[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 50 points 11 hours ago

https://archive.ph/XfIOf

F-35 program chief warns fleet has outgrown its support system amid record-low readiness

The F-35’s program chief conceded to senators Tuesday that the fighter has outgrown the system built to support it, weeks after a GAO report put readiness at the lowest level on record.

more

Marine Corps Lt. Gen. Gregory Masiello, who took over the F-35 Joint Program Office last July, testified before an open session of the Airland Subcommittee as the program defends a fiscal 2027 request that bundles more than $13 billion for the jet in fiscal 2027 alone. The request includes a buy of 85 U.S. aircraft and full funding for the Block 4 modernization effort and the engine core upgrade. This hearing marks the first time the F-35 program’s leader has appeared before the subcommittee since 2016. Since then, the fleet has grown from 170 aircraft to more than 1,300. In his written testimony, Masiello pointed to a sustainment system that was originally built to support 700 to 800 aircraft, well short of the fleet now flying. “If I have over 1,300 operational aircraft out there, I believe we have set and enabled a sustainment system for about 7 to 800,” he said. “So there is our challenge in readiness.”

what is with with western militaries and forgetting to buy enough spare parts

The hearing comes on the heels of a Government Accountability Office report this month that found just one in four F-35s were fully mission capable (FMC), meaning able to fly all assigned missions. Overall mission capable rates of jets able to fly at least one mission fell from 67% in fiscal 2021 to 44%. Masiello put the program’s mission capable rate at 56%, above GAO’s 44%, a gap he ascribed to methodology. He stopped short of contesting the GAO’s FMC figure, but emphasized that “context matters,” arguing the discrepancy results from how his program defines mission capable. Partially dragging down the FMC rate is the acceptance of incomplete jets. Pressed by ranking member Sen. Mark Kelly, D-Ariz., Masiello confirmed the Marine Corps has accepted six F-35Bs with no radar installed, opting instead to wait for a newer APG-85 radar. When Kelly asked whether an F-35 with no radar could be considered FMC, Masiello conceded, “I don’t think I would count them as fully mission capable,” adding that he would discuss the radar’s capability in more detail in the closed session that followed.

Masiello blamed years of underbuying spare parts as the fleet grew, not a broken system. In response, the program has launched what it calls the Global Support Solution Reset, a roughly $13.7 billion effort through 2031 that targets five problem areas including spares, depot capacity and maintenance plans. “It’s not a systemic issue with the system having the ability,” he said. “It’s the fact that we didn’t put enough parts and pieces on the shelf, and we’ve increased the demand exponentially with the number of aircraft fielded, and we didn’t do the same thing with the spare parts and the system.” Asked what is most responsible for keeping jets from FMC status, Masiello pointed to software issues and the jet’s canopies, whose limited lifespan he called a particular problem on a low-observable jet. The modernization track is running behind as well. The full Block 4 suite, once due in 2026, is now years off. Masiello said the program has fielded 22 of 55 planned Block 4 capabilities, the suite of new sensors, electronic warfare and weapons meant to keep the jet ahead of modern air defenses. The program fielded seven of those in last year’s software upgrade, with another six due this summer. Contributing to modernization delays are the jet’s power and cooling capabilities. The engine core upgrade, slated for fielding in 2031, is meant to power and cool the full Block 4 suite, whose new radar and sensors draw more power and generate more heat than the current jet can handle.

On program accountability, Masiello said in his written statement that the program would revise contracts to carry “meaningful incentives and penalties,”

I've got a "meaningful incentive" for ya: xi-gun-1xi-gun-2 porky-scared

a change GAO has urged for years after finding the program paid Lockheed Martin millions in fees even as readiness slid. But that isn’t GAO’s only recommendation. GAO has made 46 sustainment recommendations since 2014, including three in this month’s report. As of March, the Pentagon had implemented just 14, leaving most still open a decade later. Asked by the committee’s newest member, Sen. Ashley Moody, R-Fla., how many of the GAO’s recommendations the program had closed, Masiello wouldn’t commit to a specific number, preferring to note that they were “probably all to some degree in process.” Despite all the criticism, the jet’s unique capabilities drew high praise from across the aisle. Kelly, a Democrat and former Navy combat pilot, called himself and the committee strong supporters of the F-35 program. Kelly recalled flying an F-16 against an F-35, noting that he “could not see it on radar even when I’m looking right at it.” But he tied that support to accountability, telling Masiello the program needs to show it can improve readiness and control costs.

Masiello made the same case from the program side, citing the jet’s prominent role in recent operations, including Epic Fury, the U.S. air campaign against Iran. He said operators had told him it was “the only aircraft that can hit some of the targets” those missions required and could “act as a quarterback of that joint force.” The program’s global reach adds to the sustainment burden. Allied nations own and operate most of the F-35s based in Europe and the Pacific, and they keep buying more. Masiello said Poland signaled plans to double its 32-jet order during his visit this month, though he had not yet seen a contract. That growing fleet draws on the same global spares pool

HOW THE HELL DID YOU NOT FACTOR THAT IN!? You're the ones EXPORTING the jet, if you don't have the spare parts, don't fucking sell it! Capitalists will literally sell the last bit of firewood they have and then proceed to freeze to death in the winter, you don't even need to buy rope to hang them with from them anymore, they'll just fucking kill themselves through ineptitude!

and sustainment system now straining to keep U.S. jets ready, even as it spreads the program’s cost and industrial base across allied countries. Masiello warned that funding only part of the fiscal 2027 request would slow the production line and cut deliveries. For now, the readiness fight, modernization and the sustainment reset all hinge on a budget Congress has yet to pass.

[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 60 points 13 hours ago

https://xcancel.com/ME_Observer_/status/2070134539104469427

⚡️ 🚀 A video of the IRGC missile spring in the heart of occupied Palestine. In last month's Iranian missile attack, a missile fell in the Yokneam area, and following this impact, a spring of water gushed from the ground. Since then, many tourists have visited this new spring, and the name that has become popular among the residents of Yokneam is "Ein Te'el" (Missile Spring).

https://video.twimg.com/amplify_video/2070134494305124352/vid/avc1/268x480/JJYNNK8Rxz3aR0fl.mp4

[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 20 points 13 hours ago* (last edited 13 hours ago)

This isn't fully unprecedented - the Paraguay War led to truly staggering losses for Paraguay, traditionally estimated as 50-70% of the population (admittedly a lot of this was famine and disease), with more recent scholarship (https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=5341419, https://read.dukeupress.edu/hahr/article/68/2/289/147309/The-Demographics-of-Paraguay-A-Reinterpretation-of) arguing for a more conservative 8-18% (the massive disparity in estimates has a lot to do with lackluster census information making it difficult to know what Paraguay's population actually even was, which in turn makes percentages iffy). But even that lower figure is still pretty substantial - and yet there was little meaningful dissent against the Paraguayan government, with the Triple Alliance eventually capturing the capital and Solano López managing to continue waging a guerilla campaign for another year until straight-up getting killed in combat.

[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 55 points 15 hours ago

https://xcancel.com/Thorkill65/status/2069692541335716054 (machine-translated) (CW: abuse, suicide)

Can you imagine what they call the guys? "One-and-dones." Meaning, one trip out and that's it." The most interesting excerpts from the investigative report by the Ukrainian portal Babel about the 425th Assault Regiment "Skala." Yesterday, a long and well-documented investigative report appeared on the Ukrainian portal "Babel," describing the course of the training process in the 425th Assault Regiment "Skala." The regiment is in reality a division because it currently numbers about 8-10k soldiers, and until recently it was presented in Ukrainian media as supposedly elite. It belongs to the so-called Syrsky Army - a group of assault units subordinate exclusively to him, which he deploys with direct, hand-written orders by battalions and companies to various front sections, in order to plug holes with counterattacks. The article is very powerful and I recommend reading it, though as I note, it's not an easy read. Below are a few excerpts, so everyone can get a rough idea of what's happening in the training centers of the 425th Assault Regiment, where recruits end up.

more

"Upon arrival at the 'Skala' distribution center, they stripped us naked, searched us, made us take off our underwear and do squats. The invaluable first experience of using the toilet - in groups, under the muzzles of automatics, elaborate insults and brutal prods for not standing in sufficiently straight formation or for external appearance. "According to his words, there are two guards per tent: if one escorts to the latrine, the second stays behind. Going out alone, for example just to breathe some fresh air, is also forbidden." "The perimeter around the training centers is mined. Signs reading 'mines' are hung on the fencing tape around the tents(...). A man who spent several weeks in the tent camp says that explosions could be heard almost every night, often animals stumbling onto mines: hares or roe deer."

"In short, they found us. Knocked out teeth, broke ribs, well, just a slaughter. And that guard I escaped from says: 'What do you want, you bastard, for me to go to zero instead of you?' "Almost all the men who escaped from there talk about being bound with duct tape in the training centers." "Oleksandr Zhykyn has similar memories: 'Some chief of staff or someone like that came up to our tent: "And who's here? Ah, third company. One-and-dones." And he walked off. Can you imagine what they call the guys? "One-and-dones." Yeah, in the sense that one trip out and that's it.' 'Over Maksym Skipa, according to his words, the abuse continued even on the training ground: "He could barely walk. We helped him put on and take off his vest, because if he didn't put it on - they'd beat him." One morning the recruits woke up and saw that Maksym had hanged himself.'

"Beatings in 'Skala' don't always require a serious reason, says a former instructor with combat experience. He knows of cases where people in rear positions were abused - because of disruptions in Starlink operation or errors in paperwork. Ribs were broken, he says, right in front of everyone at roll call. The soldier also saw how dogs were set on mobilized men." The author of the report established that in the last six months, there were at least 26 fatal cases of recruits in the "Skala" training centers. The official cause of death in most cases was pneumonia, as well as various strange reasons meant to explain visible beating marks like "fall from a pine tree."

Unfortunately, the article focuses exclusively on describing the first stage of training. There's nothing, however, about what happens to recruits once they reach the regiment's actual subunits fighting on the contact line. I can briefly write that there are also interesting "tidbits" there, like handing out individual weapons to soldiers only right before the assault itself. I also remind you that I was one of the first who, on Twitter, already in September 2025, started writing about how something was off with the 425th Assault Regiment "Skala" and it looked like the so-called "meat unit." At that time, I published a long text here based on info from posts by families of missing Skala soldiers, found on social networks. In April 2026, after another such text, I was attacked by representatives of Osint Polo (I won't name nicknames, but it's easy to guess or search who it concerns), supported by other "experts" from Osint Polo and Karolina Kuzema. They wrote then that I was "leading a witch hunt" and "don't know what I'm talking about because I've never been on the front" and the regiment is just a regular unit. These people once again proved that they are ordinary Ukrainian propagandists for five hryvnia or, in the optimistic version, ignorant fake experts with no clue about the behind-the-scenes of the war in Ukraine.

the actual article: https://archive.ph/hJfmv

https://xcancel.com/Eldacar800/status/2069701677481906622

To supplement, I'll add screenshots from the Facebook group where families are looking for missing people. The group currently has 18,624 members. Even assuming that one person might be searched for by two family members or that some are just observers (like me), it's still over 9K MIA.

[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 58 points 16 hours ago* (last edited 15 hours ago)

https://xcancel.com/OlgaBazova/status/2069843118120378666

Mash reports that Ukraine has lost 2.4 million soldiers in the four years of the SMO, more than 400,000 of them in 2026. These figures were obtained by our hackers from the databases of the General Staff of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, TCC centers, Ukrainian medical organizations and morgues. By August 2025, the number of eliminated soldiers reached 1.7 million — by December, the figure exceeded 2 million. In the first six months of 2026, the AFU lost as many soldiers as they did in all of 2023 — approximately 400,000. The highest number of deaths occurred on the Pokrovsk, Konstantinovka, Liman, Zaporozhye, and Kupyansk fronts — each of them averaging 500 AFU militants killed per day. The most deaths occurred in the 72nd and 110th Motor Rifle Brigades, airborne assault brigades, and territorial defense forces. Deaths of foreign mercenaries are no longer recorded among the casualties — they are all attributed to accidents. According to our information, the number of foreigners killed in the Ukrainian Armed Forces is close to five thousand. The figure continues to rise, as the TCC regularly replenishes the ranks of militants with foreigners — 5-6 of whom are recruited by each TCC center in Kiev alone, including many young men (20-23 years of age on average) from Argentina and Brazil. The Ukrainian databases were hacked by PalachPro hackers and the NoName057 group (16) — these are the same guys who used AI to hack into 50,000 surveillance cameras for surveillance in the Ukraine and EU.

the Ukrainian counter-propagandists are also really losing their touch https://archive.ph/icbXL

The Center for Countering Disinformation under the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine said on social media that such messages are being spread by hostile-leaning outlets.

...

In reality, such statements are a fabrication. The ‘loss figures’ named by the Russians exceed the total number of Ukrainian troops

Uh, yeah... that's how casualties and replenishments work? Like, let's say you have a million men, lose 500k, replace them with new recruits, and do this another 2 times, you'll end up with 1.5 million casualties while maintaining an army of 1 million.

Kind of an ancient example, but the Romans, at one point, over the course of several battles lost a fifth of their total adult male population, 150k men (although admittedly a bunch of those were captures rather than deaths) - their eventual peak during that war would be a little under 130k (and they of course had subsequent losses even after those initial defeats).

Earlier, Russian propagandists actively circulated a fake about allegedly ‘1.7 million’ losses of Ukraine at the front. The Center for Countering Disinformation refuted it at the time. The Center for Countering Disinformation explains the nature of this disinformation campaign

Having not invented anything new, Kremlin fabricators simply ‘added’ another 700 thousand to the old lie

Are we supposed to pretend that Ukrainians have taken literally no casualties? Like, even if this Russian claim is hyperbolic, the statement here seems to be opposed to the very notion of the casualty count increasing over time!

They basically don't even bother make any sort of cogent counterargument, just "well it's from a 'hostile-leaning outlet'" so it's untrue by default"

4
submitted 1 day ago by Tervell@hexbear.net to c/guns@hexbear.net
[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 5 points 1 day ago

azov-uped Colombian mercs

Well, not sure how many of those guys are going to be returning...

13
submitted 1 day ago by Tervell@hexbear.net to c/guns@hexbear.net
12
submitted 2 days ago by Tervell@hexbear.net to c/guns@hexbear.net
[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 60 points 2 days ago

https://xcancel.com/Schizointel/status/2069071431112007935

Following the signing of a €3.2 billion contract in April 2026, we know now how many PAC-2 GEM-T missiles Germany will donate to Ukraine over the following four years. According to Ukrainian President Zelenskyy, Germany will donate 600 Patriot missiles. This was announced by him in an interview with 1+1.

This is a very good number, though if you do math you can realize that even this large number is wholly insufficient to deal with the yearly Russian missile threat. Regardless, it keeps Ukraine in the fight and the Patriots at least able to defend themselves. What remains necessary is defeating Russian supply chains, not the individual missiles. Luckily, some work is being undertaken in this field. Though ballistics interceptors will always be in short supply for Ukraine, at least in the medium term.

Just in the month of May 2026, Ukraine recorded 211 launches of Russian Ballistic and Cruise missiles the number of interceptors is abysmally insufficient and despite 4 years of war, Western manufacturing has not increased sufficiently. Currently with new European lines Raytheon PAC-2 GEM-T production in Germany will increase to 35 missiles a month by 2027 at which will then begin a 6-year time frame to produce 1,000 PAC-2 GEM-T. Again, this sounds like large numbers until you realize that Ukraine will have a need to intercept 2,500~ Russian missiles a year and are given enough interceptors for 600 but this delivery will take 4 years and then it'll take an additional 6 years for the factory to make a thousand more.

[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 84 points 2 days ago

https://xcancel.com/TheCradleMedia/status/2069379439776125245

Hezbollah drone blitz leaves Israeli forces feeling like sitting ducks in southern Lebanon

Israeli troops deployed inside southern Lebanon are facing severe psychological trauma and operational paralysis due to the relentless threat of Hezbollah explosive drones, according to testimonies published by Hebrew daily Yedioth Ahronoth. Soldiers and officers describe a persistent state of helplessness and constant anxiety, stating that the Lebanese resistance group's unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) have completely reshaped battlefield conditions and stripped away their sense of security. An Israeli soldier from the 98th Division recounted intense moments of panic where his unit was forced to abandon their vehicles and scramble into the woods for cover under the shadow of incoming drones. The soldier described the psychological toll as unprecedented, adding that field units are growing increasingly frustrated with the military leadership over a perceived lack of momentum and a strategy that exposes them to extreme risk without achieving concrete results. The report highlighted the lethality of these close-range strikes, citing an incident where a Givati Brigade reconnaissance unit officer and her assistant were severely wounded inside a disabled Namer armored vehicle. The officer sustained severe shrapnel wounds to her face and head after an explosive drone detonated directly on their position, underscoring the growing tactical challenges Hezbollah’s expanding drone fleet poses to Israeli forces.

[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 68 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

https://archive.ph/ZKWlO

US couldn’t repair battle-damaged ships in war with China, study finds

Battle-damaged U.S. warships could not be quickly repaired and returned to combat during a war with China, according to a new report.

more

U.S. maintenance facilities would be overwhelmed and would lack sufficient spare parts to repair ships in theater, concluded the study by RAND, a Washington-based think tank. Nor can the U.S. Navy assume that its Pacific allies have adequate shipyard capacity — or political willingness — to fix damaged vessels. The U.S. Navy has struggled with overworked ships and crews, as well as overburdened shipyards and repair depots. But a war with China, which has the world’s largest navy, would almost certainly result in American ships being hit by everything from ballistic “carrier-killer” missiles, to hypersonic weapons and torpedoes, the study says. “The Navy has not faced damage at the level likely to occur in a major war since World War II,” warned RAND. The study recommended that command-and-control authority for repair work be streamlined, including prior agreements with allied nations regarding access to facilities. It also urged the U.S. Navy to expand its mobile repair capabilities, including “deployable repair teams, flyaway assessment units, and scalable Expeditionary Mobile Repair Facilities.”

Barriers to repairs

RAND’s analysis was based on a tabletop wargame conducted in August 2025. The setting was a hypothetical war with China, as U.S. ships race to defend Taiwan from invasion or blockade. The American vessels in question were Arleigh Burke-class destroyers, the backbone of the U.S. surface fleet. The U.S. Navy will need every ship it can get, including damaged vessels patched up and rejoining the fight. However, “existing Navy systems for battle-damage repair are burdened by a variety of inefficiencies that hinder the Navy’s capacity for responding to widespread battle damage,” the study warned. Analysts also found that “attempting repairs in a hostile Indo-Pacific environment will be significantly more complex than existing plans allow. This complexity creates serious risks to U.S. and allied rapid force regeneration and maritime dominance.”

Meanwhile, Chinese ships would be operating close to their home bases and repair facilities. “China is not only closer, it also has significantly better industrial repair capability,” Bradley Martin, a RAND analyst who co-authored the report, told Defense News. Though the game focused on Arleigh Burke-class destroyers, repair issues would “apply to all ship classes, and in fact may be more pronounced where nuclear repairs are involved. Issues of access, vulnerability, and industrial capacity apply across all ship classes.” Rather than combat, the game focused on how damaged ships could be repaired in the Pacific theater and returned to combat, rather than spending weeks limping back to U.S. ports. This would likely require U.S. access to ports and shipyards in allied nations. During the game, teams represented the U.S. and its allies, including Japan, Korea and Australia. The four scenarios spanned a variety of situations. They included a U.S. destroyer colliding with a Chinese frigate in the Straits of Malacca, two destroyers damaged by gunfire and rockets from Chinese ships and helicopters while escorting Philippines ships in disputed waters in the South China Sea, several destroyers severely damaged by Chinese anti-ship missiles while defending the Philippines, and multiple destroyers badly damaged while intercepting a Chinese amphibious invasion of Taiwan.

Poor coordination with allies

The common denominator was that all of the American ships needed quick repairs. But that was easier said than done. For starters, there were difficulties determining what resources were needed for repairs, and whether a vessel could be fixed locally or would have to sail back to the United States. Players also “assumed that regulations and standards for repair and maintenance would remain the same in a wartime environment as they are during peacetime,” the report said. Nor were command arrangements clear. For example, “the group that represented the in-theater logistics and maintenance team at times took actions, specifically those related to in-theater repair options, that the theater operational commander had already rejected because of operational constraints,” said the report. In addition, coordination was lacking between organizations in the Pacific and the U.S. The U.S. team didn’t fully understand what its Pacific allies could offer.

“U.S. participants demonstrated knowledge gaps about the locations of host nations’ ports,

tito-laugh Americans will never learn geography, even if it's literally a matter of life or death

not to mention host nations’ capabilities or access requirements,” the study noted. Though Japan, Korea and Australia have significant resources, “some kinds of operations — such as ordnance handling or a lengthy repair — would bring complications.“ Allied nations were also mindful that repairing U.S. warships could bring Chinese retaliation. “Japan, the ROK [Republic of Korea], and Australia are in principle committed to supporting U.S. repair, but this cannot be assumed once the threat level starts to escalate,” said Martin. However, the study did note that “although there were significant knowledge gaps at the outset of the exercise, once ally members explained their capabilities, collaboration was mostly seamless.” Sufficient spare parts were also an issue, especially for older ships. “Even ships within the same class can be significantly different from one another,” the study noted. “Some critical parts or systems from one ship might not translate to another ship.”

[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 62 points 2 days ago

deep-infiltration https://archive.ph/KZqVn

US Coast Guard helicopter crashes in Alaska with four onboard

A U.S. Coast Guard MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter carrying four members crashed during a training flight Monday in Sitka, Alaska, the service announced. Coast Guard search-and-rescue teams, along with crews from the Sitka Fire Department, responded to the scene near Harbor Mountain at about 11:00 a.m. and transported the service members to Mt. Edgecumbe Medical Center for evaluation. The Arctic District command center was informed of the crash at approximately 10:07 a.m. “The safety, well-being, and rescue of our crew members is our absolute immediate priority,” the Coast Guard said. “The cause of the incident is not yet known.” The condition of the four Air Station Sitka crew members was not immediately available. The Coast Guard said that no fatalities have been reported. The service has launched an investigation into the circumstances surrounding the crash.

10
submitted 2 days ago by Tervell@hexbear.net to c/guns@hexbear.net

106
submitted 3 days ago by Tervell@hexbear.net to c/memes@hexbear.net
31
submitted 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) by Tervell@hexbear.net to c/memes@hexbear.net
12
submitted 3 days ago by Tervell@hexbear.net to c/guns@hexbear.net
[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 37 points 4 days ago

https://xcancel.com/bonzerbarry/status/2068754845452878208

Channel 12: Israel is considering "small withdrawals" from southern Lebanon - including from the Beaufort (Qal’at al-Shaqif).

[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 61 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

some good Mali news https://xcancel.com/Suriyakmaps/status/2068268784834544070

‘Normality’ is returning to Gao province. 🇲🇱🇷🇺 🏳️🏴

Following the joint JNIM-FLA offensive in late April, the Afrika Corps and the FAMa have been re-entering the areas abandoned in early May and expanding their military operations. An example of this can be found in N’Tillit, a town under the nominal control of JNIM but which remains the subject of ongoing disputes with ISSP. The Russian-Malian military operations met with no resistance, demonstrating a reduction in the jihadists’ initial strength from April, which had been weakened by Russian and government attacks on their camps and militants.

turns out, that much vaunted offensive which was totally going to collapse Mali, has in the end probably just burnt up a bunch of the jihadists' manpower and left them worse off than before they launched the offensive

10
submitted 5 days ago by Tervell@hexbear.net to c/guns@hexbear.net
9
submitted 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago) by Tervell@hexbear.net to c/guns@hexbear.net

peekaboo

12
submitted 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago) by Tervell@hexbear.net to c/guns@hexbear.net

this is the kind of shit Bethesda would be putting in Fallout if they weren't hacks

15
submitted 6 days ago by Tervell@hexbear.net to c/guns@hexbear.net
18
submitted 6 days ago by Tervell@hexbear.net to c/guns@hexbear.net
view more: next ›

Tervell

0 post score
0 comment score
joined 6 years ago