The scientific community doesn’t agree on half of the BS that the libs are trying to shove down our throats in the name of conservation. If Al Gore gets his way our economy is doomed.
What is the number one threat to U.S. aircraft carriers? You guessed it: enemy submarines. The Democrat Party.
Sentence fixed.
Ping...
The answer to your question is: There is NOTHING too low for the RATS when it comes to defeating our Sailors, Soldiers and Marines. Nothing.
If I woke up and saw that the Rats had proposed legislation to fund the terrorist insurgents in Iraq and Afghanistan, it would not surprise me one bit. Not one bit.
They are despicable, America-hating, military despising scumbags.
I believe one should never underestimate an opponent, but it is sometimes equally dangerous to overestimate one as well.
I read a very good article last month on the state of the Chinese sub fleet, and Chinese subs are pretty lousy, as is their ability to operate them.
They are averaging only two patrols a month.
The problem is a lack of leadership at the very top. Pres. Bush showed leadership reletive to the weak kneed sort that passes as leadership today but he failed to take absolute control of the situation at the start. In my view there are few if any men today who would (or could)have done more than the president. The failing is cultural. We have let the Left act with impunity thereby effectivly abandoning our own position. How much can we believe in the seriousness of the situation if, when it is slighted we don’t bear down?
Our enemies have been given heart by our cowardice and the Left’s Evil selfishness and we’re going to go where events take us, like it or not. We are not in control.
Post or FReepmail me if you wish to be enlisted in or discharged from the Navair Pinglist.
This is a medium volume pinglist.
The Navy won’t be using active sonar 5 miles off shore. It’ll be hundreds of miles out to sea.
Hello,
My name is Petty Officer Shane Tuck, and I have some information on the Navy’s perspective on this issue. The Navy issued the following release regarding the court decision:
Aug. 6, 2007
Court halts Navys ability to train realistically off Southern California
SAN DIEGO, Calif. Navy officials say they are deeply concerned by todays federal court ruling that prohibits the Navy from training realistically before deploying Sailors and Marines potentially into harms way.
A U.S. district judge in Los Angeles granted a preliminary injunction — requested by the Natural Resources Defense Council and other environmental and animal protection groups — that bars the Navy from using active sonar during critical joint task force training exercises and composite training unit exercises through 2009 in the ocean off Southern California.
We are disappointed in the courts decision and plan to appeal the imposition of an injunction, said Mr. Don Schregardus, deputy assistant secretary of the Navy for the environment. The decision puts Sailors and Marines at risk by ordering the Navy to stop critical anti-submarine warfare training while we complete Environmental Impact Statements on our training ranges.
Vice Adm. Samuel Locklear, the San Diego-based commander of the U.S. Third Fleet who oversees naval training in the Eastern Pacific, said, To the extent this court decision prevents us from using active sonar, it potentially puts American lives and our national security at risk.
The integrated sonar training exercises are essential for naval units to complete before they deploy to the Western Pacific and beyond, including support for combat operations in the Arabian Gulf.
The Navy has conducted similar exercises in the Southern California Operating Area for 70 years and has used similar active sonar technology for the past 40 years.
In all those years, not a single stranding or injury of a marine mammal has been associated with the Navys use of MFA sonar in the Southern California Operating Area, Locklear said.
The injunction is part of a lawsuit filed in March by the Natural Resources Defense Council and others against the Navys use of MFA sonar.
Active sonar is integral to anti-submarine warfare, or ASW, which is the Pacific Fleets top war-fighting priority, said Locklear. ASW is also the single-most difficult warfare area to master and maintain proficiency.
He added, Today, dozens of countries including North Korea and Iran have extremely quiet diesel-electric submarines, and more than 180 of them operate in the Pacific, within reach of critical choke points and navigational sea-lanes. Active sonar is the best system we have to detect and track them.
The Navy takes our responsibility to the environment and marine life very seriously, as demonstrated by our implementation of science-based, effective mitigation measures approved by the National Marine Fisheries Service, Locklear said. We are responsible environmental stewards while our sonar operators receive the realistic training and experience at sea they need.
To minimize the risk to marine life, the Navy takes a number of steps when operating at sea, such as posting additional lookouts specifically trained to detect marine mammals.
The Navy is a world leader in marine mammal research, dedicating more than $14 million last year alone. In addition to the significant sonar-related research, scientists and veterinarians working with the Navys marine mammal program have made important advances in the care, diagnosis and treatment of marine mammal diseases.
The Navy is preparing environmental impact statements for the Southern California Operating Area and other Navy range complexes where training and testing occur.
For more information, I recommend viewing http://www.whalesandsonar.navy.mil/