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Archive for the ‘Guest Post’ Category

Registration for SOF Week is Now Open

Thursday, March 7th, 2024

The registration for SOF Week 2024 is officially open! Taking place on 6-10 May in Tampa, Florida, this can’t-miss event brings together over 15,000 attendees from across the global SOF landscape for engaging programming, crucial conversations, new connections, and community building. Register your place today to receive our early bird pricing.

Benefits of attending SOF Week:

• Gain visibility into the future of SOF capabilities direct from senior leader briefs

• Discover the latest technology innovations that can expand SOF advantage
• Build meaningful relationships with fellow SOF members and partners
• Take advantage of professional development opportunities
• Honor SOF heroes past and present at the USSOCOM Awards Ceremony and Dinner

With more square footage, more programming, and more ways to engage, SOF Week 2024 is poised to be the biggest and best SOF event yet. Mark your calendars today and be part of this can’t-miss community gathering in Tampa this May.

Please note: This is for attendees. If you are an exhibitor, please don’t register here, exhibitor registration will follow shortly and you’ll be contacted by your POC.

TIHK – New Escape Stick 3.0

Thursday, March 7th, 2024

This update to one of our staple product enables this super innovative tool to assist escape in the hairiest of situations. It includes a diamond rod saw (can cut metal, plastic, wood, and fibrous materials) – upgraded from thin metal saw and carbide coated steel road! As well as an integrated handcuff key at the end of the rod saw, utilizing the saw as the handle.

Both tools are hidden inside a rubber sleeve instead of the hard plastic handle of the V2.0 — for those that recall this was how the V1.0 was secured (but no diamond saw!).

Escape from double lock cuffs, zip-ties, duct tape, rope, packing tape and pretty much anything else!

Check out the Escape Stick 3.0 with its limited time pricing of $29 each.

3d MLR| At the Forefront of Marine Corps Innovation

Thursday, March 7th, 2024

MARINE CORPS TRAINING AREA BELLOWS, HI —

With modernization and pacing threats challenging the Marine Corps to improve in new ways, 3d Marine Littoral Regiment remains at the forefront of innovation. One such advancement in the regiment’s training methodologies and warfighting tactics is the Littoral Reconnaissance Team concept. From January 18-25, 2024, Marines with 3d Littoral Combat Team spent a week at Marine Corps Training Area Bellows, experimenting with the LRT concept.

“An LRT is a low-signature, easily deployable team that uses multi-discipline sensors and collection sources for reconnaissance and counter-reconnaissance in the littoral zone,” said Sgt. Jordan James, chief scout with 3d LCT. “During this field operation, the LCT used an LRT to test day and night data collection and share assets on naval vessels.”

Within an LRT are Signals Intelligence/Ground Electronic Warfare Marines, Scout Marines, a Small Unmanned Aircraft Systems team, and a Maritime Surveillance Team. Most of these elements are already organic to 3d LCT’s intelligence section. The sections traditionally work independently, but when employed together they can enhance 3d LCT’s capabilities in a way that better fits the requirements of stand-in force operations.

“We are using the landward portion of the littorals to establish an expeditionary base and conduct operations for maritime domain awareness in support of the Joint Force’s ability to conduct sea denial and sea control.”

CWO4 Corey Sullivan, Signals Intelligence and Electronic Warfare Operations Officer with 3d MLR

The Marines also made sure to have real targets by working with the U.S. Coast Guard to have vessels pass by at random throughout the day – their transportation routes and hull sizes unknown to the Marines. When the vessels were detected, the LRT locked-on visuals, sent the Stalker VXE30 sUAS to get surveillance imagery, used artificial intelligence object recognition to identify the type of vessel, pinpoint its exact location, and surveyed radio activity using electromagnetic spectrum radars – all while broadcasting live updates to its higher headquarters.

“A Marine can see a ship on the horizon and launch the sUAS in a couple of minutes or less,” said Sullivan. “These programs cut down the time required to relay information, thereby speeding up the sensor-to-shooter kill web.”

“We may be using computer programs and artificial intelligence to reduce some of our workload, but it still takes diligence and determination from the Marines,” said James. “We’re here, in the Pacific, ready to answer any call to action that comes.

In doing this training and having this skill and mindset, 3d MLR expands the potential of the LCT and pushes the bounds of what it means to be “in the air, on land, and sea.”

Story by Sgt Jacqueline Parsons | 3rd Marine Division

8th Annual Whiskey & War Stories Operation Lightning Dawn

Wednesday, March 6th, 2024

This year is Operation Lightning Dawn, the rescue of Captain Richard Phillips from Somali pirates in 2009.  This is our first year relocating to Virginia Beach, VA. Several of our guest speakers who participated in our past Whiskey & War Stories ™ will be attending. Our past events included:

• Operation Thunderhead
• Operation Urgent Fury
• Operation Ivory Coast/Kingpin
• Operation Eagle Claw
• Operation Acid Gambit

Gala Night Details

Who: The Silent Warrior Foundation

What: 8th Annual 8th Annual Whiskey & War Stories ™ Fundraising Gala and Auction

Where: Marriott Virginia Beach Oceanfront Reserve

When: Saturday, April 13, 2024, doors open at 5 pm. Event ends at 10 pm.

Why: Fundraising to support the Silent Warrior Foundation

VIP Night Details

When: 5pm to 9pm Friday, April 12, 2024

Where: Military Aviation Museum, 1341 Princess Anne Road, Virginia Beach, VA 23457

What: An informal gathering with our guest speakers over food and drink at the military aviation museum in Pungo. A flight demonstration of the museum’s AD-1 Skyraider and unlimited tour of the museum for all attendees. Attendees can indulge in cigars after the flight demo.  

A chartered bus will leave for the Aviation Museum from the Marriott Virginia Beach Oceanfront Resort and depart from the museum at 9 pm for those who’d like the convenience of not driving. 

silentwarriorfoundation.com

The Silent Warrior Foundation is an all-volunteer 501c3 charity serving SOF veterans and their families. SWF funds Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy, provides scholarships, service K9’s through HomefrontK9 and emergency assistance.

Link to purchase tickets: 8th Annual Whiskey & War Stories | Auction Frogs

Contact info@silentwarriorfoundation.com to donate auction items or inquire about sponsorship.

COMAFSOC Delivers Closing Remarks at SAWS

Wednesday, March 6th, 2024

HURLBURT Field, Fla. —  

Lt. Gen. Tony Bauernfeind, Commander of Air Force Special Operations Command, delivered a keynote speech concluding the Special Air Warfare Symposium on Feb. 29, 2024 at the Fort Walton Beach Convention Center.  

SAWS is an annual symposium focused on special air warfare, SOF aviation mission sets, their partners, and enabling technologies.  The symposium, co-sponsored by AFSOC, included keynotes and panels composed of AFSOC senior leadership, leaders from across the U.S. and international SOF aviation enterprise and industry experts.  

Throughout the two-day symposium the attendees were challenged to reimagine how SOF aviation needs to adapt from several decades of counterterror focused operations to a world of increasing strategic and geopolitical instability and competing with peer adversaries.  

Bauernfeind explained how 2023 AFSOC Strategic Guidance focuses the command on the need for accelerated transformation to meet the demands of combatant commands, theater air components, and theater special operations commands, with a focus on developing people as the key to success. 

“It’s going to be our people, our Air Commandos, that make this happen,” said Bauernfeind.  

From establishing an Outreach Squadron to assist the Air Force Recruiting Service in exciting young Americans to join the military, to reducing initial qualification training by 50% while investing in augmented and virtual reality to enhance training, to developing a robust certification, validation and verification process that includes high-end readiness training and develops a culture of mission command before Air Commandos deploy, AFSOC is taking steps to develop its people throughout their service.  

Bauernfeind also outlined changes to better align AFSOC’s Wings with regional challenges and encompass all four mission areas: SOF mobility, SOF strike, SOF ISR and SOF air-to-ground integration.  

“All of our wings will be mission oriented with all our AFSOC capabilities. They will be theater focused… as we align our wings to get after regional problems for the joint force.” 

This includes establishing Theater Air Operations Squadrons focused on long-stare intelligence, multi-domain operations, air advising, and developing concepts of operations for the toughest problems. 

Looking to the future fight, Bauernfeind stated, “We know our Air Commandos had been wildly successful over the last few decades, but how are we going to ensure success for tomorrow?”  

Initiatives like developing modern high-speed vertical take-off and lift platforms to build out the ability to operate independent of traditional runways, returning focus to electromagnetic spectrum operations and enhancing precision effects through systems like small cruise missiles and reimagining how the MQ-9 is utilized through the Adaptive Airborne Enterprise. 

Bauernfeind concluded with why he is confident AFSOC will be successful in all these efforts.  

“We have an amazing team whether it be active duty, guard, reserve, our government civilians—that are focusing on pathfinding for the future, and I am excited to see what our people can do.” 

By Maj Jessica Gross, Air Force Special Operations Command Public Affairs

Tactical Tuesday: Women’s History Month Giveaway from Vertx

Tuesday, March 5th, 2024

To celebrate Women’s History Month, Vertx has teamed up with industry leaders SIG SAUER and Premier Body Armor to introduce an exclusive giveaway that celebrates and empowers the resilience of women. This specially curated package was made for the modern woman who values security, style, and independence, with a retail value exceeding $1,580.

Prize package includes:

– SIG SAUER Rose 9mm Pistol
– Vertx Transit Sling with Premier Body Armor Panel
– Vertx Lena Everyday Fanny Pack with Premier Body Armor Panel
– Vertx Hayes High Rise Jeans
– Vertx Women’s Valley Flannel

Help us celebrate Women’s History Month by sharing this awesome giveaway with friends and family.

Click here to enter

Must be 21 or older and a legal U.S. resident to enter. Void where prohibited. Winners subject to background checks and must comply with all federal, state, and local laws.

Project Convergence Capstone 4 Works to Integrate Joint, Multinational Defense Systems

Tuesday, March 5th, 2024

CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. — Pushing forward on Army Futures Command’s mission of multinational and joint interoperability, Project Convergence Capstone 4 is experimenting with the capabilities of joint and multinational layered air and missile defense systems.

PC-C4 is an Army-hosted, joint and multinational experiment that will inform the integration of modernization capabilities, such as layered defense systems that will increase the effectiveness of weapon systems and force protection.

Layered defense’s primary goal during PC-C4 is to experiment with sensor capabilities from unmanned drones and manned aircraft that send data to translating nodes that interpret it for anti-aircraft interceptors.

“Layered defense means we will see different weapons against targets from the defended area,” said U.S. Air Force Maj. Morgan Huttes, the director of operations from the 134th Air Control Squadron. “This way the coalition can increase the probability of kill while maximizing our weapons efficiency.”

The experiments at Capstone 4 will focus on implementing these strategies as a team of Multinational and Joint forces.

“During PC-C4, we are truly integrating all the services,” Huttes said. “We are using a U.S. Marine Corps F-35 as the sensor, with a U.S. Air Force unit as the battle management node translating the data so that the target can be shot by an Army missile.”

The F-35 Raptor is used by the U.S. Marine Corps, the U.S. Air Force and U.S. Navy, as well as many NATO and foreign allies, such as the United Kingdom, Australian and Japanese militaries.

“We use the F-35 out here when we’re looking for all kinds of vehicles and ships,” said U.S. Marine Corps Maj. Matteo Occhipinti, a Naval Aviator who has flown with the F-35 extensively. “The big leap in technology is the sensors, and then the data links and the fusion between the two.”

The Joint and Multinational qualities of these experiments are essential to maximizing the sensors, battle management nodes, and weapons, which complicates the enemy’s targeting and eliminates a single point of failure.

“It comes down to fighting for information because even in exercises, there are unknown factors,” Huttes said. “It comes down to teaching your airmen, Soldiers and marines, regardless of rank, to fight for the information they need at their level to help inform commander’s intent and increase their lethality.”

These experiments will increase joint and allied participation as we ensure the Army, as a part of a joint and multinational force, can rapidly converge effects across all domains and help create the Army of 2030.

“The more we do this together, the easier it becomes in reality,” said British Army Lt. Col. Callum Lane, the U.K. exchange officer within the U.S. Army Joint Modernization Command, in charge of multinational integration and interoperability. “And the more agile we become, not just as institutions in our own right, as nations in our own right, but as a partnership of institutions and nations.”

Story by SPC Jackson Gray

Photos SSG Wheeler Brunschmid, SPC Hunter Grice, SPC Christ-Claude Mowandza-Ndinga, SPC Nathan Smith, and PFC Syrr Parker

MATBOCK Monday: Part 1 of 3 – Breaking down the Graverobber Assault Medic (GRAM) Kit

Monday, March 4th, 2024

We are going to start with the Graverobber™ Assault Insert, which is where the shoulder straps are attached to. This panel insert converts to a skeleton med panel, which can be clipped or slung using the thin padded shoulder straps.

Remove to design a custom panel that is interchangeable for different packing requirements or easily change bags with the versatility of a panel insert. Without any medical gear, this weighs 10oz (283 grams)

Over the next few weeks, we will show how you can integrate this insert into the GRAM and then into the sustainment. Please reach out to sales@matbock.com or check www.matbock.com if you have any more questions.