JGSDF Conduct Amphibious Raid Training

05/04/2014

05/04/2014: Soldiers from the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force conduct night amphibious raid training during Exercise Iron Fist 2014 aboard Naval Amphibious Base Coronado, Calif., Feb. 03, 2014.

Iron Fist is an amphibious exercise that brings together Marines and sailors from the 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit, other I Marine Expeditionary Force units, and soldiers from the JGSDF, to promote military interoperability and hone individual and small-unit skills through challenging, complex and realistic training.

Credit: 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit:2/3/14

 

MRF-D Marines Train in Australia

05/04/2014: KANGAROO FLATS TRAINING AREA, Northern Territory, Australia – Marines with 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, Marine Rotational Force – Darwin, perform a live-fire range during a training exercise, here, May 1, 2014.

The Marines with MRF-D will conduct independent and bilateral training with the Australian Defence Force aboard existing ADF facilities during the six-month rotation.


 Credit: MRF-D:5/1/14

Danish Jets Arrive in Estonia

05/02/2014: Danish fighter jets have arrived in Amari Air Base in Estonia for air policing duties over the Baltic states.

According to a Fox news story published April 30, 2014L

TALLINN, Estonia –  NATO has opened its second Baltic air base in Estonia as part of the military alliance’s increased regional air policing mission during the Ukraine crisis.

Estonia’s military says four Danish fighter jets arrived at the Amari air base, some 40 kilometers (25 miles) southwest of the capital Tallinn on Wednesday.

The Royal Danish Air Force F-16 planes will patrol the skies of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania for four months in coordination with NATO fighter jets stationed in Lithuania. After that, Germany will take over the rotational mission.

http://www.foxnews.com/world/2014/04/30/nato-opens-second-baltic-air-base-in-estonia-with-4-danish-fighter-jets-amid/

An AFP story added further details:

The aircraft and a supporting team of 60 people arrived at the Amari air base in the west of the Baltic state at a time when NATO is reinforcing its presence in the region to allay concerns triggered by the Ukraine crisis.

“Your arrival in Estonia and the opening of the Amari base to regular NATO flights increases the security of our region,” Estonian Prime Minister Taavi Roivas said at a ceremony.

“But work on the security of Estonia and Europe is far from over. We are working to make our NATO allies’ stay in Estonia permanent.”

Until now the Western defense alliance’s sole Baltic air base was in Siauliai in northern Lithuania, Estonian defense forces spokesman Roland Murof said.

http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/International/2014/Apr-30/254956-danish-nato-warplanes-land-in-estonia-amid-ukraine-crisis.ashx#ixzz30Y5cN8KF


 Credit Video: NATOCHANNEL:4/30/14

Recent RAF actions are described in the following excerpt from a piece published in The Daily Telegraph on May 2, 2014:

The British Defence secretary also warned Vladimir Putin not to breach a red line around Nato members as he visited British Typhoon fighter jets that have begun patrolling skies over the Baltic States.

Philip Hammond said Russia’s role in the Ukraine crisis showed Moscow “does not accept the norms of international behaviour” and hinted Britain may need to send more reinforcements to Eastern Europe.

He spoke as four RAF Typhoon fighters practised scrambling to intercept Russian fighters as they began a four month deployment at a Lithuanian air base, 50 miles from the Russian border.

The jets from RAF Coningsby in Lincolnshire joined Polish MiG-29s at Siauliai airbase, and will be on standby for the next four months.

The air policing mission is the RAF’s first in the region for ten years as Nato has trebled its Baltic air defences as tensions have escalated with Russia over eastern Ukraine.

Mr Hammond said: “I think President Putin does listen to what’s going on and watches very carefully the reaction that he is seeing.

“The way in which the Nato allies have responded, have provided additional forces, aircraft for Baltic air policing, additional troops for exercises does send a very clear signal about the red line around Nato nations.”

Video at the top of the story is from a March 26, 2014 story.

 

Journey Back to Khe Sanh

04/27/2014

04/27/2014: Introduction by Ed Timperlake

Khe Sanh has an important place in the Vietnam War. 

For Marines, the epic battle is how they remember the name.

In a remote mountain stronghold in 1968, six thousand US Marines awoke one January morning to find themselves surrounded by 20,000 enemy troops.

Their only road to the coast was cut, and bad weather and enemy fire threatened their fragile air lifeline. The siege of Khe Sanh — the Vietnam War’s epic confrontation –was under way. 

For seventy-seven days, the Marines and a contingent of US Army Special Forces endured artillery barrages, sniper fire, ground assaults, and ambushes.

http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/last-stand-at-khe-sanh-gregg-jones/1114264329?ean=9780306821394

For others, a return to Vietnam years later was about honoring Marines who fought at that epic battle and to build toward the future with new American-Vietnamese dynamic, building schools and teaching a new generation.

The great Tennyson Poem “Ulysses” has a passage at the end that captures the experience of former Marines returning to the scene of one of the epic Marine Corps battles in a fighting force forged in combat defending America since our founding.

We are not now that strength which in old days

Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are;

One equal temper of heroic hearts,

Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will

To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.

Like Ulysses and his warriors a group of Khe Sanh Marines and their families made it their mission to strive, seek and not yield.

Their journey back to a distant battlefield to visit a successful school project they created and their former bunkers and fighting holes is presented eloquently by Judd Kinne and in doing so he also pays homage to David Douglas Duncan.

Journey Back to Khe Sanh

By Judd Kinne

Climbing to the top of Hill 881 south, Khe Sanh was not something George Barczay had anticipated doing when he and his wife Kati (who was born and raised in Hungary) decided to tour Vietnam.  It was almost 46 years to the day that George, then a Marine radioman in India Company 3rd Battalion 26th Marines (Capt. Bill Dabney’s Company), had left 881after several months of intense fighting and incoming from NVA batteries in Laos.

George and I and our wives and my 16-year-old daughter had come to Huong Hoa District, Quang Tri Province, near to the Khe Sanh Combat Base to attend ceremonies opening two new kindergartens for which we had donated funds to Saigon Children’s Charity.

The Project

“Eliminating Poverty Through Education” (www.saigonchildren.com)

These schools are located in “Bru”ethnic minority villages, some of the most impoverished in Vietnam today. The idea for this project came to me several years ago when I first met the director of SCC, Paul Finnis and asked if his charity could build schools in Quang Tri province where I too had served in 1967/68 with Kilo Company 3rd Battalion 1st Marines. 

At that time, Paul didn’t feel confident that SCC had the experience or resources to manage building projects far from Saigon where they have successfully operated for more than 20 years. 

However, things changed by the end of 2012, and SCC and I were ready to proceed.  Construction began in August 2013 and the Opening Ceremonies were held on April 15th. 

We had a wonderful few hours with the Bru children, who sang and danced, their parents, teachers and local authorities who contributed not only the land but also cash.

At the start of this project, I wanted to honor my good friend David Douglas Duncan (universally known as “DDD”) who was a Marine in WWII and has had a distinguished career as a photojournalist for LIFE magazine. 

Finally, after considerable negotiation with the Vietnamese authorities (who are very sensitive to references to the “American War”), we received permission to dedicate the schools to DDD and to place two bronze plaques (one in English and one in Vietnamese) above the doors.

DDD

In 1953, David first came to Vietnam to photograph a story for LIFE magazine.  He visited Hanoi and Saigon and concluded that the French would lose the Indochina War, which they did the very next year.  The title of his article was “Indochina All But Lost.” 

Then in late 1967 and 1968, David returned again to Vietnam also taking photos for LIFE.  He covered three areas in I Corps; the Cua Viet River, Con Thien and Khe Sanh at the height of the Tet Offensive, taking photos and writing about Marines.   He published two books (dedicated to his beloved Marines);“War Without Heroes”and“I Protest”.

David now is 98 years old and he and his wife live in Valbonne France.  He would have liked to come to the Ceremony but felt the journey was a bit too arduous.  Nonetheless, he is thrilled that his name is associated with these schools in villages near to Khe Sanh and the bitter fighting he documented 46 years ago.

Khe Sanh Today

Following the opening Ceremonies, George, Kati, their friend Sharon and I began the climb accompanied by a local guide who had been authorized by the Quang Tri security police to take us to the top of 881S.  It was quite a tough hike along a road that has been cut in recent years through pine trees as this area is now a major reforestation reserve. 

Other than some cattle and a lone ranger, we met no one else on the trail. 

In 1968 these Khe Sanh hills were virtually bare having been defoliated and blasted by B-52’s and artillery rounds.

Conclusion

David Douglas Duncan a Marine for the ages:

Lest America forget here is a series of photos made by “DDD” from his book I Protest. 

[slidepress gallery=’journey-back-to-khe-sanh-2′]

The first four photos were shot during the opening ceremony dedicating the new schools in Vietnam built by the project. 

The fifth photo shows George Barczay and Judd Kinne during their return to Vietnam for the ceremony.

The final photo shows the plaque placed on the school discussing the project and support to build the school.  

These photos are credited to Judd Kinne. The school is named for David Douglas Duncan or DDD. 

The remaining photos are some of those shot  by “DDD” and included in his book I Protest and published with his permission.

Back in the United States, he published ”I Protest!” a paperback that included 122 images along with text denouncing not only the American tactics but also the entire rationale of the conflict.

He charged $1 for the book and sold 250,000 copies.

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/12/24/books/eye-for-essential-emotion-photographer-david-douglas-duncan-distills-lucky-life.html

He earned the right to protest the VietnamWar, he was a highly decorated Marine Officer in WWII. As a USMC combat photographer he went behind the lines in the Solomon’s Campaign and flew with USMC aviation units in Okinawa battles.

His decorations included a Legion of Merit, Purple Heart, two Distinguished Flying Crosses and three Air Medals

 

 

31st MEU Night Airborne Raid Exercise

04/26/2014

04/26/2014: A night airborne raid was conducted by the Weapons and Golf Companies of Battalion Landing Team 2nd Battalion, 5th Marines, 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit, on a notional enemy-held town at a training range aboard Camp Hansen, Okinawa.

 The raid was in support of the 31st MEU’s “MEUEX,” a week-long exercise that tests the operational capabilities of the MEU in conjunction with its subordinate units, including the BLT and aviation combat element.

 The training raid force utilized night vision goggles as they landed and swept through the town in pitch black night. 

 Credit:31st Marine Expeditionary Unit:1/28/14

U.S. Navy P-8A Poseidon patrol aircraft search for MH370

04/22/2014

04/22/2014: PERTH Australia (April, 2014) U.S. Navy P-8A Poseidon patrol aircraft assigned to Patrol Squadron (VP) 16, operate out of Perth Airport, Australia, to fly missions over the Indian Ocean in support of the international effort to locate Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370.

The aircraft’s advanced radar capabilities allow the crew to recognize and investigate small contacts on the water’s surface.

The crew uses the onboard camera system, as well as a multitude of sensors, to investigate the contacts.


 Credit: Navy Media Content Services:4/13/14

 

Marines Bring CH-53Es for the Australian Rotation

04/22/2014: Marines with Marine Heavy Helicopter Squadron 463, Marine Rotational Force – Darwin, perform maintenance checks on their CH-53E Super Stallions, here, April 18, 2014.

The Marines with MRF-D will conduct unilateral training and bilateral training with the Australian Defense Force in the Northern Territory and at existing ADF facilities during the six-month rotation. 

Credit: MRF-D:4/18/14