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TacMed Tuesday – Innovative Splinting in the Field

Tuesday, December 14th, 2021

The TacMed™ RISE™ is a low profile, rugged splint designed for extremity fractures and pelvic stabilization in the prehospital environment. Born from lessons on the battlefield, it can be intuitively applied under stress to create a straight splint, a 90-degree sprint, or pelvic stabilizer and be easily secured to the patient with items such as an elastic wrap or pressure bandages.

It features dynamic living hinges that allow the splint to collapse for maximum portability and kit space savings while easily form-fitting to the required shape and dimensions for proper upper and lower extremity splinting of fractures. Its one-of-a-kind design is made of a lightweight polymer capable of withstanding surface cleaning and harsh elements, including saltwater, while maintaining its rigidity and durability.

With its compact size, the RISE™ also fits into most individual first aid kits including all standard military-issued IFAKs.

Unique to the RISE™, multiple cutout slots provide you the capability to create a pelvic stabilizer when paired with a windlass or ratcheting tourniquet such as our SOF® Tourniquet. The Committee on Tactical Combat Casualty Care (CoTCCC) recognizes splinting and pelvic stabilization application as a critical step to prevent additional injury before moving a casualty.

Whether you’re on the battlefield or a responder here at home, the RISE™ is an advantageous addition to any IFAK for increasing your medical capability at the point of injury when needed most.

If you are interested in learning more about the RISE™, check it out here: tacmedsolutions.com/products/rise

SCUBAPRO Sunday – The Palawan Massacre

Sunday, December 12th, 2021

The Palawan massacre occurred on 14 December 1944, during World War II, near the city of Puerto Princesa in the Philippine province of Palawan. The Japanese Imperial Army massacred 139 of 150 American POWs. The Palawan compound was named Camp 10-A by the japanese, and the prisoners were quartered in several unused Filipino constabulary buildings. Food was almost nonexistent; the prisoners received a daily meal of wormy Cambodian rice and a canteen cup of soup made from camote vines boiled in water (camotes are a Philippine variant of sweet potatoes). Prisoners who could not work had their rations cut by 30%.

The Japanese unit in charge of the prisoners and the airfield at Palawan was the 131st Airfield Battalion, it was command of Captain Nagayoshi Kojima, whom the Americans called the Weasel. Lieutenant Sho Yoshiwara commanded the garrison company, and Lieutenant Ryoji Ozawa was in charge of supply. Ozawa’s unit had arrived from Formosa in 1942 and had previously been in Manchuria. There was also a Military police and intelligence unit, called the kempeitai at Palawan, they were feared by anyone who fell into their hands because of their brutal tactics.

In September 1944, 159 of the American POWs at Palawan were returned to Manila. The Japanese estimated that the remaining 150 men could complete the arduous labor on the airfield, hauling and crushing coral gravel by hand and pouring concrete seven days a week. The men also repaired trucks and performed a variety of maintenance tasks in addition to logging and other heavy labor

An attack by a single American Consolidated B-24 Liberator bomber on 19 October 1944, sank two enemy ships and damaged several planes at Palawan. More Liberators returned on 28 October and destroyed 60 enemy aircraft on the ground. While American morale in the camp soared, the treatment of the prisoners by the Japanese grew worse, and their rations were cut. After initially refusing the prisoners’ request, the Japanese reluctantly allowed the Americans to paint American Prisoner of War Camp on the roof of their barracks. This gave the prisoners some measure of protection from American air attacks. The Japanese then stowed their supplies under the POW barracks.

On 14 December, Japanese aircraft reported the presence of an American convoy, which was headed for Mindoro, but which the Japanese thought was destined for Palawan. All prisoner work details were recalled to the camp at noon. Two American Lockheed P-38 Lightning fighter aircraft were sighted, and the POWs were ordered into the air-raid shelters. After a short time, the prisoners re-emerged from their shelters, but Japanese 1st Lt. Yoshikazu Sato, whom the prisoners called the Buzzard, ordered them to stay in the area. A second alarm at 2 p.m. sent the prisoners back into the shelters, where they remained, closely guarded.

Suddenly, in a deliberate and planned move, 50 to 60 Japanese soldiers under Sato’s leadership doused the wooden shelters with buckets of gasoline and set them afire with flaming torches, followed by hand grenades. The screams of the trapped and doomed prisoners mingled with the cheers of the Japanese soldiers and the laughter of their officer, Sato. As men engulfed in flames broke out of their fiery deathtraps, the Japanese guards machine-gunned, bayoneted and clubbed them to death. Most of the Americans never made it out of the trenches and the compound before they were barbarously murdered. Still, several closed with their tormentors in hand-to-hand combat and succeeded in killing a few of the Japanese attackers.

Marine survivor Corporal Rufus Smith described escaping from his shelter as coming up a ladder into Hell. The four American officers in the camp, Lt. Cmdr. Henry Carlisle Knight (U.S. Navy Dental Corps), Captain Fred Brunie, Lieutenant Carl Mango (U.S. Army Medical Corps) and Warrant Officer Glen C. Turner, had their dugout, which the Japanese also doused with gasoline and torched. Mango, his clothes on fire, ran toward the Japanese and pleaded with them to use some sense but was machine-gunned to death.

About 30 to 40 Americans escaped from the massacre area, either through the double-woven, barbed-wire fence or under it, where some secret escape routes had been concealed for use in an emergency. They fell and/ or jumped down the cliff above the beach area, seeking hiding places among the rocks and foliage. Marine Sergeant Douglas Bogue recalled: Maybe 30 or 40 were successful in getting through the fence down to the water’s edge. Of these, several attempted to swim across Puerto Princesa’s bay immediately but were shot in the water. I took refuge in a small crack among the rocks, where I remained, all the time hearing the butchery going on above. They even resorted to using dynamite in forcing some of the men from their shelters. I knew [that] as soon as it was over up above, they would be down probing among the rocks, spotting us and shooting us. The stench of burning flesh was strong. Shortly after this, they were moving in groups among the rocks dragging the Americans out and murdering them as they found them. By the grace of God, I was overlooked.

Eugene Nielsen of the 59th Coast Artillery observed, from his hiding place on the beach, a group of Americans trapped at the base of the cliff. He saw them run-up to the Japs and ask to be shot in the head. The Japs would laugh and shoot or bayonet them in the stomach. When the men cried out for another bullet to end their misery, the Japanese continued to make merry of it all and left them there to suffer. Twelve men were killed in this fashion. Nielson hid for three hours. As the Japanese were kicking American corpses into a hole, Nielson’s partially hidden body was uncovered by an enemy soldier, who yelled to his companions that he had found another dead American. Just then, the Japanese soldiers heard the dinner call and abandoned their murderous pursuit in favor of hot food. Later, as enemy soldiers began to close in on his hiding place, Nielson dived into the bay and swam underwater for some distance. When he surfaced, approximately 20 Japanese were shooting at him. He was hit in the leg, and bullets grazed his head and ribs. Even though he was pushed out to sea by the current, Nielson finally managed to reach the southern shore of the bay.

He was one of 11 prisoners of war who escaped the December 1944 massacre on Palawan Island in the Phillippines, where around 140 soldiers died when the Japanese put them into trenches, dumped gasoline on them and set them on fire. He was later a key witness in the War Crime Trials of 1945.

This biography tells the story of Glenn (“Mac”) McDole, one of eleven young men who escaped and the last man out of Palawan Prison Camp 10A. Beginning on 8 December 1941, at the U.S. Navy Yard barracks at Cavite, the story of this young Iowa Marine continues through the fighting on Corregidor, the capture and imprisonment by the Japanese Imperial Army in May 1942, Mac’s entry into the Palawan prison camp in the Philippines on 12 August 1942, the terrible conditions he and his comrades endured in the camps, and the terrible day when 139 young soldiers were slaughtered. The work details the escapes of the few survivors as they dug into refuse piles, hid in coral caves, and slogged through swamp and jungle to get to supportive Filipinos. It also contains an account and verdicts of the war crimes trials of the Japanese guards, follow-ups on the various places and people referred to in the text, with descriptions of their present situations, and a roster of the names and hometowns of the victims of the Palawan massacre.

www.humanitiestexas.org/news/articles/interview-rufus-w-smith-world-war-ii-pow

SCUBAPRO Sunday is a weekly feature focusing on maritime equipment, operations and history.

Rheinmetall MAN Military Vehicles Completes Handover of HX 8×8 Heavy Recovery Vehicles to New Zealand Defence Force

Sunday, December 12th, 2021

Rheinmetall is pleased to announce the official handover of three HX 8×8 Heavy Recovery Vehicles to the New Zealand Defence Force (NZDF) at an official ceremony on November 25th 2021 at the Trentham Military Camp in Wellington, New Zealand.

Colonel Ben Bagley, Director of Land Domain for NZDF attended the ceremony to accept handover of the vehicles from Marty Roelofs, New Zealand Manager at Rheinmetall.

Mr Gary Stewart, Managing Director Rheinmetall Defence Australia, had planned to personally attend this ceremony to mark its importance however was hampered by COVID travel restrictions.

“Although it is very disappointing not to be back in New Zealand for this important event marking the joint achievement of the handover of the HX 8×8 Heavy Recovery Vehicles, we are still very proud of this milestone,” Mr. Stewart said.

“The HX 8×8 Heavy Recovery Vehicle is another example of our commitment to providing sustainable design, development and manufacturing that delivers world leading products and services to the NZDF.”

“Delivery of this enhanced recovery capability, complementing the already delivered Medium-heavy Operational Vehicles fleet, in the midst of global COVID challenges is a testament to the relationship between Rheinmetall and the NZDF.”

The successful delivery of the vehicles to the NZDF provides the New Zealand Army with important new capabilities, with the HX 8×8 Heavy Recovery Vehicles having enhanced recovery and mobility capabilities specifically developed to meet the current and future operational needs of the NZDF.

The purchase of the HX 8×8 adds to the in-service medium and heavy operational vehicle fleet with NZDF. The Medium-heavy Operational Vehicles (MHOV) fleet which was supplied by Rheinmetall has had significant use already with NZDF, in training, operations and disaster relief both in New Zealand and offshore.

The HX 8×8 Heavy Recovery Vehicles delivered to the NZDF are the first in the world to use the Integrated Armoured Swap Cabin which allows easy configuration of the vehicles to suit the operational need. Rheinmetall will also provide a dedicated training team to conduct initial training on the vehicle with the NZDF.

At just 2.55 metres wide, the HX 8×8 Heavy Recovery Vehicle allows greater accessibility and operates exceptionally in difficult terrain with an ability to cross ditches of 1.4 metres wide and cross flooded areas of 1.5 metres in depth, as well as scale gradients of up to 60 per cent and side slopes of 30 per cent.

The HX 8×8 Heavy Recovery Vehicle is also able to operate in a range of radically different environments, operating in cold conditions as low as -32°C and in hot conditions all the way up to 49°C.

MATBOCK Featured On “I Got Hunted By The Military”

Saturday, December 11th, 2021

Three MATBOCK teammates who also used to be Navy SEALs were recently featured on “I Got Hunted By The Military” starring Mr Beast.

FirstSpear Friday Focus: The Sleeper Kicks Off FS 12 Days of Christmas

Friday, December 10th, 2021

This week we are kicking off our 12 Days of Christmas. Make sure to sign up for our email newsletters to get a first look at the 12 days of Christmas.

The first day of Christmas features the Sleeper vest. It can be a stay behind asset or less visible alternative to more overt styles of tactical vests. The Sleeper is designed to wear over or under garments and can be worn alone or in conjunction with other FirstSpear vests. Fits Soft Armor cut to the shape requirements specified for US SOCOM SPEAR BALCS and Hard Armor plates cut to SAPI/ESAPI/SPEAR and Swimmer in the corresponding soft armor size. Medium Plate and Medium Soft Armor fit a medium Sleeper.

Get them before they’re gone— limited quantities, sizes and colors. There will be no backorders once they are gone. Check out the Sleeper at: www.first-spear.com/sleeper

Be the first to know. Sign up for email newsletter at first-spear.com/landing

Blackhawk Adds Heather Miller as Brand Ambassador

Thursday, December 9th, 2021

VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. – December 9, 2021 – Blackhawk, a leader in law enforcement and military equipment for over 20 years, has announced the addition of competitive shooter Heather Miller as a brand ambassador.

Born and raised in south Texas to a military and law enforcement family, Miller’s passion for firearms started at the age of four under the mentorship of her father. Since then, she’s become one of the top female shooters in the United States, representing Team USA at the 2019 International Practical Shooting Confederation (IPSC) World Rifle Championship in Sweden and at the 2018 IPSC World Shotgun Championship in France, where she and her Team took silver.

Over her 12 years of competitive shooting, she has won numerous matches and events. She actively competes in 3-Gun, USPSA and PRS, and is currently moving into more tactical-focused events such as the Tactical Games and the Gryphon Group Rumble.

In addition to Blackhawk, Miller represents Benelli, Lone Star Armory and Staccato, which partnered with Blackhawk in 2020 to develop T-Series Red Dot Sight (RDS) Level 2 and Level 3 retention duty holsters specifically designed for Staccato 2011 handguns.

Outside the competitive arena, Miller has been carrying for defense for 14 years and gives back to her community by teaching concealed carry and firearms clinics, as well as supporting local and national 2A efforts.

“I’m honored to join Blackhawk this year – they’re truly innovating and creating products that meet real-world needs and demands,” Miller said. “Whether you’re law enforcement, military, a tactical guru, or just your average shooter looking for solid gear, Blackhawk has something for you. I can’t wait to see what they come out with next and to be a part of it.”

To learn more about Blackhawk and to see their full lineup of holsters and tactical gear, visit Blackhawk.com.

Unity Tactical Launches Spade Grip Mount

Thursday, December 9th, 2021

UNITY TACTICAL, LLC

Broussard, LA

December 9, 2021

Unity Tactical is proud to announce the release of the Spade Grip Mount for their popular Hot Button line.  Hot Button remote switches are an industry-leading electronic control system that has proven itself on the battlefield and at home.  It provides a solidly mounted and dependable remote switch option for weapon optics, lasers and lights.  Hot Buttons are available to function industry standard electronic devices and can be configured to work with OEM and specialty products. 

The Spade Grip Mount takes all of the features that made Hot Button the industry-leading remote switch and makes it available for crew served weapons. Designed to support a project for B.E. Meyers as a control module for the IZLID laser system, the Spade Grip Mount attaches directly to the fire control on the M2 Browning Machine Gun as well as most other spade grip equipped weapons systems.

Spade Grip Mount conveniently places two Hot Buttons at the top of a grip handle for easy thumb activation.  It can be securely mounted on either right or left side and will not move under hard use.  Spade Grip Mount has several key features:

• Rock solid mounting structure.

• Button Cover / Lockout to prevent ND.

• Dual button paddle activation to fire two devices simultaneously

• Single button activation

Hot Buttons can be built with device-specific leads for almost universal device control.  The Spade Grip Mount for Hot Button redefines the command and control of devices for crew served weapons and can be reconfigured to accommodate other spade grip solutions on various weapon systems at the customer’s request. 

Available now.

www.unitytactical.com

Sitka Arrowhead Continues to Expand US Distribution Network

Thursday, December 9th, 2021

Focused on developing and manufacturing purpose-built technical products for the SOF end-user, Arrowhead Equipment is pleased to announce that Mile High Shooting Accessories is the latest authorised supplier of Arrowhead product to join its global distribution network.

Mile High Shooting Accessories was built on the knowledge, practicality, and evolution of a single concept: Long Range Precision Rifle Shooting. We are a team of veterans, competitors, and enthusiasts driven to provide professional and informative service to our customers. In addition to serving hobbyists, hunters, and competitive marksmen; MHSA has a strong relationship with Law Enforcement and Veterans throughout the country.

For the complete list of authorized Arrowhead partners, please visit SitkaArrowhead.com.