1/30/1991: first combat use of another failure-prone weapon system - FASCAM mines #gulfwar30#desertstorm30
Developed in the 1970s, FASCAM, or Family of Scatterable Munitions, were artillery-delivered mines ejected from 155mm projectiles. The antipersonnel mine is "ADAM" for Area Denial Artillery Munition, and the antivehicle mine is "RAAM" for Remote Antiarmor Mine System
image source: May-June 1978 edition Field Artillery Journal 'Submunitions Of The Future' by Maj. William Whelihan web.archive.org/web/2018120100…
So on Jan 30. 1991, 5th Battalion, 11th Marines fired 360 155mm rounds of RAAM (long duration) and ADAMS, per this source: books.google.com/books?id=-oaMB…
Based on the MGRS converters I could find online, the grid they gave puts the first use of FASCAM here where the yellow thumbtack is:
I wanted to know if the Marines who fired the only acknowledged FASCAM mission in history thought they were "effective," so in June 2018 I tracked down senior leadership with direct knowledge of the fire mission and 5/11's assessments afterwards
Direct quote: "I’m not in position to comment on effectiveness of FASCAM as I have no way of knowing if the mines prevented the Iraqis from attacking or if they never intended to attack through that area anyway."
In September 1984, individual ADAM mines were already being converted into the hand-thrown M86 Pursuit Deterrence Munition for use by SOF dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fullte…
Even after the [insert shrug emoji here]-level performance of FASCAM during Desert Storm, Uncle Sam still stockpiled a heck of a lot of them here in 1995, according to @USGAOgpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/GAOR…
In August 2018, the Joint Munitions Command told me that ADAMs had been live-fire tested in 2018 while RAAM had last been live-fire tested in 2015
By February 2020, Uncle Sam's inventory of ADAMs projectiles had dwindled significantly:
This from JMC in March 2020 helps explain a lot about the mentality behind weapons engineering and design in general: they were never built with demil in mind dvidshub.net/news/365362/jm…
So, happy #gulfwar30 everybody. Cheers to the 30th anniversary of a weapon that was expensive to build, didn't work very well the one time it was used in combat, produced a lot of duds, and now costs a ton of money to demil while producing special kinds of hazmat. Huzzah
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1/30/1991: a special CENTAF log entry for the cluster munition fanboys in the house #gulfwar30#desertstorm30
"F-16s employing non-precision, free-falling general-purpose bombs, as well as older-generation cluster bomb units (CBU) — Mk-20 Rockeye, CBU-52, and CBU-58 —flew the majority, 569, of these missions."
"Battlefield effectiveness was below expectations, which led to concern over the high-consumption rates of the more modern, armor-piercing CBU-87 during the first two weeks"
It's been 18 hours since I asked @AF_Academy Public Affairs how much rent @AirForceGrads pays to have their headquarters on the USAFA campus. No response.
Check out the AOG's digs in Doolittle Hall here: events.usafa.org
"Doolittle Hall located on the United States Air Force Academy sits on 24 acres of scenic Colorado landscape and is the ideal place to host your next event. Nestled among the pines and pastures fronting the Rampart Range, it’s truly an inspiring setting."
The word "mistake" is used sparingly -- once to refer to Saddam Hussein, and the rest mostly to talk about "honest mistakes" that don't get further review #gulfwar30#desertstorm30
No discussion of fratricide. No discussion of the weapons that killed American troops. No discussion of unexploded American ordnance that continue to kill Iraqis and Kuwaitis today #gulfwar30#desertstorm30
For everyone tweeting on the 30th anniversary of Desert Storm about how brilliant the air campaign was, know that the U.S. did a lot of incredibly stupid things like drop high explosive bombs on chemical weapons depots, such as the one at Al Muthanna
They thought that the explosives in Mk-84s would destroy chemical agent, when all they did was create a giant mess that, today, still has not been cleaned up
They compounded the idiocy by following up the Mk-84s with CBU-87s, thinking that the (very) limited incendiary effects of BLU-97 submunitions would burn up liquid chemical agents. (they did not.)
8’ tall metal barricades going up on 18th Ave tonight just north of Constitution Hall to block pedestrian traffic. Worker tells me the exclusion area for the inauguration will be at least 1/3 larger than he’s seen for any other govt event, w/ 2 and 3 layers of fencing in parts
The videos I shot last night got more attention that I expected. I’ll post more from earlier in the day now, and in chronological order
1:27pm: crowd is leaving the Washington Monument following the president’s address. They’re all headed towards the Capitol. Lots of street preachers and buskers, like this guy, among them
2:02pm: I passed by these on Constitution Ave. Someone went to the trouble of printing actual fake news and left bundles on the street free for people to read