Archive for category: Special Forces

Israeli artillery fires toward Lebanon from a position near the northern town of Kiryat Shmona following Hezbollah rocket fire from the Lebanese side of the border, on August 6, 2021 (JALAA MAREY / AFP)

With first rocket attack in 15 years, Hezbollah risks war to test Israel

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The rockets fired at northern Israel on Friday were the fifth such attack from Lebanon in three months, but the first directly and openly carried out by the Hezbollah terror group since the 2006 Second Lebanon War — indicating a clear change in the dynamics on that frontier, after 15 years in which conflict bubbled just below the surface.

The Blue Line — the unofficial but internationally recognized border between Israel and Lebanon — has largely been quiet in the decade and a half since the war, with just a handful of exceptions, even as the Israel Defense Forces and Iran-backed Hezbollah continued to wage a quieter conflict with one another elsewhere, mostly in neighboring Syria.

Generally speaking, Israel has refrained from conducting strikes in Lebanon, and Hezbollah too halted rocket fire from the land of the cedars. But in recent months, that arrangement has started to break down.

During May’s conflict between Israel and terror groups in the Gaza Strip, Palestinian factions in Lebanon fired rockets at northern Israel three times, apparently with the tacit approval of Hezbollah, which maintains strict control over southern Lebanon. A Palestinian group again fired rockets at northern Israel earlier this week. In these four cases, Israel responded with limited artillery barrages. On Wednesday this was followed by a round of airstrikes on unspecified military targets in the area from which the rockets were fired. These were the first Israeli airstrikes against targets inside Lebanon since 2014.

Following the Second Lebanon War, the threat that emerged on the Lebanese border was another full-scale war. This was what the IDF trained for and worked to postpone or at least improve its chances of winning. In contrast, the situation in the Gaza Strip is far muddier: While there is a threat of large-scale conflict — such as in May or in 2014 — it is far more common for the area to see more limited attacks by Palestinian terror groups and similarly restrained retaliation by the IDF, without the situation deteriorating into all-out war.

At the beginning of this year, the IDF warned that such a dynamic was poised to emerge in Lebanon as well, with Hezbollah feeling increasingly confident that it could launch attacks directly against Israel without risking a full-scale war, one that according to Israeli military assessments would be devastating for Israel and — more so — for Lebanon.

A picture taken from Lebanon’s southern Marjayoun area shows an agricultural vehicle driving down a dirt road in the Israeli town of Metula along the border fence between the two countries on August 6, 2021 (Mahmoud ZAYYAT / AFP)

Despite the apparent emergence of this new, more aggressive stance by Hezbollah, the IDF has maintained that the terrorist militia is deterred, both out of fear of the Israeli military and due to the ongoing financial and societal crises playing out within Lebanon, as could be seen this week with rallies against the government to mark the one-year anniversary of the Beirut Port explosion.

Indeed, IDF Spokesperson Ran Kochav told reporters on Friday that the army believes the rocket attack itself “shows Hezbollah’s deterrence, as it fired at open areas.”

But there is reason to question this interpretation. Of the 19 rockets fired at northern Israel on Friday, 10 were shot down by the Iron Dome missile defense system, something that, under the IDF’s air defense doctrine, is normally only done when it appears a projectile is heading to a populated area.

While Hezbollah may not have been intentionally launching a full-scale war with its rocket attack on Friday, it seems it was certainly willing to risk one.

The IDF’s projections for how a war with Hezbollah would break out do not anticipate that the terror group would initiate such a conflict with a sudden, large-scale assault — but rather that such a conflict would kick off with some kind of attack along the border, possibly an ambush against IDF troops, as was the case in the Second Lebanon War, or a rocket or missile attack, to which Israel would respond forcefully.

This picture taken on August 6, 2021 shows a view of Israeli bombardment near the southern Lebanese village of Kfar Shouba following a rocket attack from the Lebanese side (Mahmoud ZAYYAT / AFP)

Hezbollah would then retaliate further, potentially launching large barrages of rockets at the Israeli home front and deploying its Radwan Unit, a special forces detachment that has been specifically trained to capture portions of the Galilee in order to score a public victory over Israel — however fleeting — and to delay Israel in launching its own ground invasion of southern Lebanon. Such an invasion would be necessary, IDF officers say, to take the strategic high…

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Fallen Local Soldier Named Honorary Green Beret | Local News

Fallen Local Soldier Named Honorary Green Beret | Local News

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In a rare private ceremony held in July at Fort Bragg military base in North Carolina, the late Jeremiah “J.W.” Johnson of Greene County was one of two soldiers named an honorary Green Beret for their actions during a deadly 2017 ambush in Niger, Africa.

Johnson and Sgt. La David Johnson of Florida were two of the four American soldiers killed alongside four Nigerien partners when the joint American and Nigerien patrol came under hostile fire in southwest Niger on Oct. 4, 2017.

Before the July ceremony, only 10 others had received honorary Green Beret recognition, Task and Purpose has reported. Johnson’s father, also known as J.W. Johnson, said his son and La David Johnson are two of just three soldiers among that number.

“To get it posthumously as a soldier is just unheard of. For him to be given that honor means so much to me,” said Johnson, a Marine veteran who lives in Erwin.

Jeremiah Johnson was born in New Bern, North Carolina, where his father was stationed at the time at the Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point. He attended North Greene High School and planned to retire in Greene County, where his father said much of their family lives.

Johnson said part of what makes the recognition so meaningful is that Jeremiah was working toward earning his Green Beret before he was killed.

“I always wanted him to be a Marine, but he chose his own path. When he joined the Army, he told me, ‘Don’t worry, I will end up in special forces like you,” said Johnson.

Johnson added that the process is very long and arduous, consisting of extensive physical and mental training and qualifications before and after selection for the program, with only about a 3% graduation rate. Once a member of special forces, it could take years to earn the beret, Johnson said. Jeremiah Johnson served five years as a member of Special Forces.

“He was taking the necessary steps to qualify for selection, and he was killed before he got the opportunity. So was La David,” said Johnson.

Through his own military background, Johnson said Jeremiah grew up around military and law enforcement personnel before he joined the military himself. He enlisted in the U.S. Army Reserve at 29 in 2007 and joined the active duty Army in 2008.

With chemical and biological specializations, Jeremiah was first assigned to the 22nd Chemical Battalion, and in 2015 he was assigned to a chemical reconnaissance detachment in the Group Support Battalion.

On the morning of Oct. 4, 2017, he was one of 12 members of the Army Third Special Forces Group to leave the village of Tongo Tongo near the Mali border in a convoy of seven unarmored pickup trucks.

The patrol began taking small-arms fire from a tree line and tried a maneuver to outflank the enemy, but had to pull back.

The attack built in intensity as enemy fighters on motorcycles threatened to overrun them. An account of the action said the Americans and their Nigerien partners fought back fiercely, but were outnumbered and outgunned. They made several attempts to break out and withdraw, but had to retreat to a final defensive position.

Jeremiah was 39 when he was killed alongside Sgt. La David Johnson, 25, and Green Berets Staff Sgt. Bryan Black, 35, of Washington, and Staff Sgt. Dustin M. Wright, 29, of Georgia, and four members of Team Ouallam, named after the camp they staged from.

Jeremiah Johnson was also posthumously promoted to Sergeant First Class and awarded a Bronze Star Medal with Valor in 2019 at the Capitol Theatre in Greeneville for his actions in the firefight.

Johnson said that while he still feels the loss of Jeremiah, the recent honor eases some of that pain.

“It feels like something has been lifted off of my shoulders. I can still feel that void, and I can’t explain it. Something is just gone, and there’s that hole, but I’m ok,” he said. “It is unbelievable how much this has helped. I really cannot explain it.”

Johnson said seeing the camaraderie his son had in the Army, and military personnel’s continued correspondence and recognition for his son, have also brought him comfort.

“When the guys out of his unit found out Jeremiah and La David would get the Green Beret, the phone calls I got were just wonderful,” said Johnson. “I thought there might be some controversy and someone might say he didn’t pay his dues, but they all said he did. He paid with his life. When I went to the ceremony, all of the Special Forces guys and Green Berets that were there said he well deserved it, and so does La David.”

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The United States Air Force's 26th Special Tactics Squadron

The United States Air Force’s 26th Special Tactics Squadron

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The United States Air Force’s 26th Special Tactics Squadron out of Cannon Air Force Base in New Mexico train at Fort McCoy, Wis., on the installation’s different drop zones June 23-24, 2021.

Airmen participate in free-fall jumps out of C-130s from the Minnesota Air National Guard’s 133rd Airlift Wing out of Minneapolis, Minn.

This U.S. Air Force and Air National Guard joint training is another great example of Fort McCoy’s value as a Total Force Training Center.

FORT MCCOY, WI.

06.23.2021

Video by Cedar Wolf Fort McCoy Multimedia Visual Information Branch


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Warzone Cold War Season 5 Roadmap

Warzone & Cold War Season 5: Roadmap & content

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The official roadmap for Season 5 of Call of Duty: Warzone and Black Ops Cold War has been revealed to the community, and we have everything you need to know covered.


There is plenty of excitement brewing in the Call of Duty community right now thanks to the reveal of the Warzone and Black Ops Cold War Season 5 roadmap.

As with previous seasons, the Warzone and Cold War Season 5 roadmap gives players a picture of all of the new content they can expect to see during the new period of content for the popular games.

You can find everything you need to know about the Warzone and Cold War Season 5 roadmap below:

Warzone and Cold War Season 5 roadmap

Warzone and Cold War Season 5 roadmap

The Story So Far: Time to Execute the Mission

“This is Wraith. The Verdansk tests are looking good… that clears the way for you.”

Having emerged from the shadows with a direct assault on the Ground Station in South Africa and the de-orbiting of an American satellite constellation, Perseus continues their offensive.

Wraith hands off Dragovitch’s data, stolen from the Soviet facility on Mount Yamantau to a mysterious operative, along with details of the next phase of Perseus’s nefarious plan.

“Told you it would be easy.” – Kitsune

In the early hours of July 23rd 1984, Woods and an assault team take to the air, in response to a distress signal sent from a NATO listening station in Teufelsberg, Germany… the base has been overrun by unknown assailants.

Inside, Woods is confronted by a threat he thought long buried, a weapon from the past that could change the conflict forever…

Don’t fall to the mind games – Black Ops Cold War and Warzone Season Five comes online on August 12, following updates to Black Ops Cold War on August 10 at 9 PM PT and Warzone on August 11 at 9 PM PT. Keep reading, even though this declassified intel will almost certainly fall into the hands of double agents in our ranks….

BLACK OPS COLD WAR CONTENT:

Warzone and Cold War Season 5 roadmap

Become a Double Agent in the Newest Multiplayer Game Mode

The new Double Agent mode infiltrates into Season Five, an investigative Multiplayer party experience where each match assigns Double Agents who are there to sabotage the mission. Communicate, investigate, and expose the traitors – or successfully wipe out the investigating team – to win.

It starts with up to ten players in a lobby who are assigned one of three roles:

·      Double Agents, who must either eliminate everyone else or successfully set off explosive charges around the map.

·      The Investigator, who can use clues to target suspected Double Agents as Wanted criminals.

·      Operatives, who must work together to identify and eliminate the Double Agents before it’s too late.

Warzone and Cold War Season 5 roadmap

Each player starts with a pistol. Weapons and Equipment are introduced in the Preparing Stage, where all players can grab weapons in different parts of the map.

Each role gains access to unique skills and content during the round. Double Agents gain access to Gas Mines, Counter Spy Planes, Combat Bows, and Attack Helicopters, and also have protection from the radiation spreading from the bombs they’ve set.

Investigators gain access to Trophy Systems, Stimshots, and Hand Cannons, and can see the footprints of an attacker when examining a player’s death location. Investigators can also issue a Wanted Order on a player that they find to be suspicious.

Voice chat is strongly encouraged, and this party mode can be played with the wider community or up to nine of your best friends. Hopefully, they can still be considered your closest allies at the end of the operation.

Warzone and Cold War Season 5 roadmap

Demolition Returns In-Season

Later in Season Five, the classic Demolition game mode makes its debut in Black Ops Cold War.

Two teams battle it out as attackers attempt to destroy a pair of active bombsites, while defenders must prevent the detonations. All-out chaos ensues when time is extended after the first bomb site is destroyed, and you’d better be prepared with plenty of Scorestreaks and squadmates for backup should one final bomb be planted at the last second.

Five Fresh Multiplayer Maps

Prepare to seek and destroy Double Agents – and execute missions across a variety of Multiplayer modes – in a collection of locales both fresh and familiar, especially to true veterans of the Black Ops series.

Warzone and Cold War Season 5 roadmap

Echelon (6v6, Launch)

In this brand-new map seen in the Season Five intro cinematic, you’ll need to keep your ear to the ground if you want to leave this listening station alive.

Set at Teufelsberg – also known as “Devil’s Mountain” – in Berlin, Echelon sees Operators fighting through the rain and ash in the aftermath of Perseus’ latest operation. From either infiltration point, you’ll fight to control the central control room inside the main dome, a natural hotbed for combat that gets even hotter in objective game modes.

This NATO compound was partially blown to pieces during the attack, so mind the gaps in the roofs unless you’re planning to…

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Waco company offers customers free toy soldiers to remember service members

Waco company offers customers free toy soldiers to remember service members

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WACO, Texas (KWTX) – A company in Waco is thinking ‘outside the box’…the ammo box…to find a way to honor U.S. service members.

In the corner of Waco Axe Company lies an old ammunition box filled with toy soldiers and a note: “Please take a soldier home and place it somewhere that will remind you to pray for the men and women serving our country.”

”It’s one of those things where you genuinely kind of get a little choked up because you don’t think about your people who are overseas,” said Will Craig, Operations Manager at Waco Axe Co. “They do a lot for us that some people kind of take for granted.”

Craig borrowed the idea from a bar in Georgetown called Mesquite Creek Outfitters.

“Every time I’d go there I thought it was the coolest thing,” said Craig. “We’re looking to shift our brand a little bit more toward military and armed forces, so I thought it was a perfect opportunity considering we have a lot of military that come in here, it was a perfect fit for here.”

The owner of Waco Axe Co., Thomas Ellis, was a special ops Army Ranger.

“When you are overseas, it is tough because you feel disconnected from your life back home,” said Ellis. “I really think that when you do have someone back home thinking about you, people that you don’t even know, it’s just one of those comforting feelings, especially overseas.”

Ellis says many of his employees are veterans, too.

He says axe throwing is great for stress release and PTSD, and recreates some of the comradery former service members may miss when they return home.

“When you’re out, you’re kind of off on your own little island, and coming here with some friends or meeting some of the other veterans that are working here….just talking and throwing and competing…just adds a sense of togetherness,” said Ellis.

He says it’s been special seeing how customers have embraced their free box of plastic green army men.

“It’s near and dear to my heart, and I love that people have embraced that and are thinking about those soldiers,” said Ellis. “People used to take pictures of our murals here–now they’re taking pictures of our box.”

Craig says the idea has really taken off.

“We’ll have people that come in here once, and they come in again, and they’re like ‘can I take another one?’ and we’re like ‘yeah, 100 percent, make your own little squad,’” he laughed. “The response has been phenomenal, people have really embraced it, we’re getting an outpour from military families, they really appreciate it.”

Craig put out the wooden box about a month ago.

They hope the little box will make a big difference in terms of honoring men and women in uniform, past and present, and increasing patriotism.

“If it means something to someone or you tie that relationship to that little figurine, that little toy soldier, it makes you think about them a little more than you normally would,” said Craig. “Everybody should spend little bit of time thinking about them because they do a lot for us.”

Waco Axe Co. also offers military discounts to show appreciation.

Copyright 2021 KWTX. All rights reserved.

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special forces

Defender Pacific 21: Special Forces Soldiers, JGSDF conduct bilateral operations in Guam

Two C-130s launch from Yokota Air Base, Tokyo, into midnight darkness on course to deliver airborne personnel with U.S. Army Special Forces and the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force members to Guam.

History is being made as Green Berets with 1st Battalion, 1st Special Forces Group (Airborne), and members of JGSDF, execute their first bilateral airborne operation outside of Japanese territory. On board, both units know well the commands and procedures that lead up to exiting a high-performance aircraft.

The operation begins with a call from the drop zone control party. The pilots check in and wind calls are made. The JGSDF exits on first pass with the Type 13 parachute. On second pass, special operations forces exit with the steerable MC-6 parachute. Directly below is a flight line—which guarantees a hard landing—and grass off to the sides.

On July 30, 2021, A Special Forces Operational Detachment-Alpha (ODA) assigned to 1st SFG (A) and approximately 80 members with JGSDF conducted bilateral operations in Guam as part of Defender Pacific 21.

DP21 is a U.S. Army Pacific exercise designed to operationalize the national Defense Strategy through realistic, iterative training across all domains—land, sea, air, cyber and space.

Following the airborne infiltration, U.S. Special Forces and the JGSDF conducted an air assault in vicinity of their first objective near Naval Base Guam, said the Special Forces ODA team leader assigned to 1st Bn., 1st SFG (A). After destroying the first objective, which were anti-air weapon systems, the bilateral force reconsolidated and moved toward their follow-on mission.

Thirty-six hours elapsed from when mission planning started to when the second objective—an enemy command and control node—was destroyed.

Despite tropical heat, humidity and lack of sleep, the bilateral force conducted a high-performance mass-tactical airborne operation and executed two targets with zero major injuries, said the team leader. The airborne operation sends a clear message that the United States and Japan share a commitment to freedom and security and can employ a combined force in support of these principles.

“This experience provided valuable insight into JGSDF capabilities and maneuver techniques; giving insight into how we can better support their operations in the future,” he continued. “Furthermore, this operation allowed the team to create valuable relationships with JGSDF [members] and leadership that will serve as the foundation for future bilateral operations.”

Throughout the operation, the ODA team leader made sure bilingual Green Berets and JGSDF members were placed strategically in the formation to ensure communication and commands were understood.

“Joint operational capability is important for us to defend [Japanese] territory.” said Capt. Ryosuke Taki, lead U.S.-Japan bilateral operations planner for JGSDF.

For six months, Taki coordinated with the JGSDF, and 1st SFG (A), on making this training opportunity a reality.

“I had to overcome many obstacles to accomplish this mission,” he said. “As far as airborne operations go, [U.S. Army] uses many words we don’t know. Language sometimes [created] misunderstandings making coordination difficult…[however,] our members wanted to coordinate with 1st Special Forces Group.”

“Special Forces are experts in military freefall and close-quarters combat, as well as static-line jumps,” Taki said. “We have more lessons to learn from their rich experiences.”

The Indo-Pacific region is the most consequential theater on the planet and DP21 provides opportunities necessary to create, refine, and deploy new options and solutions for the challenges our nation, allies and partners face. This exercise anticipates requirements to support regional alliances and the existing security architecture to exploit opportunities.

Date Taken: 07.30.2021
Date Posted: 08.04.2021 16:47
Story ID: 402441
Location: GU
Hometown: JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, WA, US

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