north end of the [drop zone]. Their leadership right now is co-located with [ground force commander] out here at the MSS,” the other ODA team member said, referring to the mission support site. “But they’re going to be at the north end of the DZ and they’re going to try to take a sniper shot to take out a guy with a man-portable air defense. He’s carrying an SA14. Going to try to find him… and then that way we can bring in [combat air support] and we can facilitate close air support, and help enable the joint forcible entry by the 11th Airborne Division.”

Put simply, the mission was to remove the threat preventing joint force aircraft from entering the area of operations — a task that was certainly easier said than done. Less than an hour later, the answer arrived with the roar of an F-16 Fighting Falcon overhead as it rolled in on its targets.

With the air defense systems neutralized, the spread-out teams gathered on the sloping overlook to watch the dozens of transport aircraft — American C-130s and Belgian A400Ms — begin to drop paratroopers by the score along the FLS. The ground forces’ mission was complete. Fighter jets and transports successfully reached the objective, and as the crack of the infantry’s weapons rang out over the peaks, the hasty exfiltration back to the vehicles began.

But the TACP, or tactical air control party, had one last surprise in store for the rest of the ODA. Confirming the transport craft had cleared the airspace, they radioed yet again, this time to the F-16s still circling the area and requested a “show of force.” While discussing what grid coordinates to give, one of the ODA members grinned and pointed. The unsuspecting range control contractors had been parked in their pickup trucks nearby for quite a while, breaking the illusion of the war game with their necessary presence. Still smiling, the TACP suggested, “How about them?”

Moments later, the F-16s screamed directly overhead, buzzing by the unsuspecting 4x4s, the frames of the trucks rattling as the contractors within suddenly jolted from their seats.

Descending toward the mountain pond vehicles were parked next to, Alaska revealed one last pleasant surprise. Grazing across the small body of water, a herd of caribou had come into the open, looking up and regarding the team with vague interest.

In the distance, the roar of jet engines was still audible, and as the ground forces’ role in Red Flag came to a concluded, the forces in the air were now free to dominate the battlefield, the conditions for success already set by the operators on the ground.

By SGT Nicholas Riccio

Freedom Atlantic Introduces FPV Training Drones

July 3rd, 2026

Freedom Atlantic now offers three 5″ FPV drone packages designed to meet you your mission.

1. Build it yourself. Receive the kit, follow the training path, and learn every component along the way.

2. Ready-to-fly. We assemble and configure the system so it’s ready to fly right out of the case.

3. Full immersion. Choose the location and our team will train you to build, program, train, and fly your FPV platform.

Ready to fly.

Ready to build.

Ready to become an operator.

Learn more at www.freedom-atlantic.com

#FreedomAtlantic #FPV #DroneTraining #UAS #MilitaryTechnology

SOFWERX – Warfighter Radio Industry Day

July 3rd, 2026

SOFWERX and USSOCOM PEO-TIS are hosting a Warfighter Radio Industry Day August 11 to 13 at SOFWERX to gain a better understanding of the current market and the technical capabilities of a Key Leader Radio (KLR), an Intra Team Radio (ITR), and a Team Networking Device (TND).

USSOCOM has a critical need for reliable and secure communications for dismounted warfighters operating in a variety of challenging environments, including those that have denied, degraded, intermittent, and low-latency communication operational areas. Key Leader Radios (KLR), Intra Team Radios (ITR), and Team Networking Devices (TND) provide a multi-platform communications strategy enabling resilient, self-healing, and autonomous solutions for voice transmission, data transmission, and networking capabilities at the team and leadership levels.

This effort is for informational and planning purposes only and does not constitute a Request for Proposal (RFP).

U.S. Companies Only. Submit NLT 15 July 2026 11:59 PM ET.

events.sofwerx.org/peo-tis-radio-industry-day

BDS Tactical Gear Partners with Qore Performance to Bring ICEFLASK Cooling Canteens to Exchange and Selected MCX Stores Overseas

July 3rd, 2026

Oceanside, CA and Knoxville, TN — July 2, 2026 — BDS Tactical Gear has partnered with Qore Performance, Inc. to launch a complete, mission-ready hydration and thermoregulation setup directly onto the shelves of military Exchange (AAFES) and selected Marine Corps Exchange (MCX) locations overseas.

By pairing the Qore Performance ICEFLASK® canteen with the BDS Tactical Gear Inner Cummerbund Winglet system, this partnership puts wearable cooling, heating, and hydration right where service members shop on post, making it immediately accessible for standard plate carrier setups.

“We at BDS Tactical Gear are excited to build on the long-term relationship with Qore Performance, bringing quality American-made products to the brave patriots that defend our nation every day,” said Mike Bornfriend, President / CEO of BDS Tactical Gear.

System Capabilities & Performance Specs

The combined system integrates directly into service members’ existing plate carrier setups, providing high-retention utility without adding bulky, shifting pouches to the exterior of the kit.

Qore Performance ICEFLASK®: A rugged, 0.5L (16.9 oz) rigid hydration canteen designed to be frozen or filled with hot water to provide active temperature management alongside hydration. It is built specifically to match the slim form factor of a standard PRC-152 tactical radio, allowing it to slide into space-saving radio pockets rather than heavy, traditional round bottle pouches.

BDS Tactical Gear Inner Cummerbund Winglet Pouch: Built using heavy-duty hook-and-loop fields to mount securely underneath a plate carrier’s cummerbund in a ‘radio wing’ configuration. The premium elastic construction offers tight, zero-slop retention. This multi-role pouch is highly versatile, engineered to securely carry the ICEFLASK®, standard NATO radios, or standard 30-round M4-style 5.56 magazines.

Immediate Global Availability

The ICEFLASK® and BDS Tactical Gear Winglet setups are available now. Service members can find them stocked at the following Exchange and selected MCX locations overseas and stateside:

Stateside Locations:

  • JBSA-Lackland (South Troop)
  • Fort Cavazos (Hood AMCSS)
  • JAC Coleman Troop
  • Fort Sill (Cons Quarry Hil)
  • JBLM-Lewis (New AMCSS)
  • BLSC AMCSS
  • Fort Riley (Riley AMCSS)
  • Fort Liberty (Bragg Army MCS)
  • Fort Carson (Carson AMCSS)
  • Fort Leonard Wood (Leonardw AMCSS / Trp St 744)
  • Joint Base San Antonio (JBSA-Sam AMCSS)
  • Camp Atterbury (Atterbury AMCSS)
  • Nellis AFB (Nellis AFMCSS)
  • NASJRB AFMCSS

OCONUS & Forward Deployed Locations:

  • Camp Humphreys, South Korea (Hump MCSS)
  • Camp Buehring, Kuwait (KW Buehring Z2 Store)
  • Camp Arifjan, Kuwait (KW Arifjan Z6 Store)
  • Vilseck, Germany (Vilseck AMCSS)
  • Novo Selo Training Area, Bulgaria (BG Novo Selo)
  • Al Udeid Air Base, Qatar (QA Al Udeid MCSS)
  • Camp Bondsteel, Kosovo (Kosovo MCSS)
  • Andersen Air Force Base, Guam (JRM-Andersen Main St)

Selected Marine Corps Exchange (MCX) Overseas Locations:

  • Camp Hansen (MCX Hansen MMCSS / Branch St)
  • Camp Schwab (MCX Schwab MMCSS)
  • Camp Foster (MCX Foster MMCSS)
  • Camp Kinser (MCX Kinser MMCSS)

Beyond these exchange locations, Qore Performance thermoregulation equipment is available at BDS Tactical Gear’s brick-and-mortar stores in Oceanside and Twentynine Palms, California, and online at BDStacticalgear.com. The complete ICEAGE ECOSYSTEM can be found at qoreperformance.com.

 

DFND: Supporting the Warrior Athlete

July 3rd, 2026

For the past decade, DFND, a Berry Compliant performance company has focused on supporting those who protect us. U.S. active-duty military personnel are among the most highly conditioned athletes in the world, but the physical demands placed on them result in high rates of musculoskeletal injuries (MSKIs) and chronic sleep deprivation. This is where DFND delivers measurable impact.

Through our proprietary, patented graduated compression technology and Recovery IR Sleepwear, DFND helps improve recovery, reduce injury risk, and enhance sleep quality for the modern warrior athlete. Since implementing DFND compression solutions, MSKI rates have been reduced by as much as 30%.

Our Recovery IR Sleepwear technology works naturally with the body’s recovery processes by helping regulate body temperature — one of the key drivers of restorative sleep and physical recovery.

Over the last several years, the Army’s Holistic Health and Fitness (H2F) program has become the gold standard for comprehensive soldier readiness and recovery. H2F demonstrates the Army’s commitment to taking care of its men and women by prioritizing injury prevention, recovery, sleep, and long-term performance optimization.

DFND aligns directly with this mission.

The MSKI Crisis in the Military

Musculoskeletal injuries remain the leading cause of medical visits and limited-duty days across the U.S. military.

• Service members experience approximately 25 million limited-duty days annually due to MSKIs.

• MSKIs significantly reduce combat readiness and cost the Department of Defense billions of dollars every year.

• Across U.S., Canadian, and British Armed Forces, MSKI rates range from 40–76%, with repetitive lower-body injuries being the most common.

In a study conducted within a U.S. Special Forces unit:

• 98% of soldiers reported reduced calf soreness and cramping while wearing DFND compression socks.

• 98% reported reduced swelling and soreness the following day after wearing recovery compression tights.

• 92% experienced partial or complete soreness reduction overall.

Graduated compression has also been shown to help reduce:

• Shin splints

• Achilles tendinitis

• Lower-leg pain from prolonged standing

• Fatigue associated with strenuous activity

Sleep & MSKI Risk

The Dose-Response Relationship

Sleep deprivation dramatically increases injury risk among warfighters.

A study involving 7,576 U.S. Army Special Operations soldiers found that soldiers sleeping four hours or less per night were 2.35 times more likely to suffer an MSKI compared to those sleeping eight or more hours.

Additional systematic reviews found:

• Lower sleep duration was consistently associated with musculoskeletal symptoms over both short-term and long-term periods.

• Poor sleep quality independently increased current MSKI risk among U.S. Army Rangers, even after controlling for age.

Why Sleep Deprivation Drives Injury

Insufficient sleep directly impacts physical performance and recovery by:

• Reducing muscle strength

• Slowing muscle repair

• Decreasing endurance

• Impairing cognitive function and reaction time

Research has also shown that short-term sleep deprivation can reduce testosterone levels by 25–30%, limiting the body’s ability to repair tissue and recover from physical stress.

When reduced sleep is combined with increased training demands, the likelihood of muscle injury rises significantly due to accumulated fatigue and decreased recovery capacity.

The Scope of the Problem

• MSK injuries result in more than 2 million medical encounters annually

• They account for approximately 10–12 million limited-duty days

• Only 1 in 3 active-duty soldiers consistently receives adequate sleep

Compression recovery systems and quality sleep work best together:

• Compression supports passive recovery during rest periods

• Sleep amplifies the body’s natural repair and regeneration processes

Together, they create a powerful injury-prevention and recovery strategy.

The Financial Impact of MSKIs

MSKIs are not only a readiness issue — they are also a massive financial burden.

When a soldier is injured and unable to complete training, the Army loses its entire investment in recruiting, training, and development.

For example:

• A stress fracture during Basic Combat Training can cost the government $50,000+ per soldier with no operational return.

• Non-combat MSKIs cost the U.S. military more than $3.7 billion annually.

• In one year alone, the Army spent $434 million in direct medical costs treating MSKIs.

Embedding injury-prevention specialists into Initial Entry Training programs has already reduced sunk training costs by as much as $20 million annually simply by preventing MSK-related attrition.

Long-Term Consequences

The long-term effects of MSKIs extend far beyond initial injury:

• MSKIs contributed to nearly 70% of Army medical disability discharges

• More than 90% of disability discharges among first-year enlisted soldiers from 2010–2015 were MSKI-related

• MSKI disabilities account for 44% of all service-connected disabilities among compensated Global War on Terrorism veterans

Why DFND Matters

DFND exists to improve readiness, recovery, and resilience for the warrior athlete.

Our technologies support the exact priorities the military is now emphasizing through programs like H2F:

• Injury prevention

• Recovery optimization

• Improved sleep

• Enhanced performance

• Reduced medical costs

• Increased force readiness

By combining patented graduated compression with advanced IR recovery sleepwear, DFND delivers a scalable, non-invasive, and performance-driven solution to one of the military’s most expensive and persistent problems.

FirstSpear Friday Focus: Frogskin Collection

July 3rd, 2026

America’s original camouflage is back. FirstSpear is proud to introduce the Frogskin Collection, a limited-run colorway drop featuring the iconic five-color disruptive pattern first developed for the U.S. Marine Corps in 1942. The pattern that concealed Raiders in the Pacific is now available across seven of FirstSpear’s most proven pieces of kit, each built to the same standard the brand has always held, now wearing a pattern with genuine history behind it.

Products Offered in Frogskin:

General Purpose Pocket, Medium – A modular, MOLLE-compatible storage pocket built for mission-essential gear, sized to mount cleanly on any platform without adding bulk.

Duffel – A heavy-duty, high-capacity bag built from rugged 500D nylon for range days, travel, and everything in between.

Loose Ammo Bag w/ ID Pocket and Legend Window – A purpose-built solution for transporting and organizing loose ammunition, with an integrated ID pocket and legend window for fast, positive identification.

Structured Gadget Bag – A rigid-frame organizer bag designed to protect and provide quick access to electronics, tools, and sensitive mission equipment.

Summit Pockets – Low-profile, multi-purpose storage pockets engineered for organization and durability.

MultiMag Rapid-Adjust™ Pocket – A multi-magazine carrier with FirstSpear’s Rapid-Adjust retention system, allowing on-the-fly tension adjustments without tools or reconfiguration.

Sherpa – A heavy-duty range and transport bag with removable interior organizer panels, built to adapt to your gear loadout and hold up under hard use.

The Frogskin Collection is a limited release. When current inventory is gone, there are no plans to bring it back. If you want it, now is the time. FirstSpear is the premier source for cutting-edge tactical gear for military, law enforcement, and those who train.

For more information visit First-Spear.com.