SIG SAUER - Never Settle

Sneak Peek – Platatac x Snugpak Badger Insulated Hoody in Tigerstripe

October 7th, 2022

Platatac has engaged with Snugpak to offer a version of the Badger Insulated Hoody in Tigerstripe. Coming soon.

FirstSpear Friday Focus: Wool ACM 100

October 7th, 2022

As temperatures begin to drop, check out FirstSpear’s Advanced Clothing Material Wool lineup. This week we’re featuring ACM-Base 100 layer.

• Warm Merino Wool
• Wicks away moisture
• Low profile pile
• Lightweight

The FS Beanie will keep your dome warm, wick away moisture, and has just enough extra material to double up over your ears when the temperatures drop. It is constructed with flat seams for a great fit under helmets. There is also low profile pile in key areas to attach IFF. Experience light high-performance Merino.

Built with a tight, open mesh design for breathability, the Neckie is a tube that can be worn as a turtleneck, hat or even a hasty balaclava. The mesh design aids in preventing your goggles from fogging up when you wear it over your mouth. Low profile pile attachment points in key areas let you put on IFF as required. With a variety of uses and extremely lightweight, the Neckie is something you don’t want to go outside the wire without.

The Hooded Field Shirt is a generously cut lightweight garment built for long-term comfort on extended adventures or daily wear on the job. This shirt is made from ACM Base 100 wool and offers a generous cut, a large hood, low profile cuffs, and thumb holes. Leveraging the naturally occurring performance benefits of wool, the Hooded Field Shirt is a technically advanced package blending comfort, performance, and fit. Use it as a hooded base layer or wear it all on its own. Either way, don’t leave home without it! Made in the USA.

Visit FirstSpear to find all the gear and apparel for America’s Warfighter.

Joint Warfighters Train in LVC Environment Prioritizing Agility and Sustained C2 Capabilities

October 7th, 2022

The 705th Combat Training Squadron, also known as the Distributed Mission Operations Center, executed exercise VIRTUAL FLAG: Battle Management in a synthetic, joint combat environment, ensuring joint operational and tactical warfighter readiness in the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command area of responsibility at Kirtland Air Force Base, New Mexico, and eight distributed locations.

The DMOC used its live, virtual, and constructive, or LVC, environment capabilities to connect simulators and live aircraft in a dynamic battlespace to challenge air, land, and maritime combatants in the USINDOPACOM AOR and incorporating multiple U.S. Air Force, U.S. Space Force, U.S. Navy, U.S. Marine Corps, and U.S. Army platforms.

“For VIRTUAL FLAG: Battle Management, the DMOC replicated a combat environment, prioritizing agility and sustained command and control capabilities integrating joint warfighters to meet our pacing challenge in the USINDOPACOM AOR,” said U.S. Air Force Maj. Christopher Hawzen, 705th CTS VF exercise director, Kirtland AFB, New Mexico.

Joint military participants traveled from across the U.S. to train and integrate with geographically separated units in scenarios that executed mission-type orders with degraded communications and limited air operations center, or AOC, connectivity.

“The virtual environment allows GSUs to train together for contingency operations or combat without leaving homebases while simultaneously integrating multiple high-end training events,” said Scott Graham, 705th CTS exercise director, Kirtland AFB, New Mexico.

More than 262 operators were trained & 339 readiness training events were accomplished, building experience and familiarizing Airmen, Guardians, Sailors, Marines, and Soldiers in a joint combat environment.

VF: Battle Management’s use of LVC training improved air combat training systems enabling all-domain air dominance in combat against peer- and near-peer adversaries.  LVC training also expanded combat operations training by enabling rapid execution of multiple scenarios over a limited time frame; the rapidly adaptable environment encourages learning and builds experience without the time or cost of an exclusively live exercise.

“VIRTUAL FLAG is a great opportunity for us to work with our joint partners face to face and distributed to gain a better understanding of the capabilities we can bring to bear in a joint fight. This exercise gives us a chance to practice tactics, techniques, and procedures that could be used during our next deployment and future war,” U.S. Navy Commander Phillip Boice, Carrier Strike Group NINE deputy operations officer for commander/Navy VF lead, North Island Naval Air Station, California.

The flag-level exercise involved E-3C Airborne Warning and Control Systems, E-8C Joint Surveillance Target Attack Systems, RC-135V/W Rivet Joints, MQ-9 Reapers, C-17 Globemaster IIIs, E-2 Hawkeyes, P-8 Poseidons, MH-60 and MH-60R Seahawks, AN/GSQ-272 SENTINEL weapon systems and the U.S. Marine Corps Multi-Function Air Operations Center and U.S. Air Force Control and Reporting Center.

“One thing never changes: the DMOC enables warfighters to sharpen their combat skills in a live, fast-paced, and realistic joint training environment,” said Hawzen.

VF also integrated kinetics with non-kinetics effects to practice wartime tactics in a degraded environment.  One of the major non-kinetic players in VF 22-4 was the cyberspace element which integrated cyberspace to support the defense of an AOC and a CRC.

The cyberspace defensive force was composed of members from the 834th Cyberspace Operations Squadron, 92d Cyberspace Operations Squadron, 552d Air Control Networks Squadron mission defense team, and the U.S. Marine Corps’ 9th Communication Battalion.  The teams defended against Advanced Persistent Threats, or APTs, whose objectives were to gather critical tasking orders and data from the AOC and to deny, delay, disrupt, destroy, and manipulate, or D4M, the AOC during operations.  The defensive units hunted and cleared the APTs on the network so that the cyber attackers could not achieve their objectives.

“Integrating cyberspace into flying exercises like this supports the education of the flying community as to what capabilities and threats are present within the cyberspace domain.  It also helps our cyberspace forces expand their knowledge of the joint fight and how it integrates into the other domains of warfare, preparing both sides for the joint concept of all-domain warfare,” said U.S. Air Force Capt. Travis Britton, 834th Cyberspace Operations Squadron Weapons and Tactics chief, Joint Base San Antonio, Texas.

The 805th Combat Training Squadron’s Shadow Operations Center-Nellis with direction from the 318th Cyber Operations Group, Detachment 2, planned, organized, and executed red team actions during VF.  The red team included Air Force and Marine Corps personnel assigned to execute actions according to desired learning objectives from the 552d ACNS’s E-3 Sentry AWACS mission defense team and 834th COS cyber protection team.

“The ShOC-N stands as the vanguard beacon of efforts to engage current and future pacing challenges. In this regard, performing red team actions within the VIRTUAL FLAG: Battle Management construct helped ShOC personnel develop penetration testing skills that are vastly needed during experimentation within the confines of our Air Force Battle Lab,” said U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. Shawn Finney, 805th CTS/ShOC-N operations officer, Nellis AFB, Nevada.

Guardians from the 310th Space Wing, an Air Force Reserve unit, honed their skills while providing warning of inbound enemy missiles, analyzing degradation of global positioning signals caused by jammers, as well as sharing and analysis of electronic intelligence and overhead persistent infrared data from satellites, and providing valuable information that helps the warfighter understand the threats they face on the battlefield.

“VIRTUAL FLAG exercises provide a superb opportunity to train space operators in a joint environment,” said Walt Marvin, 392d Combat Training Squadron exercise planner, Schriever Space Force Base, Colorado.  “Our space element learned their role very quickly and ensured that support from the space domain played an integral part in mission accomplishment on the tactical battlefield.”

During VF, air battle managers and tactical air control party, or TACP, Airmen traveled to Kirtland from across Air Combat Command, Pacific Air Forces, and U.S. Air Forces in Europe to participate in the experiment executed the third Tactical Operations Center – Light experiment iteration.  The experiment was designed to continue development of future C2, concepts intended to expedite kill chains and improve distributed battle management.

“The 705th CTS team has been extremely supportive in our efforts to leverage their capabilities and expertise to experiment with these concepts.  Integrating within VIRTUAL FLAG: Battle Management provided exposure to unique tactical problem sets and an amplified intensity from our previous experiment iterations, which enabled the team to make strides in our collaborative experimentation,” said U.S. Air Force Maj. Dustin Nedolast, 505th Command and Control Wing, Detachment 1 experiment director, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.

VF: Battle Management executed 8-hour vulnerability windows allowing C2 over time and enabling participants to work through force and battle management challenges across all five domains from start to finish. 

“Although we have been conducting VIRTUAL FLAG exercises for more than 21 years, the mission and execution have changed dramatically,” said U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. Michael Butler, 705th CTS commander, Kirtland AFB, New Mexico.  “We’re constantly evolving to meet the needs of joint and coalition warfighters, adding elements, changing threats – anything that a pacing challenge may present, we want to address at the DMOC.”

The exercise also included the use of condition-based authorities, which enabled tactical C2 units to train mission commanders, contested logistics problem sets, and a dedicated mission planning cell that operated concurrently with execution.

“Technology, equipment, and participants change. The DMOC’s use of LVC training environment prepares joint and coalition warfighters for any pacing challenge,” said U.S. Air Force Col. Aaron Gibney, 505th Combat Training Group commander, Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada.

Deb Henley

505th Command and Control Wing

Public Affairs

SMX Awarded Competitive $2.3B U.S. Africa Command ARIES Task Order

October 6th, 2022

HERNDON, Va., Oct. 03, 2022 — SMX, a leader in Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Cyber, Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (C5ISR), next-generation cloud, and advanced engineering and information technology (IT) solutions, announced today that it has been awarded a prime contract to continue its support of U.S. Africa Command (USAFRICOM) ISR mission operations and intelligence analysis. With an estimated value of $2.3 Billion (inclusive of option periods), the task order, titled “AFRICOM Reconnaissance Intelligence Exploitation Services (ARIES),” was competed and awarded on GSA’s ASTRO Data Operations Pool contract (see https://aas.gsa.gov/astro/).

Over 30 companies were eligible to bid on the ARIES task order. Dedicated to equipping decision makers with accurate, relevant and timely intelligence information to achieve continued decision superiority across the vast and complex AFRICOM area of responsibility, this new award has a seven-year period of performance and will allow SMX and its teaming partners to extend their support through 2029 if all option periods are exercised.

ARIES, like its predecessor task order, is a complex, multi-tenant task order providing cutting-edge full lifecycle intelligence solutions through cloud-enabled data insights and decision analytics. ARIES’ objective is to improve the United States’ ability to observe, orient, decide and act faster and more effectively on the information provided through an innovative system of systems intelligence collection and dissemination eco-system.

“We are honored and excited to have been selected to continue our support of and partnership with USAFRICOM and GSA FEDSIM. We look forward to building upon our world-class C5ISR solutions in support of the critical missions USAFRICOM executes. We are grateful to our employees and teaming partner subcontractors who work alongside our clients wherever and whenever the mission demands,” said Peter LaMontagne, Chief Executive Officer.

Dana Dewey, President of the C5ISR business unit, commented, “SMX and our industry partners will continue to work seamlessly to identify and deliver emerging technologies and innovative approaches that will accelerate mission execution on this critical National Security requirement. We are thrilled to deliver collection modernization and non-traditional ISR solutions that will leverage multi-modal all source data insights, curated to mission need, both remotely and with edge compute technologies.”

DroneShield Announces Launch of Regional NSW Testing Facility

October 6th, 2022

DroneShield is pleased to advise that it has launched a dedicated testing facility in regional New South Wales. The facility will significantly streamline the testing and release of advanced drone detection technologies in development by the Company.


Image: DroneSentry system at DroneShield test site facility in regional NSW

This is DroneShield’s first dedicated testing facility in both New South Wales and Australia.

Oleg Vornik, DroneShield’s CEO, commented “As we continue to grow our advanced drone detection and defeat technologies, there is an increasing need for a locally based test site, that meets our operational requirements as well as being compliant with Government regulations.”

“This permanent facility enables fully remote testing by our engineering team, with real time data shared with our engineering headquarters in Sydney. This enables faster development cycles of our AI-enabled radiofrequency, image recognition, and sensorfusion technologies, which are pushed out to our subscribed customers on a quarterly release cycle.”

“Importantly, Australia is a key customer market for DroneShield, and having a dedicated local facility is expected to further enhance our work with Australian customers, both from a sovereign capability perspective and a way to conduct customer demonstrations.”

Galvion Introduces New Nerv Centr SoloPack II Battery at AUSA

October 6th, 2022

Galvion, a world leader in the design and manufacture of integrated, soldier-worn power and data management solutions, with operationally proven pedigree in NATO countries, has expanded its Nerv Centr® power provision capability with the introduction of its new SoloPackTM II Lithium ion rechargeable battery. The battery, along with Galvion’s full suite of Nerv Centr® power and data provision and management solutions, and next generation Batlskin® head systems, will be on display at AUSA 2022, booth #1732.

Operations today depend on more charged equipment than ever before, and the complexity of sustaining soldiers on the battlefield expands and shifts with every new technology. Radios, NVGs, GPS, smart phones, laptops, drones, and other surveillance equipment all demand significant power, and the ability to manage that power effectively is mission-critical. Galvion’s new SoloPack II builds on the widely adopted and field-proven functionality of the original SoloPack battery, while offering a number of additional features to further support the modern soldier.

Small, lightweight and energy-dense, the next-generation SoloPack II offers 140Wh of energy, (40% more power storage capacity than SoloPack), while maintaining the familiar, soldier-centric form factor users expect from the Nerv Centr suite of products. SoloPack II fits into a magazine pouch for ease of storage and weighs only 1.65lbs (750 grams). A flexible flying lead connects in any orientation, and the next-generation NettWarrior connector allows faster charging and additional current flow, while remaining backwards compatible with standard US NettWarrior and NATO STANAG 4695 for ease of integration and improved logistic sustainability on the battlefield. The SoloPack II has state-of-charge display for real-time remaining capacity at the press of a button, convenient bottom contact charging and can be recharged while in-flight and connected to Galvion’s Squad Power ManagerTM (SPM) which is certified safe-to-fly.

Kristen Lomastro, President of Active Systems, said: “The SoloPack II is a prime example Galvion’s unyielding commitment to enhancing the operational effectiveness of those who are out in the field, protecting us. We listened to our end-users – they wanted more power, but without the additional bulk and weight – and we delivered a solution that offers longer mission capability, while reducing logistics and minimizing weight burden.” She added: “The less soldiers have to think about while out there, the safer the mission, and that is what drives everything that we do here.”

The higher capacity SoloPack II is designed to support operational power needs for missions of up to 24 hours, while the original 98Wh SoloPack battery supports short-duration missions of up to 12 hours. With expected availability in early 2023, Galvion’s 140Wh SoloPack II rechargeable battery offers users an additional scalable power solution to suit any mission needs.

North Idaho Law Enforcement Industry Day This Sunday

October 6th, 2022

Vertac Training / G9 Defense North Idaho Law Enforcement Industry Day 10/09/2022

Restricted to Law Enforcement and Military Personnel only

• Barrier Blind G9 Defense Pistol and Rifle ammunition testing on Windshields, Drywall & Vehicles

• Terminal Ballistic Gel testing in conjunction with the various barriers

• Body Armor Demos, Precision Rifle & Surveillance Tripod Kits

Genesis Arms GEN-12 Live Fire Demo

• FREE FOOD!

For location and time please contact U.S. Tactical Supply @ 208-457-7320 or email sales@ustacticalsupply.com  

Now Shipping – PMAGs for the SIG CROSS

October 6th, 2022

TThe PMAG 5 7.62 AC and PMAG 10 7.62 AC are perfect for use with the SIG CROSS. Featuring PMAG GEN M3 technology and a unique, self-lubricating, high-visibility follower that includes a feed ramp that enables ejection port loading, you can take ultimate reliability on your next backcountry hunt with your lightweight rifle.

Get them today at Magpul.com or your local retailer.