SIG SAUER - Never Settle

BFG Monday: The Enemy – The Weight of Water

April 27th, 2026

Issued load is only part of the problem. The real burden shows up in the field.

After rain, river crossings, or sustained humidity, standard loadcarriage systems absorb and retain water. According to research published in Sage Journals, Soldiers are routinely “exposed to full clothing saturation” in operational environments. That moisture doesn’t just disappear, it adds weight, increases fatigue, and degrades performance.

U.S. Army photo by Spc. Jessica Scott, www.dvidshub.net/image/6652157/jungle-operations-training-course-train-up-25th-infantry-division-lightning-academy

The load our Soldiers, Sailors, Marines, and Airmen carry already places significant strain on the body. When that load becomes saturated, the impact compounds. Studies referenced in PubMed Central indicate excess weight directly reduces mobility, slows decision-making, and degrades marksmanship under stress.

Photo source: www.war.gov/Multimedia/Photos/igphoto/2001186769

Current MOLLE systems – built with layered webbing, fabric backings, and metal hardware – trap water. Once wet, they stay wet. That added weight was not part of the mission at SP, but it becomes part of the fight.

There is a better solution.

The Helium Whisper attachment system from Blue Force Gear eliminates water retention at the source. Built with ULTRACOMP, a hydrophobic, high-performance laminate, Helium Whisper does not absorb water. Instead, it sheds moisture immediately, maintaining consistent weight and eliminating unpredictable load increases.

Helium Whisper pouches provide as much as 50% reduction in base weight compared to legacy systems and unlike traditional MOLLE, they do not gain weight in wet conditions. What the warfighter deploys with is what they carry throughout the mission.

This translates directly to combat effectiveness:

Improved mobility
Reduced fatigue
Faster decision-making
Increased lethality


Modernization efforts continue to address weight reduction, but water retention remains an overlooked vulnerability. Helium Whisper closes that gap.

Reduce the weight and upgrade to Helium Whisper. Save our warfighters.

For units seeking to increase survivability and operational performance through reduced load carriage by upgrading to Helium Whisper, contact the Blue Force Gear Military Department or visit BlueForceGear.com.

Accelerating Transformative Technologies Aids Commanders’ Readiness Across the Pacific

April 27th, 2026

SCHOFIELD BARRACKS, Hawaii (April 21, 2026) – With instrumental support from industry partners, the 25th Infantry Division accelerated its digital kill chain in just three months using advanced AI-driven technologies.

As part of the Army’s Next Generation Command and Control (NGC2) “commercial first” effort, the division joins the 4th Infantry Division (4ID) to prototype modern technologies that make data more usable and accessible to commanders across all the warfighting function technologies.

NGC2 provides a “full stack” capability ecosystem, comprised from the top-down of Apps, Data/AI, Infrastructure, and Transport capabilities. Integrating AI into the NGC2 stack will enhance the Army’s competitive advantage, however, Army leaders emphasize that at no time will commanders lose their autonomy while conducting missions.

“AI will continue to be a decision aid, and accelerate the decision cycle, not replace commanders, who will make the final judgement calls,” said Brig. Gen Shane Taylor, Capability Program Executive Command and Control Information Network (CPE C2IN).

Through a series of operational exercises, Ivy Stings for the 4ID and Lightning Surges for the 25th Infantry Division (25ID), Soldiers continue to identify in real time which technologies aid the mission, and which need improvement.

“The Soldier’s feedback is the most important product we generate,” said Lt. Col. Andrew Batule, 25ID Innovation Officer. “The Soldiers in the TOC [Tactical Operations Center] and on the gunline are the ones who tell us, in real time, if this is making us more lethal. Their direct input is what informs every single software update and ensures we are building the right tools for the fight.”

During the time between Lightning Surge 1 and Lightning Surge 2, division leadership, artillery (DIVARTY), and technical staff stated they achieved a digital end-to-end workflow that accelerated the fires process by integrating four key commercial capabilities within the NGC2 stack: An advanced data platform supported by an AI mission system; modern, automated target workflow software; enhanced electronic warfare capabilities and 5G data transport.

“From a technology perspective, ‘commercial first’ means the tech is available to everybody,” Taylor said. “It’s only as good as our ability to rapidly inject it, train it, field it and then replace it with the next solution right behind it.”

This full-speed-ahead iteration and integration approach is ensuring the Army arrives at best-of-breed commercial solutions tailorable to any unit’s mission, including the contested environment across the Pacific theater’s tyranny of distance.

“We have to move out very quickly and iterate fast,” said Maj. Gen. James Bartholomees, 25ID commanding general. “That’s exactly why our model is—experiment with it, train with it, and then deploy it forward into the terrain with our allies to both assure them and deter our adversaries.”

Refined data, modern fires app

The division’s call for fires chain consists of forward observers identifying a potential target and transmitting target data to the Fires Direction Center, allowing the fires direction officer to calculate if, when, and how to engage kinetic fires.

Industry teams and division personnel collaborated to accelerate this process by establishing a prototype, AI-aided data platform integrated with the Army’s new app-based, data-centric fires command and control system, called the Artillery Execution Suite, or AXS.

During the event, forward observers used hand-held devices to extract data from the edge sensors – both on the ground and in the air – which was ingested into the data platform and then simultaneously into AXS. New algorithms calculated the specific type of data ingested from the sensors to publish to the DIVARTY common operational picture.

“We are now at a place where we are feeding all the data into the data platform,” said Maj. Rebecca Borrebach, 25ID G6 data officer. “Our data is accessible, and now an application can subscribe to the data it needs.”

Controlling the electronic spectrum

Before the forward observers can confidently share information on a potential target, the commander must conduct an Electromagnetic Warfare (EW) assessment to identify and understand what signals an adversary may be transmitting to interrupt the mission.

“Almost all warfighting functions need access to EW data,” said Cpt. Curtis Hart, assistant product manager for the Electronic Warfare Planning and Management Tool (EWPMT).

“Aviators want to know where they can fly without their GPS navigation being degraded. Artillerymen want to know where they can employ precision-guided munitions without interference. Ground maneuver forces want to know where they can expect radio transmissions to be unreliable,” he said.

NGC2 allows this data, previously only readily available to the CEMA [Cyber Electromagnetic Activities] cell, to be widely disseminated and used by these sister warfighting functions, he said.

“With the eventual addition of AI, I feel confident that the data my EW team aggregates will inform commanders and their staffs throughout the division,” said CW2(P) Kris Perez, Electromagnetic Warfare Technician, 25ID. “This will enable them to make more timely, informed decisions, which will increase the division’s lethality.”

5G-Transport Diversity

Unlike the 4ID, which is prototyping NGC2’s full stack, the 25ID is primarily prototyping the data and application software on top of its previously fielded modern “C2 Fix” transport and infrastructure. However, the NGC2 prototype effort provided flexibility for the unit and industry teams to experiment with desired capabilities, based on the division’s missions, including the need to operate in the degraded environments often encountered in the Indo-Pacific.

“Our focus for Lightning Surge 2 was the ‘first mile, last mile’ challenge,” said Lt. Col. Adam Brinkman, 25ID G6. “We used what we learned from our last event to upgrade the launchers and guns with better radios and private 5G, which gives the commander more resilient options to get a fire mission from the sensor all the way to the shooter at the tactical edge.”

For the first time in the Army, private 5G served as the primary pathway to travel from the fires direction officer to the guns, with modern satellite radios available as the secondary transport.

“We are implementing incremental lessons learned from the 4ID, where its personnel viewed the fires chain using 5G in one of its previous NGC2 Ivy Sting events,” said Lt. Col. Clarke Brown, product manager for Network Modernization, Capability Program Executive Command and Control Information Network (CPE C2IN). “Pushing the capability to actually transport the call for fires down to the field artillery Soldiers was an exciting accomplishment for the unit.”

Conclusion

The Lightning Surge and Ivy Sting exercises continue to leverage data and AI technologies that deliver information across all warfighting functions to enhance commanders’ decision making.

According to Bartholomees, the Lightning Surge events are more than exercises; rather, they are “rehearsals” as he leads his division into multi-national Indo-Pacific exercises to train in real-life electromagnetic, cyber, distance and denied environment challenges.

“We exercise in the Hawaiian Islands across the archipelago so we can then project those forces into the first island chain within the Philippines,” Bartholomees said. “Our next Lightning Surge series will be in conjunction with Philippines joint and combined exercises, in which we’ll be able to put all this together and really test out the concepts that Next Generation C2 is delivering.”

By Kathryn Bailey, CPE C2IN Public Communications Directorate

Team LionStrike Joins Team Forces as a Platinum Level Partner

April 26th, 2026

Team LionStrike has joined Team Forces as a platinum-level partner, reinforcing its commitment to the U.K. Armed Forces community through sport, challenge and adventure.

Team Forces is a U.K. charity supporting serving personnel, veterans and families through sport, challenge and adventure to improve health, well-being and recovery. Team LionStrike will headline-sponsor the British Army Motorsport Association (BAMA) motorcycling team and support Forces’ motorsport athletes during the 2026 superbike season.

Formed by GM Defence together with its subcontractors BAE Systems and NP Aerospace, Team LionStrike is responding to a requirement to deliver an OEM-backed, U.K.-based solution to the U.K.’s Light Mobility Vehicle (LMV) programme—supporting potential U.K. jobs and export opportunities.

“Joining Team Forces at platinum level underlines our commitment to the U.K. Armed Forces community,” said Gilbert Nelson, Vice President, International Sales & Marketing, GM Defence U.K.

“We chose Team Forces because it delivers tangible social value through armed forces sport, challenge and adventure—an authentic give-back to serving personnel and veterans that aligns with our role as headline sponsor for Army Motorsport and our performance-driven vehicle capabilities.”

The partnership also provides a community-facing platform that reflects Team LionStrike’s industrial investment in the U.K., linking its next-generation mobility solutions with the people and programmes they support.

“Welcome to Team Forces,” said Major General Lamont Kirkland, CEO of Team Forces. “Joining at platinum level is a significant commitment from Team LionStrike. We look forward to working together to deliver measurable impact for our military community—and meaningful engagement and exposure in return.”

The partnership will be felt most directly in Army Motorsport, where Team LionStrike’s backing will help sustain and grow a high-performance programme that showcases the Army’s skill, innovation and resilience on and off the track.

“We are delighted to welcome Team LionStrike and grateful for their investment in Army Motorsport,” said Colonel Rich Hall, MBE, Head of Partnerships for Army Motorsport. “Their support strengthens a programme that reflects the Army’s values and technical excellence. Together, we can broaden youth engagement, improve our storytelling and better connect our riders, engineers and communities—creating more opportunity and visibility for Army Motorsport than ever before. Thank you.”

Snake Eater Tactical Announces Simple Sling Mod 2

April 26th, 2026

Snake Eater Tactical announces the Simple Sling Mod 2, a purpose-built patrol rifle sling engineered for law enforcement officers, military personnel, and prepared civilians. The Simple Sling Mod 2 emphasizes rapid adjustability, secure weapon retention, and streamlined performance in dynamic environments. The quick-adjust system allows for fast length changes under stress, supporting efficient rifle handling during vehicle operations, transitions, and hands-on situations. Full length adjustability allows the sling to be cinched down tight along the rifle for snag free deployments from vehicles without the need for additional bungee or elastic bands for storage.

Constructed in the USA using Berry-compliant materials, the Simple Sling Mod 2 is optimized for durability without unnecessary bulk. Compatible with AR15 and M4 platforms, as well as AKs and traditional hunting rifles. Open ended design allows the Mod 2 to be used with any 1” sling mounting hardware including fixed or integral swivels.  A variety of mounting options are available in our store.

The Simple Sling Mod 2 is available for individual purchase as well as department-level and unit-funded acquisitions. Quantity discounts are offered for agencies and military units seeking to standardize equipment across patrol or training elements. With a focus on reliability, simplicity, and field-proven function, the Simple Sling Mod 2 delivers a practical solution for professionals who depend on their equipment in operational environments.

Simple Sling Mod 2, Speed, modularity, simplicity, adaptability.

SHOP SLINGS

SHOP MOUNTING HARDWARE

Congressman Pat Harrigan Introduces the Special Operations Forces Concealed Carry Act to Extend Concealed Carry Rights to Elite Military Veterans

April 26th, 2026

WASHINGTON, D.C.—Today, Congressman Pat Harrigan (NC-10) introduced the Special Operations Forces Concealed Carry Act, legislation that extends federal concealed carry authority to both serving and veteran special operations forces whose firearms training and marksmanship standards match or exceed those of retired law enforcement officers.

“Federal law already trusts retired police officers to carry concealed nationwide. That makes sense. But it makes no sense that an active or retired SEAL or Green Beret, someone who spent a career mastering firearms under the most demanding conditions in the world, has no equivalent recognition under federal law,” said Congressman Harrigan. “This bill fixes that. It does not create new rights or weaken any safeguard. It simply extends an existing, proven framework to the warriors who have earned it more than anyone.”

“Atlas Rescue enthusiastically supports this legislation recognizing Special Operations veterans for their unique skills and service to our country. This recognition strengthens our ability to deploy highly trained operators in the fight against human trafficking, enabling us to more effectively bring that expertise to missions that protect the vulnerable and dismantle trafficking networks,” Sean Williamson, Executive Director ATLAS Rescue.

The Special Operations Forces Concealed Carry Act amends 18 U.S.C. Section 926C, the statute that currently grants concealed carry authority to qualified retired law enforcement officers, to also cover qualified special operators. Eligible veterans will receive permanent, nationwide concealed carry authority with no annual firearms requalification requirement, while remaining fully subject to all existing federal firearm restrictions. The bill covers honorably discharged servicemembers from paygrade E5-E9, W1-W5 or O1-O10 with verified service in Army Special Forces, the 75th Ranger Regiment, Delta Force, Navy SEALs, Marine Corps Scout Snipers, Reconnaissance Marines, MARSOC operators, and Air Force Combat Control, Pararescue, Special Reconnaissance, TACP, and Special Operations Weather. The legislation also directs the Department of Defense and the Department of Veterans Affairs to establish a photographic identification program within 180 days of enactment, and requires the Department of Justice to issue guidance to law enforcement agencies nationwide ensuring uniform recognition of qualifying credentials.

Congressman Harrigan is urging his colleagues to support the Special Operations Forces Concealed Carry Act and honor the service of America’s most elite warriors.

This press release was issued on 16 April.

Gun Tote’n Mamas Returns to A Girl and A Gun 2026 National Conference as Diamond Sponsor

April 26th, 2026

NORTHBROOK, Ill. – April 21, 2026 – Award-winning Gun Tote’n Mamas® (GTM), the leading provider of women’s protection solutions, is proud to appear as a diamond sponsor of the 2026 A Girl and A Gun (AG & AG) National Conference. The conference will take place in Grand Junction, Colorado, April 30 – May 3, 2026 and is officially sold out. 

The AG & AG National Conference will be packed with powerful training sessions led by top-tier instructors, inspiring keynote speakers, and access to cutting-edge gear. GTM is proud to be aligned with AG & AG while supporting their four pillars: Education, Recreation, Competition and Community.  

GTM has been setting the industry standard for quality concealed carry handbags since 2009. This ultimately reflects its commitment to offering reasonably priced, high quality and multi-tasking concealed carry bags without compromising on design, construction and leather quality. GTM handbags are designed by women, for women and loved by firearm instructors, law enforcement and security personnel. GTM takes pride in the extensive testing conducted by instructors across the country to ensure the concealed carry leather bags meet the highest standards for ease of draw and functionality. GTM rigorously tests each concealed carry leather handbag using leading firearms. 

“GTM believes deeply in the power of education, community and training. This event brings together women who are committed to growing their skills, building confidence and supporting one another in a meaningful way,” said Claudia Chisholm, president of GTM. “It’s more than just time on the range—it’s about fostering a network where knowledge is shared, friendships are built and personal empowerment is strengthened. We’re honored to stand alongside these women and support a mission that aligns so closely with our own.” 
 
“We are incredibly grateful to Gun Tote’n Mamas for supporting our National Conference in such a practical and meaningful way,” says Robyn Sandoval, President & CEO of A Girl & A Gun. “By equipping every attendee with a purpose-designed crossbody carry bag and sponsoring training that addresses the realities of off-body carry, they are helping women build real-world skills, confidence and control in how they choose to carry.” 

GTM will also showcase its latest concealed carry handbags and everyday personal protection solutions at the conference retail village on April 30. Attendees will have exclusive access to AG & AG x GTM merchandise that will be available for purchase as well as conference-only giveaways. To learn more about the nationwide women’s club, visit agirlandagun.org. To find more information about the AG & AG National Conference, visit www.agirlandagun.org/conference/

As a longtime champion of women’s protection, GTM remains committed to creating functional, stylish solutions that support confidence and preparedness.  

GTM remains committed to prioritizing women’s protection. For more information, visit gtmoriginal.com or call 847-446-0700 Ext. 105. 

BRAKER Breakthrough: New Air-Delivered Bunker Busting Warhead Tests Successfully

April 26th, 2026

PICATINNY ARSENAL, N.J. – In a significant leap forward for battlefield technology, U.S. Army Infantry Drone Operators have successfully tested a new warhead designed to be delivered by an unmanned aerial system (UAS).
The live-fire demonstration of the Bunker Rupture and Kinetic Explosive Round (BRAKER), which took place at a Redstone Arsenal in Alabama on March 26, comes only weeks after the initial design and rapid prototyping of the system, showcasing the Army’s accelerated approach to innovation in the face of evolving threats.

VIDEO BELOW:

The Army continuously transforms by using the latest technologies for warfighting advantage, and ensures that the force is lethal, modern and ready. The development of this air-delivered munition directly supports that mission as well as two senior leader priorities in Readiness and Transformation.

SLOW-MOTION VIDEO BELOW:

The BRAKER project, led by a team from the U.S. Army Combat Capabilities Development Command (DEVCOM) Armaments Center and Project Manager Close Combat Systems (PM CCS), a project office under the U.S. Army Capability Program Executive Ammunition and Energetics (CPE A&E), aimed to create a lightweight, powerful, and lethal warhead that could be deployed from a small, agile drone.

“Our Picatinny team went from concept to live-fire in two weeks,” said Col. Vincent Morris, PM CCS. “BRAKER proves our ability to rapidly develop and safely deliver devastating effects from small unmanned aircraft systems (sUAS). We are now creating the architecture with Picatinny Common Lethality Integration Kit (CLIK) and the small universal payload interface (sUPI) for industry to scale this critical warfighter advantage.”

The Picatinny CLIK is a safe and effective method for integrating lethal payloads with UAS platforms, designed and developed by DEVCOM Armaments Center engineers.

The rapid development-to-testing timeline of BRAKER was made possible by the Army’s emphasis on additive manufacturing, also known as 3D printing.

Beginning in early March, Armaments Center engineers began design, explosive pressing, housing manufacture, and integration of the warhead to be used on a low-cost and expendable one-way attack drone.

Shortly thereafter, transfer and compatibility tests were conducted at Picatinny and approximately a dozen warheads were assembled, with one being tested on a makeshift bunker on one of the installation’s test ranges.

After proving worthiness and validating effectiveness, the prototype warheads departed Picatinny for Redstone where a live demonstration was conducted for U.S. Army leadership.

The successful detonation of the device deployed on a drone on a designated target demonstrates a new and potent capability for the modern warfighter and illustrates how engineers can quickly design, fabricate, and integrate hardware to meet urgent and compelling needs.

“Rapid demonstrations of overwhelming lethality such as BRAKER are attributed to years of continued technology investments and the organic core technical competencies and facilities resident at the DEVCOM Armaments Center,” said Anthony Sebasto, Executive Director, Munitions Engineering and Technology Center.

By Eric Kowal

Army Conducts Historic Large-Scale SERE Reintegration Exercise

April 25th, 2026

FORT RUCKER, Ala. – In a historic first, the U.S. Army’s Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape (SERE) school at Fort Rucker partnered with U.S. Army South from March 14-18, 2026 to successfully execute a large-scale reintegration exercise, simulating the mass return of service members from a large-scale combat operation.

The landmark exercise processed nearly 50 students acting as returned prisoners of war (POWs), the largest reintegration since Operation Homecoming in 1973. It was the first event of its kind to include a mass Phase I medical triage and time-sensitive debriefings for all returnees, moving reintegration planning from a theoretical concept to a practical, battle-tested framework.

Maj. Tracy Beegen, US Army SERE School Psychologist and Chief of Human Factors, was named “Hero of the Battlefield” for her pivotal role in the initiative. Beegen initiated the concept with US Army Southern Command and orchestrated the complex, multi-service effort that brought together personnel from the Army, Navy and Air Force to build a comprehensive reintegration plan from the ground up.

The intense, real-world simulation pressure-tested the entire reintegration process, successfully identifying critical friction points in handling numerous returning POWs. Key outcomes of the exercise included the development of a triage system to assess personnel for a return to duty and the creation of new tactics, techniques and procedures, or TTPs, for intelligence gathering from group interviews.

The event was truly a joint effort, engaging units from the Joint Personnel Recovery Agency, the U.S. Air Force, the U.S. Navy, U.S. Army Special Operations Command and the U.S. Army SERE School. The exercise also trained SERE specialists from the Air Force and Navy, alongside SERE psychologists, for the U.S. Army Western Hemisphere Command Reintegration Team.

As a result of the training, the team is now mission-ready for Phase I and II reintegration in the U.S. Southern Command area of responsibility, as well as for service-level Phase III responsibilities. Furthermore, the Soldiers who were debriefed can now share their valuable experiences with their home units to increase readiness across the force.

Thanks to MAJ Beegen’s initiative and the collaborative efforts of multiple military branches—including the U.S. Army SERE School’s Human Factors and Medical Team—theoretical plans have been replaced by field-tested TTPs. The Department of Army and the broader joint force are now significantly more prepared for the challenges of large-scale combat operations, ensuring a proven, joint process to bring warriors home, reunite them with their families and return them to the fight when able.

By Lisa Foote