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29 March 2009

UAVs used in Sudan Convoy Attack


تنسيق-الكليات-لعام سكس نيك كس
The London Sunday Times reported that the Israeli Air Force used Unmanned Air Vehicles (UAVs) to carry out strikes on three Sudanese convoys carrying Iranian missiles destined for Hamas in Gaza. Sources also said that the convoys carried Fajr-3 missiles which have a range of 43 kilometers, capable of reaching Yavneh and Be’er Sheva.According to “western diplomats”, Israel used Hermes 450 drones to carry out the attack. The planes, which operate out of the Palmachim air force base south of Tel Aviv, can remain in the air for 20 hours and fire two Hellfire missiles at ground targets. Some sources also claimed that Israel used the new Eitan UAV in the attack, which have a wingspan of 85 feet, comparable to that of a Boeing 737, and can remain in the air for 36 hours.

Defense sources told The Times that unmanned drones were used because of the nature of the targets. Whereas manned bombers could be used to attack a fixed target, UAVs are the ideal choice for a strike on a moving convoy. The drones can hover high in the air undetected for a long period of time until the ideal moment for an attack arrives.





The military sources also reported that the convoy was carrying an unspecified number of Iranian Fajr-3 missiles. “They build the Fajr in parts so it would be easy to smuggle them into Gaza, then reassemble them with Hamas experts who learned the job in Syrian and Iran,” one source said. Although the sources told The Times that when fired from Gaza, the missiles could hit Tel Aviv and Israel’s nuclear facility in Dimona, traditional Fajr-3 missiles have an operational range of 43 kilometers, which would only reach as far north as Yavneh and as far east as Be’er Sheva, large population centers in Israel.



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Sudan Weapons Convoy Attack Update

تنسيق-الكليات-لعام سكس نيك كس

Lots of news stories online...

...a Sudanese spokesman claimed that “more than 100 people” had been killed in the air raid, which he termed “a genocide, committed by U.S. forces.”

When asked how he knew the attackers were American, the spokesman said: “We don’t differentiate between the U.S. and Israel. They are all one.”

A spokesman for the United States Africa Command said U.S. forces had not attacked in Sudan. “The U.S. military has not conducted any airstrikes, fired any missiles or undertaken any combat operations in or around Sudan since October 2008, when U.S. Africa Command formally became responsible for U.S. military action in Africa,” he said.


...And from another online source:

United States officials have confirmed that Israel Air Force warplanes bombed a truck convoy in Sudan in January. The trucks were carrying arms that would be smuggled into Gaza for use against Israel, the officials said, according to a report in the New York Times.

Israel has refused to confirm or deny the attack, but Prime Minister Ehud Olmert made a statement, after the reports of the attack surfaced, that Israel has been striking at terror targets “near and far,” and warned enemies, “there is no place that Israel can't reach.”

Israel strikes terrorists “in the north and in the south... There's no need to mention details; people can use their imaginations,” Olmert said.

The American officials said Israel hit the convoy in order to prevent weapons from reaching Gaza during Operation Cast Lead.

The Times describes the sources as two American officials “who are privy to classified intelligence assessments.” The sources said that Iran had been involved in the effort to smuggle weapons to Gaza. According to intelligence reports, they added, an agent for Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards was in Sudan, coordinating the smuggling operation.

Iran funds, arms and trains two proxy armies on Israel’s borders: Hizbullah in the north and Hamas in the south.




...Of course we are dealing with the Sudanese, so they really have their finger on the pulse...

...According to foreign news sources, The Israel Air Force (IAF) bombed Iranian-funded weapons convoys in Sudan three times since mid-January not far from the border with Egypt and in the Red Sea.

Sudan was not aware of the first strike until after the second aerial bombardment, according to the Arabic-language Al Jazeera satellite television network. "We didn't know about the first attack until after the second one. They were in an area close to the border with Egypt, a remote area, desert, with no towns, no people,” a Sudanese foreign ministry official said.

ABC followed up with a report Friday night that Israel carried out three aerial bombings, basing its information on comments made by an unnamed United States official.

Sudanese officials added that one strike sank a ship in the Red Sea that was loaded with weapons; Hamas smuggles by sea as well as through smuggling tunnels under the Egyptian-Gaza border.

Thirty-nine people reportedly were killed in the aerial strikes, the first of which took place January 27, slightly more than a week after the end of Operation Cast Lead. A second strike followed on February 11, and the ship was sunk in another bombing.

Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said “Israel hits every place it can in order to stop terror, near and far.”

Calling them a “new Israeli crime” the Hizbullah terrorist organization, which is part of the Lebanese cabinet, urged Arab League leaders to condemn the attack when they meet in Qatar this week.


So there you have it!


We didn't do it.

3 times!


As our Prime Minister says, Use you imagination!


More here

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27 March 2009

Who bombed Sudan's Weapons Convoy?

تنسيق-الكليات-لعام سكس نيك كس


Israel's Prime Minister has denied any connection, a retired IDF Air Force General is praising the operation.

We always get blamed... Who do you think did it?

According to the American network CBS the Israel Air Force carried out an attack last January against a convoy of trucks in Sudan carrying arms for Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

According to the report, 39 people riding in 17 trucks were killed, while civilians in the area suffered injuries.

Official Israeli sources refused to confirm or deny on Wednesday any report of Israel's involvement in an air strike in Sudan.

However, Sudanese State Minister for Highways Mabrouk Mubarak Saleem was quoted in the Paris-based Sudan Tribune Web site as saying that a "major power bombed small trucks carrying arms, burning all of them."

The strike "killed Sudanese, Eritreans and Ethiopians, and injured others," Saleem added.

CBS News national security correspondent David Martin broke the story. He says that Israeli intelligence learned of plans to move weapons through Sudan, north toward Egypt and then via the Sinai into the Gaza Strip.

According to Martin, Israel and the U.S. had signed an agreement for closer international efforts to block smuggling of arms into the Gaza Strip.

During the final days of the Israeli offensive against Hamas, Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni and her American counterpart Condoleezza Rice signed a security-intelligence memorandum on intensifying cooperation in a joint effort to block the smuggling of arms from Iran to Hamas via Sudan.

The Sudanese news site said the attack took place "in a desert area northwest of Port Sudan city, near Mount al-Sha'anun."

According to SudanTribune.com, the airstrike was an "embarrassment" to Sudan's government, and it discussed the matter with Egypt's government "to gather more information to formulate a response."
Hat Tip Jameel

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26 March 2009

IDF Women


تنسيق-الكليات-لعام سكس نيك كس


IDF Navy Servicewoman, Seaman Adi Rodnitzki (center), was crowned Miss Israel during an event held at the Haifa Convention Center on March 18th.





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24 March 2009

What really happened in Gaza?

تنسيق-الكليات-لعام سكس نيك كس

"I looked for the dead, the wounded. They were hard to find. I saw empty hospital beds."

More here

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22 March 2009

IDF Field Training Golani Infantry 12th Battalion

تنسيق-الكليات-لعام سكس نيك كس
Although I can still fell the soreness in my muscles, taste the crap they tried to feed us, and vividly recall the sadistic behaviour of our instructors, it's been a while since I was in Basic Training, but as I hear from the younger IDF servicemen, nothing has changed. The rain gear the IDF issues is ok if you are just standing guard, but when 1/3 of the annual rainfall comes down in less then a week, you might as well leave it at home!

http://www.fototime.com/B2703BE97C07BF9/standard.jpg

From another IDF Blogger in training on a typical winter day in Israel with IDF Golani Infantry, 12th Battalion:



Mud was in everything. The tents were solid brown, and we were rolling them up and sticking them in our assault packs with mud oozing out like the pack was filled with the stuff. It was plain gross, but I thought it was pretty fun, in a strange way. I felt like I was “doing it,” suffering for a greater cause. I felt productive. I felt like a soldier.

We were just throwing all this gear, the entire company was, into a 12x12 tent, something of that size. It was one big slime fest. Moving on here, we then were given the green light, room by room, to go to the officers’ tent and vote. You see, it was national elections day, a tightly polled race between Livni (Kadima) and Netanyahu (Likud). I was pretty excited to vote, maybe even as much as I was to be going back to base.

We stood in line outside of the tent, everyone secretly grabbing the avocados and fruits that the officers obviously weren’t going to eat; they were being drowned in a half-melted cardboard box outside. Finally, we were called in. I stepped into the tent not knowing what to expect, and was surprised to find a massively crowded scene. The 15x15 or so tent was packed with all types of commanders and officers I hadn’t seen all week. I suppose they were hiding from the rain. They all were sardined into the dimly lit shelter between tall stacks of food, gear, tables, and boxes. Boxes of who knows what. Just towers of brown boxes.

A single light bulb barely as bright as that old flashlight in your glove box hung over a plastic table where some army logistics guys, who I didn’t even see come to our camp, were handling paperwork and calling out our names. Next to them was a large cardboard presentation board, which was sitting on another table.

I signed a sheet with my name on it and was directed to behind the presentation board. Behind the board was a large tray with what looked like a hundred slots, all filled with different little slips of paper bearing political parties’ trademarks. I couldn’t remember what the symbol was for the party I wanted, and I could barely see, and the commanders were really hurrying everyone along, so eventually I just asked the guy on the other side to help me. He was actually really nice, considering the conditions, and he showed me what I requested. I took that sheet, put it into another envelope, carefully wrote my info on the outside, and dropped it into the big blue voting box, effectively becoming a true citizen-soldier. Another integration into this state; one more little step on the path of taking my claim to this country.

But before I could process the implications of my civic involvement in Israel, I was ordered to briskly make my way outside to eat. They threw a soaked box of combat rations to us and we quickly dug in. The rain was only coming down in a drizzle, but we all were waiting for another big deluge.

After maybe 10 minutes, the platoon commander came over and told us to pack it up and get our vests on. We kinda hesitated for 5 seconds, and then he yelled, “UP, NOW! I don’t care if you’ve got a fork in your mouth, spit it out and GO!” [Nearly verbatim]. We jumped up, me swallowing a large last bite of tuna and chocolate spread on soggy bread.

We went over to our vests and assault packs, which were next to piles of sleeping bags and all types of heavily mud caked gear. We were then commanded to take all the sleeping bags and move them about 10 feet away, as well as plastic rain guards for the tents. Because everything was soaked with mud and rain, each thing was three times the weight. A single Jeep’s headlights were slantingly lighting the mayhem going on, and I can’t even begin to tell you the apprehension I felt.



I knew what was about to happen. I looked around and saw all the gear we came in with, the stretcher piled high with our huge ‘kitbags,’ (dufflebags), wooden boxes of commanders’ gear, assault packs, water packs, ammo, etc. After some yelling, and a frantic search for someone’s gun lost in the midst of all this stuff, we loaded up. We had to hike the few kilometers in the mud to the road we came from, which was up a steep hill...

More here

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19 March 2009

IDF Women





تنسيق-الكليات-لعام سكس نيك كس


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18 March 2009

Sign this Petition

تنسيق-الكليات-لعام سكس نيك كس

A reader asked me to post this.

To: The Honorable Hillary Clinton

March 17, 2009

The Honorable Hillary Clinton
Secretary of State
2201 C Street NW
Washington, DC 20520

Dear Madam Secretary:

I write to you today regarding the situation in the Middle East. In the wake of Hamas' attacks on Israel, and Israel's defensive operations, I understand the U.S. government has pledged to grant $900 million for the rebuilding of Gaza and for assisting the Palestinian Authority. I am concerned that this money will end up helping Hamas and hurting the very Palestinian people we intend to help.

For years, the U.S. has infused money into the Palestinian Authority (PA), with very little to show for it. Their leaders are no more ready to govern today than they were before we began our funding. After years of mismanagement, their basic institutions are in shambles and they have shown very little ability to govern in the West Bank without the presence of the Israeli Defense Forces. Instead of helping average Palestinians, our money has lined the pockets of the Arafats and other corrupt Palestinian leaders.

I also understand our funding will not be conditioned on any reciprocal actions by Hamas or the PA. Despite Israel's withdrawal from Gaza in 2005, Hamas still refuses to recognize Israel's right to exist as a Jewish state, has not stopped raining rockets on Israeli territory and still holds captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit. It is essential that we condition our funding on Hamas'reciprocating with these basic demands. Without such links, Palestinians will see the U.S. as providing aid while Hamas continues to terrorize the Israeli people, with no consequences from the U.S. government.

I am also concerned that much of the funding will be directed through the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA). Unfortunately, UNRWA has proven itself to be a biased agency, with very little oversight. During the most recent violence in Gaza, UNRWA issued numerous statements attacking Israel for their self-defense actions, while failing to criticize Hamas for launching missiles at innocent Israeli citizens. Much of UNWRA's money and services end up in the hands of people who are wealthy enough not to need the assistance, or worse, with members of terrorist organizations. UNRWA officials have even admitted that they cannot guarantee their money does not go to Hamas. I believe helping UNRWA does not further the cause of peace.



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16 March 2009

What will history say about Obama?

تنسيق-الكليات-لعام سكس نيك كس


"IN THIS TEMPLE
AS IN THE HEARTS OF THE PEOPLE
FOR WHOM HE DUPED THE UNION
THE DAMAGE OF BARACK HUSSEIN OBAMA
IS ENSHRINED FOREVER"


Hat tip Theo Spark



14 March 2009

Israeli Defense Weapons Manufacturer Video

تنسيق-الكليات-لعام سكس نيك كس You Don't Mess with the Zohan Dvir
One of Israel's largest arms / weapons exporters, Rafael, came up with this video for the Indian market.

I know a little bit about the weapons manufacturing market and I'm not sure that having a Zohan wannabe dancing and singing with a harem of sari clad Indian looking women is how I would instill confidence and increase name recognition.

On the other hand... I'm just a blogger, what do I know?

(If you can't see the video click here)








Dinga Dinga Dee!

Whatever that means??

Hat tip Aussie Dave
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12 March 2009

IDF Women Purim Fun










تنسيق-الكليات-لعام سكس نيك كس


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10 March 2009

Purim Costume

I found skull "tatoo sleeves" and jolly roger doo rag in a toy store.
So for about $5.00 (US) I had myself a costume for Purim










I got some interesting reactions from my neighbors when I walked into synagogue.


تنسيق-الكليات-لعام سكس نيك كس


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Star of David Kafiya for Jews Jews and Supporters of Israel

تنسيق-الكليات-لعام سكس نيك كس kafiya kaffiya kaffia

Hijacking the Arab Symbol of Nationality / Solidarity

Introducing the Star of David Kafiya

for Jews and Supporters of Israel

Available at your local quickie mart.
Made of tiny interlocking stars of David, in Israeli Blue


http://images.channeladvisor.com/Sell/SSProfiles/73000007/images/6/argo_0005d.jpg


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09 March 2009

Purim in Israel

تنسيق-الكليات-لعام سكس نيك كس
This year the Jewish Festival of Purim begins Monday at dusk.

...from another IDF Blogger



Tonight was the start of Purim, which in Jerusalem lasts through Sunday. Purim is the holiday remembering a very specific story of Jewish past. In short, we were exiled from the Land of Israel (6th century BCE), and found ourselves under Persian rule. Persian King Ahasverus had a high-ranking officer named Haman. When Haman was entering the palace, the high priest of the Jews, Mordechai, would not bow down to him. Haman wanted to kill Mordechai and the Jews, and he got Ahasverus' permission to make a decree to exterminate all the Jews in the Persian Empire. So, Mordechai sends in his niece, Ester, Ahasverus' new queen, and she talks to old Ahas. He loves her, she reveals Haman's plan, Ahasverus has Haman hung on the very trees he planned to hang the Jews on... yay! As we say: They tried to kill us, they got theirs, now let's get drunk!

Purim is celebrated by giving gifts to the poor, gifts to our friends (mishloach manot), listening to the reading of the Scroll of Ester (telling this story -- which is found in the Tanach/Bible), and finally, getting very drunk during a ritual meal. If you want to know why, I can tell you.

Apparently, in Roman times a custom was developed to dress up in silly costumes for Purim. So, Purim is like the Jewish Halloween, minus paganism and plus a strong religious purpose, theme, and traditions. Everyone is dressed up in Israel tonight. Everyone is partying. Everyone is out and about and... most seem to have a mouse outfit on.

I was walking down a back alley, taking a shortcut to my bank's ATM, when out of nowhere a motorcycle screams by, going way too fast, and the driver was gunning his engine in the manner that cyclists do to get attention. Very manly. Or should I say, very mously?

Yeah, I never claimed to be a comedian! But seriously, this was the funniest thing I've seen in months. You don't even realize how much effort it took to get these pictures. I had to chase him around 3 different corners, me on foot, him on a powerful streetbike. Eventually I turned a corner and there he was, getting off his bike, and walking into a sushi restaurant. Five minutes later he comes out, I get the pictures. I felt like either a Mossad agent or a stalker.

More here
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08 March 2009

Punch your favorite politician

تنسيق-الكليات-لعام سكس نيك كس
Bookmark this post. Now you'll be able to come back here anytime you hear about something stupid the president or secretary of state do and teach them a lesson.







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Galil Rifle pictures

The Original IMI Gaili Rifle





































The Original Galil Sniper Rifle (7.62x51)

New Golani Galil Pictures


MOSAD Golani Tactical Assault Rifle Brand New 5.56
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IDF Galil Rifle

تنسيق-الكليات-لعام سكس نيك كس

With the advent of the "all new" Galil Sporter a reader asked me my opinion of the Galil rifle.

I carried the IMI (now IWI) Galil AR and Galil SAR rifles back in the 80's. It was the standard issue rifle for IDF Infantry. We carried the Galil AR with an attached bipod and 8 fully loaded 35 round steel magazines. It was heavy, rusty, and a pain to keep clean. The Galil SAR is lighter, has a shorter barrel, no bipod, and a molded plastic foregrip.

In order to understand the Galil Sporter, you need to first know the original Galils.


The Original Galil Rifle

The Galil rifle was invented by Israel Galili, chief weapons designer for IMI (Israeli Military Industries), and Yaacov Lior, the Galil is a somewhat successful attempt at the "best of all possible worlds."


Dissatisfied with the 7.62mm NATO FN FAL with which the Israeli Army was largely equipped, Galili went directly into the field to investigate the problem (see "Weapons Wizard Israel Galili," SOF, March '82). He was told by everyone that the Kalashnikov was the "tiger of the desert."

Taking what he needed from the AK-47, Galili placed his rifle in competition with the M16A1, the Stoner 63, the AK-47, the HK 33 and a design by Uziel Gal. The test's greatest emphasis revolved around performance under arid-region conditions. The Galil Rifle emerged as the clear winner and won the Israeli Defense Award. It was officially adopted by the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) in 1972.

The selective-fire versions are available to law-enforcement agencies and qualified Class 3 dealers. Although also produced in caliber 7.62mm NATO to increase its sales on the world market, the Galil rifle as issued to the IDF is chambered for the 5.56mm NATO M193 ball ammunition. The Galil's Kalashnikov heritage is apparent, even at first glance. Not so evident are its differences. It fires from the closed-bolt position and is gas-operated without an adjustable regulator. The change in caliber, from 7.62x39mm ComBloc to 5.56mm NATO, required numerous alterations. The AK-47's 4.2mm gas hole was reduced in diameter to 1.8mm. The Galil's most immediate predecessor was the Finnish Valmet M62 rifle and, in fact, early Galil prototypes were fabricated using M62 receivers made in Helsinki. However, as the 52,000 cup SAAMI (Sporting Arms and Ammunition Manufacturers' Institute) pressure limit specified for the 5.56mm NATO round is far greater than that developed by the 7.62x39mm ComBloc cartridge, Galili abandoned the pinned and riveted, stamped sheet-metal receiver of the Valmet M62/M76 series and went to a heavy milled forging. In addition, the Galil does not utilize the usual Kalashnikov barrel-extension unit for lock-up of the bolt. The bolt lugs lock into recesses milled into the receiver body itself. Thus, heat dispersion occurs more rapidly, the cartridge remains cooler and the possibility of a cook-off, even under the most intensive full-auto conditions, is minimized. While the method of operation is identical to the Kalashnikov, Soviet AK-47 parts most certainly cannot be used in the Galil, contrary to the statements of others. When the trigger is pulled, the hammer drives the firing pin forward to ignite the primer. Kalashnikovs have inertia firing pins without a spring. The initial lot of Galils brought into the USA also had no firing pin springs and are not suitable for use with commercial ammo. This can be modified.

After ignition of the primer, a portion of the propellant gases migrate into the 1.8mm vent, drilled at a 30-degree angle into the gas block which is pinned to the barrel. The gas enters the cylinder (to which a small spring has been attached to secure its retention during reassembly) and drives the piston rearward. The piston is hard-chrome-plated for ease of maintenance. It is also notched to provide a reduced bearing surface and permit excess gas blow-by. The bolt carrier is attached to the piston. After a short amount of free travel, during which time the gas pressure drops to a safe level, the cam slot engages the boit's cam pin and the bolt is rotated and unlocked as the carrier moves rearward.

Primary extraction occurs as the bolt is rotated and thus the massive Kalashnikov-type extractor claw is not required. Empty-case ejection is typically violent. The cases are severely dented by the ejector and thrown to the right and front by as much as 40 feet (a defect with regard to position disclosure). At this time, the recoil spring is compressed and its return energy drives the carrier forward to strip a round from the magazine and chamber it.

The Galil's hammer spring is made of multi-strand cable. The trigger and sear springs are conventional coil types. Like other Kalashnikov-system rifles, the trigger mechanism is that first used in the U.S. M1 Garand rifle.

The Galil's right-side selector lever is the same stamped, sheet-metal bar common to all Kalashnikovs. South African troops often wrap nylon line around this selector bar to quiet the sound of its manipulation. It can also be slightly bent to draw it away from the receiver notches. The top position, marked "S," is safe, where the trigger is locked and the bolt can be retracted only far enough to inspect for a chambered round in this position.

The Galil also features a selector switch on the receiver's left side, intended to be manipulated by the thumb of the trigger hand. On the semiauto version, through use of a two-piece hinged bar inside the receiver, the rearmost position of this selector is safe and pushing forward with the thumb will place the weapon in the firing mode, marked "F." This is as it should be. However, on the selective-fire model the rearmost position is "R" (British terminology for Repetition, or semiauto), the middle position is "A" (full auto) and the forward position is safe. Thus, to come off safe, using the left-side selector, one must pull rearward with the thumb, a most unnatural and awkward maneuver, especially under stress.

On the selective-fire Galil, two sears control the firing mechanism, the trigger sear and a safety sear. In full-auto fire the trigger sear is held back and only the first round of the burst is fired off this rear sear. Subsequently, the bolt carrier moves rearward and rolls the hammer over. The safety sear continues to hold the hammer back until the bolt carrier is fully forward again, at which time it trips the safety sear and the hammer rotates to fire another round. Thus, after the first round the trigger sear is deactivated entirely from control on the hammer. Releasing the trigger will catch the hammer on the trigger sear once more. In semiautomatic fire, no pressure is placed on the trigger sear, which is free to catch the hammer each time it is rolled back by the bolt carrier.


The entire safety sear assembly (sear, spring, cross pin and trip lever) is absent from the semiautomatic-only version of the Galil. In addition, certain receiver mill cuts have not been made, the hammer spring pin protrudes from the right side of the receiver to stop further downward travel of the selector lever and the bolt carrier has been altered to prevent full-auto fire.

There are three basic configurations of the Galil, all available in calibers 5.56mm NATO or 7.62mm NATO: The ARM is equipped with a bipod, wooden handguard and carrying handle. It is intended for use as an assault rifle and squad automatic weapon. The AR is equipped with a high-impact-plastic handguard without a bipod or carrying handle. The barrel length of both, in caliber 5.56mm NATO, is 18.5 inches with the flash suppressor (and 21.0 inches for the 7.62mm NATO models). Both are available in semiauto-only and selective-fire versions. The SAR is a short-barreled version of the AR model. It has a barrel length of only 13.5 inches in 5.56mm (15.8 inches in the 7.62mm version) and, as a consequence, is available in the United States as a selective-fire weapon only. Its gas tube and piston are 1 1/8 inches shorter than the other models. The 5.56mm NATO Galils all have six-groove barrels with a right-hand 1:12-inch twist for the M193 ball projectile. All three are normally issued with a folding stock, although a wooden buttstock is an available option.


At first glance, the folding stock appears to be that of the FN FAL. It is not. The FAL stock is constructed of tubular aluminum. The Galil folding stock is fabricated from tubular steel - stronger, but heavier. More important, the Galil stock has no button latch to confound the operator in opening or closing, no small consideration during high-stress situations.


The ARM's carrying handle is almost identical to the Belgian FAL'S. Located to the rear of the wooden handguard, it is not positioned over the rifle's center of mass. The wooden handguard remains somewhat cooler during sustained full-auto fire than the black plastic handguard. The squared-away shape of the wooden handguard is not entirely comfortable, but necessary to store the bipod. Both the plastic and wooden handguards are attached permanently to the barrel and cannot be removed.

The Galil bipod is a sturdy, rigid affair, certified so by my memory of Israel Galili jumping wildly and theatrically on top of the rifle with its two steel legs extended. When stored in the handguard, the bipod serves as a feed chute to speed insertion of the magazines. The bipod can be used as a wire cutter and to open beer bottles also.



The Galil's gray plastic pistol grip is one of the very best ever put on an assault rifle and seems to be taken from the Hungarian AKM/AMD-65 series. Of more than adequate length, with a sharp bottom flare to prevent the hand from slipping, the grip has been mounted to the receiver at precisely the correct grip-to-frame angle. Somehow, it just feels right.

Gaili offers tough, all-steel magazines in three capacities: The 12-round magazine, color-coded with whith stripes, is blocked to accept only ballistite (blank) cartridges for launching rifle grenades. The standard magazine has a capacity of 35 rounds. A large capacity 50-round is also available. Difficult to load by hand, it is intended for use primarily in the squad automatic role. However, like all bottom-fed magazines of this length, it will "monopod" the weapon when fired with the bipod in the prone position.

An optional magazine adapter allows the use of 20- and 30-round M16 magazines. Unfortunately, the magazine wells of the semiautomatic and selective-fire Galils are of different dimensions and the adapter supplied by IMI can be fitted only to the semiautomatic version. Why this is so I do not know. However, the adapter is well-designed and the magazines can be inserted and released with no greater difficulty than in the M16. Valmet 5.56mm NATO magazines will likewise fit into the semiautomatic Galil, but cannot be used in the selective-fire rifle. South African R4 magazines are identical to their Israeli counterparts and can be inserted into all versions of the Galil. The magazine-release latch is of the flapper type, similar to the Kalashnikov and unlike the SKS, is easy to reach with the index finger of the right hand while hold on the rear pistol grip is maintained.

The retracting handle is attached to the bolt carrier and bent upright to allow ambidextrous.

The flash suppressor has six ports and is almost identical to the M16 "birdcage" muzzle device. Those who still dream of charging up San Juan Hill will be pleased to note that the Galil accepts the readily available M7 bayonet issued for the M16.

The rear end of the Galil's recoil-spring guide rod, which serves as a retainer for the sheet-metal receiver cover, has been extended to ease disassembly and lock the cover more securely to the receiver body. This is especially important as the rear sight has been mounted on the receiver cover. While no less secure than its attachment to the gas cylinder on the Valmet M71, it does not provide the rigidity offered by the receiver-mounted rear sight of ComBloc Kalashnikovs. The trade-off is a longer sight radius.

Reassembly of the receiver cover on all Kalashnikov-type weapons is simplified if you first place the recoil-spring guide rod slightly below its notch in the receiver onto the rear interior wall of the receiver. Then set the receiver cover in place. Jack the retracting handle smartly to the rear and the guide rod will pop into its notch and the square-cut hole in the receiver cover.

Standard Kalashnikov disassembly and reassembly procedures apply to the Galil. But, a small, though important, correction to the preventive maintenance instructions given in the IMI operator's manual is required. After cleaning, we are instructed to lubricate the gas cylinder and piston. I say no to that. Keep lubricants of all types away from the piston and the interior of the gas system. The intense heat generated in this area of a gas-operated weapon will cause lubricants to bake and varnish these parts.

The rear sight is a flip-up peep type with 300- and 500-meter apertures adjustable for elevation only. The front-post sight is adjustable for elevation and windage zero. Elevation adjustments are by means of the UZI front-sight tool. Windage adjustment is achieved by loosening and tightening the two opposing screws which move the entire front-sight assembly in its dovetail on to the gas block. The diameter of the front-sight hood is such that it forms an additional aiming circle just within the rear aperture to further assist sight alignment and speed target acquisition.

Taking another cue from the Valmet, the Galil is equipped with tritium (betalight) night sights set for 100 meters. To use, at dusk or night, the front betalight is folded up to expose a vertical bar, which is aligned between the two rear luminous dots. When the rear tritium sight is flipped up for use, the rear peep sights must be placed in an offset position midway between the two apertures.

The left side of the receiver is dovetailed for a scope side-mount. Mounting a scope on the receiver body usually results in maximum stability. But the IMI side-mount has exhibited a decided tendency to lose zero after take-down and remounting. After phosphating (Parkerizing), all exterior metal surfaces on the rifle (except for the barrel, gas block and front sight) are finished with semi-gloss black enamel.

The five-inch differential in barrel lengths between the ARM and SAR did provide an excuse to chronograph their respective muzzle velocities. PMC (Pusan Arsenal, Korea) M193 ball ammunition was used throughout this portion of the test and evaluation. The 18.5-inch barrel of the ARM generated an average of 3,087 fps. The stubby 13.5-inch barrel of the SAR dropped the average velocity by only 183 fps. to 2,904 fps. The extreme spread and standard deviation were significantly lower for the SAR. But, the accuracy potential of both rifles was quite high, even with trigger pulls no better than the average Kalashnikov.

In addition to high marks for hit probability and target acquisition, the SAR exhibited phenomenal controllability in the full-auto mode. The cyclic rate is 650 rpm. Muzzle rise is barely perceptible with two- and three-round bursts. In fact, firing in the off-hand position, at 30 meters an entire and continuous 50-round burst can be contained within a standard military silhouette target! Felt recoil was virtually nonexistent with both rifles. But, a heavy price must be paid for all these attributes.

All of the above operating characteristics are a function of the weapon's weight. At almost 9.5 pounds, empty, with bipod and carrying handle, the ARM is quite heavy in comparison with other state-of-the-art assault rifles. The M16 and AKM weigh only 7.0 pounds apiece. The Galil is only a quarter-pound shy of the U.S. M14. The South African troops who must constantly drag this beast through the bush have real cause for complaint.

Write up for the “all new” Galil Sporter currently sold in the US by www.centuryarms.biz

If it looks like a Galil and functions like a Galil, is it a Galil? Nope, it's a Golani Sporter, named after Israel's Golani Brigade instrumental in selecting the Galil after conducting extensive field-testing with it. After a long absence from the surplus pipeline, a Galil clone in 5.56mm is being made by Century International Arms www.centuryarms.biz

Rumbling into the Six Day War of 1967 armed with the FN-FAL, the victorious Israel Defense Force came away from the fray with a great deal more respect for the Arabs' AK-47's. Their adversaries' AK's operated well in the sandy battleground while Israel's FN-FAL proved to be sand sensitive and awkward in a highly mobile environment. The result was a period of study and weapons testing to identify a replacement for the FN-FAL.

Israel's greatest ally and source of foreign aid, the United States, had already adopted the M16 and the 5.56mm cartridge. Attracted to the low impulse 5.56mm cartridge, Israel was still impressed by the reliability of the AK-47 and its gas-piston design. At the conclusion of a series of destructive field tests by the Golani Brigade involving the M16, Stoner 63, HK33, AK-47 and a design by Uziel Gal, the AK-47 was still considered the best of the lot.

Hybrid Design

What emerged was a hybrid design developed by firearms designer, Israel Galil. Galil borrowed freely and blended the best elements of the AK-47, the refined Finish AK, known as the Valmet M62, the M16 and the FN-FAL with some unique ideas of his own. The end product was so successful it was adopted in 1972 and, reportedly, saw action the following year in the Yom Kippur War.

The military Galil was produced by Israel Military Industries (IMI) in a variety of models. There was the Galil ARM with a folding bipod, carrying handle and the FN-style tubular folding stock common to all Galils, a Galil AR (assault rifle) without the bipod or carrying handle, a Galil SAR with a short 15" barrel, a Micro-Galil (MAR) and a heavy-barreled Galil Sniper. Galils were chambered in both 5.56mm NATO and 7.62mm NATO.

IMI exported Galils to a number of South American, African and Asian countries and licensed South Africa to produce the design as models R4 (Galil AR), R5 (Galil SAR) and R6 (Galil MAR). As recently as 2006, Columbia was licensed to manufacture the Galil.

In Israel, the Galil proved to be a short-lived design for general issue and was phased out in favor of the M16 and CAR-15, supplied by the United States in very ample quantities at very low prices.

Century's Golani Sporter is essentially a Galil-type AR with its sturdy folding stock, rigid milled receiver and without the ARM's bipod or carrying handle. Mechanically, it's an improvement over the Soviet AK/AKM in several ways.

The Israeli design is ambidextrous. The fixed operating handle is mounted in a vertical, rather than horizontal position, and can be readily grabbed and operated with the strong hand or the weak hand by either a right- or left-handed shooter.

Ambidextrous Safety

There's a handy, easy-to-operate, side safety (selector switch) located under your thumb at the top of the pistol grip on the left side of the receiver. It is connected to the traditional, sheet metal AK safety (selector switch) on the right side of the receiver, so the safety can be operated from either the right or left side of the rifle. On Century's Golani Sporter model, in the forward position (marked "S'), the safety is "ON" and in the rear position (marked "F"), "OFF" It would be handier if it worked in reverse.

Unlike the AK/AKM, the rear sight of the Golani Sporter is mounted on top of the heavy receiver cover. The protective sight housing contains an excellent "L" shaped, flip-type aperture sight offering either a 300m or 500m zero plus a flip-up, night-sight blade. The Golani aperture sight is a vast improvement over the open, tangent sight of the AK.

The AK-type post front sight is adjustable for elevation by screwing it up-or-down with an SKS/AK sight tool. Windage is easily adjusted by turning two opposing screws in-and-out to move the graduated sight base left-or-right. Hinged to the bottom of the front sight housing is a neat, flip-up, night sight post.

Gas System

The gas tube of the Golani is not locked down like that of the AK/AKM. Rather, the rear of the tube is mated to an integral dovetail at the top of the receiver while the front of the tube slips over a shoulder on the gas block. The tube is secured in place by the receiver cover fitting into a recess at the rear of the tube as it is locked in place. It's a practical design and much easier to disassemble for cleaning and maintenance than an AK's.

The Golani handguard is distinctive and comfortable. It cradles, but does not touch, the medium weight 5.56mm barrel, so there is plenty of cooling air circulation around the barrel. Moreover, the inner surface of the "U" shaped handguard is completely lined with an aluminum heat shield to keep the handguard cool to the touch. It's a great design when you're doing a lot of full-auto work and, not touching the barrel, it enhances accuracy.

The heavy, tubular folding stock of the Golani Sporter leaves nothing to be desired. It is robust and rock solid when locked in place and out-of-the-way, when folded. It is also comfortable when shooting.

The muzzlebrake is effective and combined with the 9-pound, 4-ounce weight of the gun, there is little left upon firing you could call "recoil."

Those distinctive features of the Golani Spotter set it apart from the AK/AKM design. The bolt, bolt carrier, piston, recoil spring and fire control system are pretty much Kalashnikov.

Slings Flat

Like the Galil, the Golani is fitted with side sling swivels on the opposite side from the operating handle so the rifle lies flat and comfortably against your back when slung. When not at sling arms, the Golani is an easy carry if you wrap your hand around the receiver just in front of the magazine.

I've heard some remarks about the nine-pound weight of a Galil-type rifle. Obviously, the critics haven't carried a Garand, FN-FAL, G3, or even combat ready M16's decked out with grenade launchers, flashlights, lasers and optical aiming devices or, if they have, they were in their 20s when a 9-pound-plus rifle felt like a wand and was a comforting friend. Being a bit older now, they just don't remember how easy it used to be.

The two-stage trigger on the sample I tested was remarkably clean and light. There was an initial take-up of about 4 pounds and a crisp release when another 1 1/2 pounds of pressure were applied.

The 35-round Galil magazines are steel, heavy-walled and AK robust. You could drive a truck over them without putting a dent in one. The two, genuine surplus Galil mags I used fed without a hiccup. Do pay attention and keep the end of the long 35-round magazine off the shooting table when you're benching the Golani. It will ruin consistent accuracy.

Before firing the test piece, I did strip it and lubricate the bolt, bolt carrier, rails, and sears with TW25b synthetic grease. AKs and Golani Sporters have to break-in. They improve with firing and when kept properly lubricated.

Accuracy

The most accurate load I fired was a handload right out of the Sierra Manual, consisting of 26.2 grains of 748 and a 52-grain Sierra HP MatchKing. The Golani Sporter would put three of this recipe into 1/2" at 50 yards and 1 1/2" at 100 yards. This load, by the way, has shot exceedingly well in every AR I have tested it in, regardless of barrel twist. I did notice the latest Sierra manual now lists 23.5 grains, of Viht 133 as the accuracy load. These are not the fastest loads, giving about 2,900 fps, just the most accurate.

The next most accurate load was Winchester's 53-grain HP marketed under the Super X label. It delivered 3shot groups of 1 1/4" at 50 yards and 2" at 100 with a velocity of 3,060 fps.

Military ball ammunition didn't fare as well. I tested Israeli, US and Guatemalan M193 ball. Typical groups at 50 yards ran from 1 1/2" to 1 3/4" and grew to 3" at 100 with velocities running consistently around 3,190 fps. Winchester "USA White Box" 55-grain FMJ was a bit better delivering 1 1/2" at 50 and 2" at 100 yards.

The only stoppages I experienced were 4 failures to extract in the first 40 rounds. The extractor was just stiff and had to break-in. After that, it functioned perfectly.

In short, here's the last chance to own a Galil clone. Century got it right with the Golani Sporter. It's an engaging rifle, a classic and historical milsurp. Fed quality ammunition, the Golani Sporter really performs.

DISASSEMBLY/REASSEMBLY

Fieldstripping the AK-based Golani Sporter is simple fast and can be accomplished without tools. First remove the magazine take the safety off cycle the action to cock the hammer and check the chamber is unloaded.

Press in on the serrated latch at the rear of the receiver cover and remove the cover up and rearward from the receiver.

Disengage the serrated latch of the recoil spring guide by pushing t forward out of the receiver dovetail. Remove the recoil spring to the rear

Pull the bolt carrier with its attached piston and bolt all the way to the rear of the receiver where there is a cutout section in the receiver rails. Remove the units by pulling the bolt carrier up and to the rear. Pull the gas tube to the rear and remove it

Remove the bolt from the bolt carrier by pushing it to the rear and rotating it counter clockwise to free its operating cam from the carrier

The rifle is now field stripped for routine cleaning

Reassemble in reverse order. Hint: If the Golani receiver cover won't seat fully and the serrated latch is visible and lined up with its retaining slot, give the top of the cover a stiff rap with your hand. That will normally seat it in place.

  • GOLANI SPORTER

Maker: Century International Arms www.centuryarms.biz

ACTION: Gas operated, semiautomatic

CALIBER: 5.56mm

MAGAZINE CAPACITY: 35

OVERALL LENGTH: Extended: 38.5", Folded: 29.25"

BARREL LENGTH: 18" Twist: 1:9"

SIGHTS: Flip-up apertures, 300m and 500m

STOCK: Tubular steel, folding

buttstock. Synthetic

handguard

AVERAGE WEIGHT: 9.25 pounds

FINISH: Parkerized

Additional pictures and videos can be found here



More on the Galil Rifle here
http://DoubleTapper.blogspot.com






07 March 2009

Pure Unadulterated IDF Exhaustion

تنسيق-الكليات-لعام سكس نيك كس

IDF Infantrymen crashed out in their bunks



Now that's tired!



More here




Civilians and Police Shoot and Kill Another Bulldozer Terrorist

تنسيق-الكليات-لعام سكس نيك كس

The Bulldozer terrorist plowed into a police car and rammed into a bus, before he was shot by police and a taxi driver at the scene. He later died of his wounds.

The incident took place a little after 1 P.M. Thursday near the popular Malkha shopping mall, on Menachem Begin Boulevard, in southern Jerusalem.

Police are saying that an open copy of the Koran was found in the bulldozer after the attack.

Witnesses described a harrowing site of the Bulldozer speeding along the highway, dragging the police car and sending it flying into the air.

The civilian who shot the terrorist, Dor a Taxi Driver, told Israel Radio that, “I saw the police car fly into the air. He [the Terrorist] flipped it over twice, then continued dragging it toward a bus that was stuck in traffic,” he said. He told the radio he fired four shots at the Terrorist, wounding him. “Then a policeman came with his M-16 and finished him off finally,” he said.

Another Civilian seen shooting the Terrorist is a Rabbi at Horev Yeshiva.

Live Video of the Attack
(watch until the end as the video repeats with more detail)


News Report Translated to English


Elad Ben-Nun, a Volunteer Auxiliary Policeman who shot the terrorist stated, “We got out of the squad car and moved towards the terrorist. We were about six yards away when I fired at the driver through the window.

The driver keeled over to the left and we hurried to the other side of the tractor. I saw him try to get up. I fired several more rounds until he wasn’t moving anymore.”

Daniel Housliech, the Police Officer riding in the car with Ben-Nun told the press, “We arrived at the scene by way of Golomb Street. We could see the tractor to our left. It was hammering the police car with its shovel and then it tried to flip it over.

“We pulled over and ran to the scene. This was clearly a terror attack and not the scene of an accident. I pulled my gun… and since I am somewhat of a marksman, I hit him immediately.

Aftermath of the Terror Attack


The morons at BBC try to justify the Terror Attack



Now if Jameel will just tell us the answer to the question...


Hat tip Israellycool
http://DoubleTapper.blogspot.com






04 March 2009

IDF Women

تنسيق-الكليات-لعام سكس نيك كس







http://DoubleTapper.blogspot.com






02 March 2009

I am Bielski

تنسيق-الكليات-لعام سكس نيك كس

I thought that Liev Schreiber [playing my father, Zus] stole the show,” Jay Bielski recounted. “Zus was impulsive and wanted to get revenge and to kill as many Germans as possible, while Tuvia thought they couldn’t defeat the German killing machine and should try to save as many Jews as possible… He [Schreiber] really got Zus’s personality correct and portrayed him well.”

Jakow believes that his father’s experience as a partisan can be summed up in a line found in his parents’ Yad Vashem testimony, recorded in 1979. When asked to describe his daily life, Zus responded: “It consisted of eating, drinking and planning how to kill Germans.”

Jakow is certainly a proud fighter like his father, a trait he has passed down to his children — he served in the U.S. Marine Corps and also fought for Israel in the Yom Kippur War of 1973. His two grown sons, Matthew and Elan, both made aliyah and live in Israel; Matthew served as a special forces paratrooper for the Israel Defense Forces; Elan is currently a paratrooper in the IDF.

Matthew Bielski, DoubleTapper and Elan Bielski



According to Jakow, the movie’s portrayal is remarkably accurate, except for some small details — names of characters, ages and other minor variations — which were changed with the permission of family members. If anything was distorted, it is the fact that “the movie is not one thousandth as brutal as what actually happened in real life,” he says proudly. “My father killed 67 people, anybody who turned in Jews, and he had no respect for any Germans. I told the director I wanted to see high body counts for my father in the movie.”

“Defiance” Director and Producer Edward Zwick met with family members and consulted with them several times during the making of the movie and long before he began filming.

“I was very happy with how it came out,” Jakow said. “It also just opened in Israel about a week ago and it is being sold out.”

After the movie was released in New York, he made T-shirts for his extended family that read ‘I am Bielski,’ — one of his favorite lines from the movie — on one side, and ‘Defiance’ on the other.

Related Post: Bielskis in IDF

More here

Bielski Survivors and their descendants.
http://thejewishstar.files.wordpress.com/2009/02/bielskisgenerations.jpg
http://DoubleTapper.blogspot.com






01 March 2009

IDF Blogger

تنسيق-الكليات-لعام سكس نيك كس

Another IDF Blogger posted this...


Two weeks ago our platoon commander gathered us together and had us suit up in our vests and helmets. We lined up at the staff sergeant’s storage room and he called to two of the guys to grab a brown ammunition box. Also, we had flak jackets and goggles, a stretcher, radios, and even the water pack. In short, we were fully geared up.

As usual, they were telling us nothing. We didn’t know what was in the box, why we had flak jackets, and definitely not where we were going. We just started walking behind the commander, who was up front talking on the radio quietly, barely audible.

“Yeah, we’re heading there now,” he whispered to whoever was on the other end.

I learned a long time ago to just kind of go with the flow. Who was I to ask questions? Some of the guys tried to get some information from the staff sergeant, but he just shrugged them off. Finally we made it to the entrance to the base, which leads to a set of shooting ranges reserved for advanced training.

Instead, we left the base and went in the opposite direction. At the edge of a parking lot, bordering the hilly, grassy, rock cratered buffer between an Arab village and our base, the platoon commander told us to drop our gear. After unloading we stood in formation, fully confused on what the hell was going on.

“You’re currently classified a Rifleman 03. You’ve done some shooting, learned about various weapons, successfully performed field battle movements, and so on and so on. Today, however, you’re going to become an 05, the last classification before your final 07. This is mandatory, so if anyone is too scared to do it properly, you might as well request a transfer right now.”

By this point even my curiosity was through the roof. Within minutes, however, we all found out that the time had come to throw a live grenade. The previous week we learned all about the various hand grenades used by the army, from smoke grenades to frags, flashbangs to sonic blasters. We knew it was coming, and I’m not sure if there was one unexcited face in the crowd.

Our smiles were soon displaced with seriousness as the company commander, a demigod of sorts to us privates, marched up to our formation, radio in hand. The unknown receiver on the other end of the radio being revealed, and the gravity of the situation well established, we listened raptly as he informed us that this was not something we were doing for fun, but rather as a part of our new professions.

“You’re professional soldiers now, and professional soldiers throw grenades. You mess up, you’re dead. Remember that. Good luck.”

“Yes, Company Commander!,” we shouted. I think we actually meant it this time around.

A long story made short, the way the day went was actually pretty great for us. We had to wait for literally hours as one by one a guy ran out to the throwing range when instructed, after the guy before him finished. BOOM BOOM BOOM we heard all day, the smoke rising quickly from inside a blown-out hole in the ground. At first the explosions, a deep thud that resonates for a greater distance than you’d imagine, had us yelling in excitement. After a while, however... well, it was just old-hat. How strange is a normalized irregularity.

Eventually the squad commander told me to put on my helmet and grab a flak vest and head out to the sergeant. After getting there, the sergeant told me the way it was going to work. I was to wait until the guy before me threw his grenade, and after hearing the explosion I was to run to the throwing area.

At this point he opened the brown ammunition box we carried from his storage room and took out a single green hand grenade, just like what you see in the movies. The grenades sit in a Styrofoam crate just like eggs, circular and all. They look so peaceful all lined up and insulated, unmoving, unthreatening.

“Grab,” he said as he carelessly thrusted the grenade into my hand.

My heart probably skipped more than one beat, to be honest. To be clear, I wasn’t scared. It’s just kind of one of those situations you want to do perfectly, you know? I didn’t have much time to think about it all, however. Before I knew it, BOOM! The guy before me had thrown his, and it was my turn. Time to run! Real grenade in hand, gripped tightly as possibly! Is this safe?

“Hurry,” the sergeant instructed, and I ran the couple hundred meters to the concrete barrier where our platoon commander was standing.

“Daniel,” the platoon commander called out to me as I drew near, grenade in hand. “Are you nervous?”

Without even hesitating, or trying to be the typical tough-guy you have to be in an army, I responded naturally and honestly. “Hell yes!” I said. He only smiled. I took that as him actually saying, ‘Don’t worry, it’ll be cool.’

Before the live throw you have to practice with a dummy device. Standing inside a concrete barrier the shape of a T, you pretend to throw a silver replica of the real thing. Simple enough. One strange drill you do, however, is what to do if a live grenade falls into the barrier. As you can expect, you run out of the barrier as fast as you can and jump on the ground. The platoon commander, a commissioned officer and your major authority on a day-to-day basis, then proceeds to jump on top of you. More than a few of the guys actually had bleeding cuts from how hard he fell on us. How strange it was for him to touch me. He’s just so detached from us physically...

Anyway, after only a simple practice of each scenario, he told me to grab the real thing and enter the barrier with the grenade positioned outside the concrete walls. “Already?,” I thought to myself, but of course I did as I was told. I was ready, but I just felt like something else was supposed to happen. It was all so surreal, if you can’t tell from my lackluster explanation.

I’m no Hemingway, and I feel more frustration than you know over this, but I just don’t have it in me to properly describe what it feels like to throw a grenade, to hold your life so tangibly in your hand. You pick up a live hand grenade, a simple tiny little thing no bigger than a baseball, and you just know what it can do to you. I looked down at the grenade and couldn’t help but see the terrible possibilities. Think about it like this:

We drive our cars every day, real devices of destruction, with reckless abandon and no thought of its dangers. Most people don’t get behind the wheel of a car and feel trepidation over putting the key in the ignition. How many ‘close calls’ have you had in your car and shrugged off after a minute? Now imagine having a ‘close call’ with a freaking hand grenade.

But just as quickly as I found myself entering the barricade and being instructed to pull the pin and throw the explosive, I found myself ducking down behind the barricade with the platoon commander huddled overtop me. In the Israeli army, commanders put their safety last.

And just like that, a bone-shattering thud rocked the concrete barrier. We waited a second, and then the commander pulled me to my feet.

“Let’s see...” he began, but was cut short by an acrid smoke that blew thickly in our faces. I couldn’t see a thing, and my throat, nose, and eyes burned from the deep orange-yellow smoke. Though I wanted to move out of the way, like a tough-guy I stood still, not making a sound.

“Very good. Run back to the sergeant.”

It was all just too bizarre, and they don’t give you even half a second to process any of this. It’s a run-throw-run kind of thing. But as I ran back I was still gripping the safety pin from the grenade, the ring that you have to pull in order to activate it, wondering where I was going to put it.

...found it’s long-term home on my keychain. What a normal place for something so not normal.

More here

http://DoubleTapper.blogspot.com






IDF Reserve Training

I spent this past week on duty in the IDF Reserves as the Commander of the Battalion Security Company.

Sometimes we have to make due with what we can find in the field. We didn't have any tow vehicles in the motor pool so I got to pull this mobile unit around by myself.






تنسيق-الكليات-لعام سكس نيك كس


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