Archive for April, 2009
Ambushing the Insurgents
Posted by: | CommentsA gripping story in the NYT about how American soldiers are now ambushing the Taliban in Afghanistan:
The soldiers waited. The rules of the ambush were long ago drilled into them: no one can move, and no one can fire until the patrol leader gives the order. Then everyone must fire at once.
The third Taliban fighter in the column switched on a flashlight, the soldiers said, and quickly switched it off. About 50 yards separated the two sides, but Lieutenant Smith did not want to start shooting too soon, he said, “because if too many lived then we’d be up there fighting them all night.â€
He let the Taliban column continue on. The soldiers trained their weapons’ infrared lasers, which are visible only with night-vision equipment, on the fighters as they drew closer. The lasers mark the path a bullet will fly.
The lead fighter had almost reached the platoon when Pvt. First Class Troy Pacini-Harvey, 19, his laser trained on the lead man’s forehead, moved his rifle’s selector lever from safe to semi-automatic. It made a barely audible click. The Taliban fighter froze. He was six feet away.
More here. (Via jackshafer.)
Ride Safe
Posted by: | CommentsLooks like there’s a nice few days of spring weather ahead. If you’re heading out on your bike, ride safe.
Mambo Interlude
Posted by: | CommentsThis recommendation comes via Sofie’s cousin Ruth.
By coincidence, Sofie and I saw Mambo performed live on Broadway the weekend before last at Arthur Laurents’ revival of West Side Story. I have to admit, even on YouTube, the Simón BolÃvar Orchestra does a much better job of bringing it to life.
Sniping at Sea
Posted by: | CommentsToday’s New York Post has an interesting piece by a former Marine chief warrant officer about the difficulties that faced the US snipers who took part in the pirate stand off at the weekend:
A shot at any range from the pitching deck of a ship underway is very challenging. And this target was a head in the two-foot-square forward window of a bobbing lifeboat tethered by a line.
[...]The snipers, spotters and their team commander all likely took positions hours earlier, under cover of darkness, and remained well hidden in the daylight. (You don’t want to spook the pirates with activity on deck or at sea — you want them to lull in complacency.)
Probably, the snipers chose a hard-hitting rifle and round — such as a .338 Lapua Magnum, now popular among Marine and SEAL Special Operations snipers.
These are awesome guns, highly accurate. The more massive bullet would effectively break through the impact-resistant glass of the lifeboat windows, and retain enough force and integrity to kill the pirates on target.
More here.
Thank You For Smoking Roll Ups
Posted by: | CommentsThis quote of the day comes from an unnamed spokesman for the pro-smoking pressure group Forest (emphasis is mine):
There are far more people smoking roll-ups, partly because of the cost, but partly because of the fashion element. Roll-ups have a slightly more antiestablishment feel to them. Cigarettes are getting more and more expensive, and in a recession you can hardly say they are essentials. No matter how addicted you are to tobacco, you can live without it, it is still a discretionary item. People trade down, especially when they are skint.â€
Not bloody likely.