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Friday, April 4, 2014

SUITCASE NUKES CARRIED BY AMERICAN SPECIAL FORCES, GREEN LIGHT TEAMS

THE RECENT SHOOTING AT FORT HOOD, ONCE AGAIN, PROMPTED ME TO LOOK FURTHER INTO HOW OUR MILITARY TRAINS OUR TROOPS.
YOU MUST BE AWARE THAT EVERY GENERATION IN MY FAMILY HAS SEEN VOLUNTEERS SIGN UP FOR SERVICE.
SOME WENT ON TO BECOME PART OF THE "SPECIAL FORCES" WHO RECEIVE ADDITIONAL TRAINING.
SOME WORKED IN AREAS THEY STILL ARE NOT AT LIBERTY TO DISCUSS.
I KNOW DOZENS OF CURRENTLY DEPLOYED MILITARY AND HAVE SAT AND LISTENED LONG TO THEIR STORIES, THEIR COMPLAINTS, THEIR FIRST-HAND EXPERIENCES, JUST AS I LISTENED FOR DECADES TO TWO SPOUSES AND TWO UNCLES (SADNESS AT THEIR GOING PEACE TO THEIR ASHES) AND MY FATHER, WHO WERE   WORLD WAR 2, KOREAN, AND/OR VIETNAM VETERANS..
WE WERE A MILITARY FAMILY, SOLDIERS IN THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION, WARRIORS IN BATTLE SINCE BEFORE THE FOUNDING OF AMERICA.

I WILL NEVER PRINT FALSE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR TROOPS.
I AM DEDICATED TO APPRECIATING THEIR SERVICE AS MUCH AS A HUMAN CAN.
I "SUPPORT OUR TROOPS" BY WISHING THEY COULD ALL COME HOME AND STAY HOME.
I BELIEVE WE WOULD BE BEST SERVED BY NEVER SENDING A U.S. SOLDIER TO ANY FOREIGN NATION EVER AGAIN, UNLESS THAT NATION ATTACKS THE U.S.

THAT SAID, I FIND THAT THE WAY OUR MILITARY TRAINS OUR TROOPS IS BOTH IMMORAL AND UNETHICAL AS PERTAINS TO THE TROOPS THEMSELVES. 
OUR TROOPS AND THEIR WELFARE ARE NOT THE PRIORITY OF THE CURRENT U.S. MILITARY, AND MAY HAVE NEVER BEEN.
THEY ARE TRAINED IN A WAY THAT DISRUPTS THEIR CONSCIENCES, THAT DELETES THEIR INDIVIDUALITY, THAT TOO OFTEN ROBS THEM OF THE ABILITY TO REASON LOGICALLY, AND INSTILLS IN THEM A HOSTILITY AND AGGRESSIVENESS THAT THEY FIND HARD TO DEAL WITH ONCE WAR IS DONE.

THIS THE STORY OF JUST ONE GROUP, BUT OTHER "ELITE FORCES". "SPECIAL FORCES" HAVE RECEIVED THE SAME DIRECTIVES, HAVE ENGAGED IN SIMILAR (AND EVEN WORSE) TACTICS. .
US Army Sergeant Major (Retired) Joe Garner describes what was probably the first parachute jump with a W54 Special Atomic Demolition Munition (SADM) in 1960 as part of PROJECT GREENLIGHT in his autobiography - Code Name: Copperhead. SGM Garner, a Special Forces soldier with many years of combat experience, described his high altitude jump from a H-21 helicopter on the back side of Fort Bragg, also the fictional setting of the special munitions depot in Lost Key. Joe reported that he dropped faster than anticipated in his modified chute and ended up on the ground with all the laces busted out from his boots.

                                 ONE VERSION OF THE SUITCASE NUKES, ABOVE. 
In the Navy scenario, the two-man team would place the weapon package in the target location, set the timer, and swim out into the ocean where they would be retrieved by a submarine or other high-speed water craft. The parachute jumps and the retrieval procedures were practiced extensively.
Reportedly 300 SADMs were assembled and remained in the US arsenal until 1989.

                                        A WASTEBASKET VERSION OF THE SADM.

THE BALTIMORE SUN REPORTED, July 27, 1994
"U.S. commandos once assigned to suicide missions"  
<<For many years, American commandos were assigned to volunteer teams with the suicidal mission of detonating small nuclear weapons at very close range, according to authoritative military sources.
The so-called "Green Light" Army demolition squads were supposed to deliver, arm and then "watch the device until it went off" to assure that enemy forces did not interfere with the explosion, said a former Special Forces member trained in the mission.
"If that meant staying inside the hydroelectric plant, standing 20 feet away from the warhead, that's where you stayed," he said. "It was suicide and we all knew it."

Retired Army Maj. Gen. David Einsel, deputy assistant secretary of defense for atomic energy from 1980 to 1985, confirmed the "Green Light" teams' assignment.

Man-portable nuclear warheads "were not the weapon of choice, and it had to be a very worthwhile mission or you weren't going to set it off in the first place," General Einsel added.
George Grimes, spokesman for the U.S. Special Operations Command, said he could not discuss the capabilities of forces assigned to the command. The Special Forces member trained in nuclear detonation asked not to be identified because, he said, he had signed confidentiality agreements while in the Army program.

A classified Army manual on nuclear demolition supports his account and General Einsel's, and civilian experts in nuclear weapons say it is consistent with their understanding of nuclear war tactics.
No devices ever were actually fired by the Army's tactical nuclear demolition teams. The last of 300 so-called "backpack nukes" built for such missions were withdrawn from NATO arsenals in 1988 and destroyed.

WHO WOULD EVER DREAM OF SENDING OUR TROOPS ON SUICIDE MISSIONS?
WE FIND THAT OUT FROM THE ARTICLE IN THE SUN...
DWIGHT DAVID EISENHOWER...A GENERAL HIMSELF.
President Eisenhower conceived of the highly classified U.S. tactical weapons program in the 1950s, hoping that ways could be found to use very small nuclear devices in combat. 
The smallest weapon, armed with a 58-pound warhead and producing a blast equal to only a few tons of TNT, was deployed in Europe in 1964. It was designed to destroy Eastern Bloc bridges, tunnels, dams, canals and other targets invulnerable to bombardment from the air.
The warhead was drum-shaped, about 20 inches in diameter and 24 inches tall. Two-man teams carried the devices in customized backpacks. One bore the warhead, which was nicknamed "the monkey," according to the former Army Special Forces commando; the other carried the firing mechanism. Assembled, the device weighed about 160 pounds, according to the Nuclear Weapons Databook, the definitive unclassified manual on the subject.
"They practiced delivering it by land, sea and air; by static line, free fall, HALO (high-altitude, low-opening parachute) jump and submarine; by car, truck, train and just plain hiking it in," said the former commando.

They'd disguise it as a trash can, a water cooler, a keg of beer. If somebody beside it pulled out a sextant, you'd think it was surveying gear," said the former commando.
According to Mr. Arkin, a cable only 100 meters long ran from the blast site to the detonation team in early versions of the device. "Believe it or not, for safety and security reasons, it was operated without remote detonation. Somebody actually had to push the button."
Later, use of a radio activated "timer option" was permitted. But protecting the device still required that demolition team and their squad of 10 heavily armed and cross-trained protectors stay fatally close to the warhead, the Special Forces veteran said.
If the weapon were deeply buried in rock and the detonation triggered by a radio transmission, "Green Light" teams might have survived the explosion, General Einsel said.
They probably would not have survived the radioactive fallout, according to tables published in a classified 1971 Army field manual titled "Employment of Atomic Demolition Weapons." It predicted heavy casualties from fallout even at the lowest yields and even when the warhead was buried 12 meters deep.
["Although demolition units were likely to perish, "delay in the onset of effects . . . may permit some personnel to remain effective long enough to influence a specific operation," the training manual states."]

One [NUCLEAR DEVICE] nearly got away in 1977, according to a former "Green Light" team member.
In that incident the navigator of an Air Force MC-130 that was supposed to drop a "Green Light" team a half mile inland from the Gulf of Mexico at Eglin Air Force Base in Florida, got lost, he said.
The aircraft dropped the team and their weapon more than|| TC mile offshore into choppy seas. Eleven of the 12 squad members let their gear drop to the bottom and took turns holding up the warhead two at a time. The twelfth member swam ashore and found help. The warhead was saved, he said.>>
<end quoted Sun article>

 PERHAPS A LITTLE LESS CREDIBLE (THOUGH FACTUAL IN CONTENT) AND A BIT MORE BIASED IS THE REPORT IN RT (RUSSIA TODAY) FROM February 11, 2014.

 In a detailed report by Foreign Policy, the publication chronicles the creation of the Special Atomic Demolition Munition (SAMD), a portable nuclear weapon that could be carried into battlefield by a single solider. During the Cold War’s final 25 years, Navy SEALs and Army Special Forces were trained to carry these “backpack nukes” beyond enemy lines where, if necessary, they'd be used to destroy valuable infrastructure and keep opposing forces at bay.
 [NOTE: THE ARTICLE LINKED ABOVE, FOREIGN POLICY,  IS RICH WITH PHOTOS AND ILLUSTRATIONS.]
Concerned with the Soviet Union’s military advantage over the United States and its allies in terms of manpower and traditional weaponry, President Dwight Eisenhower looked to enhancing the country’s nuclear capabilities as a way to level the playing field. His “New Look” strategy, however, promised “massive retaliation” to any form of aggression by the Soviet Union – a bold strategy that in reality left the US with little room to maneuver.
“In the event that communist forces launched a limited, non-nuclear attack, the president would have to choose between defeat at the hands of a superior conventional force or a staggeringly disproportionate (and potentially suicidal) strategic nuclear exchange that would kill hundreds of millions of people," the report stated.

In an attempt to develop targeted nuclear weapons that wouldn’t cause as many casualties, the SAMD was born. Often strapped to a soldier’s back, the 58-pound bomb made it difficult for soldiers to maneuver through a war zone, and those chosen to carry the device – known as the “Green Light” teams – underwent extensive training to ensure they could deliver the bomb, even at the expense of their own lives.
"I think that my first reaction was that I didn't believe it," former Green Light member Ken Richter told Foreign Policy. "Because everything that I'd seen prior to that, World War II, showed this huge weapon. And we were going to put it on our backs and carry it? I thought they were joking.

 US allies were not particularly fond of the idea of detonating numerous nuclear devices across their countries, while others within the American military questioned the whole enterprise.
"In our hearts, we knew nobody was going to give control of these to a bunch of big old boys running around the countryside," Tom Davis, another Green Light member, told Foreign Policy. "We just didn't believe it was ever going to happen."

This, however, wasn't the only controversial idea the United States tested during the Cold War. A lawsuit is currently unfolding in federal court concerning a military program that subjected servicemen to various secret drug and chemical experiments. The US hoped to discover new ways to control human behavior, pinpoint weaknesses, hypnotize, and increase an individual’s resistance to torture.
As a result, many former soldiers have come forward claiming that their long-term health problems are a direct product of the experiments conducted on them. The Department of Veterans Affairs has generally declined to cover the health costs of these individuals, though just recently a federal judge ruled the US must notify all veterans of any potential health problems stemming from the experiments.>>
<end quoted RT article>
 "We were kamikaze pilots without the airplanes," said Louis Frank Napoli Jr. of Tampa, Fla., a former enlisted man in the Army who said he volunteered for the assignment.

WELL, IT WAS "IMPRESSIVE" ENOUGH THAT NORTH KOREA VOWS IT HAS ITS OWN VERSION OF THE AMERICAN SUICIDE UNITS THAT CARRY SIMILAR DEVICES, AND ARE JUST ITCHING TO USE THEM. 

AMERICAN MILITARY'S TOP DOGS ARE DEDICATED TO PRESERVING THEIR SPECIAL UNITS BEYOND THE "WARS" IN THE MIDDLE EAST.
<<The Special Operations Command, or SOCOM, is scheduled for spending and personnel increases while the rest of the military looks to be making cuts.
In fact, the number of operators has doubled since 9/11, and their budget tripled — from $3.5 billion to $10.5 billion. The trend will likely continue as the U.S. is in the middle of a shift to "smaller footprint" type operations.>>
THE ABOVE ARTICLE MAKES MENTION OF A COUPLE OF SPECIAL UNITS NOT LISTED BY WIKIPEDIA AND OTHER SITES. [SEE LIST BELOW]
SPEC OPS WEATHERMAN, ANGLICO, ARMY CAG, FAST, MARSOC...

SOME OF THE "COURSES" THE SPECIAL ELITE FORCES ARE REQUIRED TO TAKE ARE RIGOROUS, DEMANDING, AND FEW PASS ENOUGH OF THESE, PLUS THE TRAINING, TO MAKE IT INTO THESE GROUPS.
IMPRESSIVE PARTIAL LIST OF REQUIREMENTS, ISN'T IT?
BUT THE NAMES GIVEN THE COURSES DON'T TELL THE READERS THAT THESE MEN ARE HIGHLY TRAINED WEAPONS THEMSELVES, THAT THEY ARE USED AS WEAPONS.
THEY CAN KILL WITHOUT A BLINK, DESTROY WITHOUT A FLINCH, AND FOLLOW ORDERS TO THE UTMOST DEGREE. 

WHAT ARE THEIR ORDERS?
EXACTLY WHAT ARE THEIR ORDERS?
IN THE CASE OF THE SUICIDE TEAMS OF GREEN LIGHT, IT WAS TO KILL AS MANY POSSIBLE AND ALSO BLOW THEMSELVES INTO POWDER.


REMEMBER HOW HORRIFIED AMERICANS WERE WHEN THE MAINSTREAM MEDIA BEGAN BROADCASTING THINGS LIKE YOUNG SUICIDE BOMBERS OF IRAQ/AFGHANISTAN/GAZA BLOWING THEMSELVES UP, AND HOW APPALLED WE WERE AT THOSE VIDEOS OF BEHEADINGS BY THE TERRORISTS THERE?  WHEN WE SAW THE PHOTOS OF THOSE BURNED AND MANGLED AMERICAN BODIES HANGING FROM THAT BRIDGE IN IRAQ, WHO DIDN'T WEEP AND SCREAM?
OUR TROOPS ARE TRAINED TO DO THE SAME THINGS, AND DO THEM DAILY.
THEY DO THEM ALL OVER THE GLOBE.

THE MAP BELOW ROUGHLY SHOWS DEPLOYMENT OF AMERICAN "SPECIAL FORCES".
WHY THEY ARE IN MOST OF THESE FOREIGN NATIONS IS BEYOND MY COMPREHENSION. 
[JUST CLICK ON THE MAP FOR A LARGER VERSION]


FROM THE MOTHER JONES ARTICLE ABOUT THIS DEPLOYMENT:
JANUARY 8, 2014
<<More than a month before, I had called US Special Operations Command (SOCOM) with a series of basic questions: In how many countries were US Special Operations Forces deployed in 2013? Are manpower levels set to expand to 72,000 in 2014? Is SOCOM still aiming for growth rates of 3%-5% per year? How many training exercises did the command carry out in 2013? Basic stuff.

"Dude, I don't need to play these stupid games. I know what you're trying to do."  With that, Major Matthew Robert Bockholt hung up on me.

A review of open source information reveals that in 2012 and 2013, US Special Operations forces (SOF) were likely deployed to–or training, advising, or operating with the personnel of–more than 100 foreign countries.  And that's probably an undercount. In 2011, then-SOCOM spokesman Colonel Tim Nye told TomDispatch that Special Operations personnel were annually sent to 120 countries around the world. They were in, that is, about 60% of the nations on the planet. "We're deployed in a number of locations," was as specific as Bockholt would ever get when I talked to him in the waning days of 2013. And when SOCOM did finally get back to me with an eleventh hour answer, the number offered made almost no sense. 

As Special Operations Command chief Admiral William McRaven put it in SOCOM 2020, his blueprint for the future, it has ambitious aspirations to create "a Global SOF network of like-minded interagency allies and partners."  In other words, in that future now only six years off, it wants to be everywhere.  

Born of a failed 1980 raid to rescue American hostages in Iran (in which eight US service members died), US Special Operations Command was established in 1987. Made up of units from all the service branches, SOCOM is tasked with carrying out Washington's most specialized and secret missions, including assassinations, counter-terrorist raids, special reconnaissance, unconventional warfare, psychological operations, foreign troop training, and weapons of mass destruction counter-proliferation operations. 

In the post-9/11 era, the command has grown steadily. With about 33,000 personnel in 2001, it is reportedly on track to reach 72,000 in 2014. (About half this number are called, in the jargon of the trade, "badged operators"–SEALs, Rangers, Special Operations Aviators, Green Berets–while the rest are support personnel.)  Funding for the command has also jumped exponentially as SOCOM's baseline budget tripled from $2.3 billion to $6.9 billion between 2001 and 2013. If you add in supplemental funding, it had actually more than quadrupled to $10.4 billion. About 11,000 special operators are now working abroad at any one time and on any given day they are in 70 to 80 countries, though the New York Times reported that, according to statistics provided to them by SOCOM, during one week in March 2013 that number reached 92.

TomDispatch's analysis of official government documents and news releases as well as press reports indicates that US Special Operations forces were reportedly deployed to or involved with the militaries of 106 nations around the world during 2012-2013. For years, the command has claimed that divulging the names of these countries would upset foreign allies and endanger US personnel. SOCOM's Bockholt insisted to me that merely offering the total number would do the same. "You understand that there is information about our military… that is contradictory to reporting," he told me. "There's certain things we can't release to the public for the safety of our service members both at home and abroad.  I'm not sure why you'd be interested in reporting that.">>

WHY HE'D BE INTERESTED IN REPORTING THAT?
MAYBE, JUST MAYBE,SO WE'D KNOW HOW MANY OF OUR SONS AND DAUGHTERS ARE OUT THERE IN EXTREME DANGER, OR HOW MANY WE MAY EXPECT WILL TRY TO RETURN TO ROUTINE CIVILIAN LIFE, AND, LIKE THE FORT HOOD SHOOTER AND SO MANY OTHERS, FAIL TO FIND IT WITHIN THEMSELVES, WITHOUT ANY HELP FROM VETERANS AFFAIRS AND THEIR GOVERNMENT AGENCIES, TO COME BACK FROM SUCH PLACES WITH THIS TYPE TRAINING AND NOTHING TO "USE" IT ON.

OUR MILITARY THINKS, AS AN UNCLE AND BOTH SPOUSES PUT IT, THEY CAN TAKE A NORMAL GUY, TRAIN HIM AS AN ASSASSIN, MAKE HIM INTO A WEAPON OF WAR, THEN, WHEN THEY'RE DONE WITH HIM, JUST DROP HIM IN THE MIDDLE OF ANYTOWN, AMERICA, AND EXPECT HIM TO WORK THINGS OUT FOR HIMSELF. 
THAT IS NOT GOING TO HAPPEN IN MANY (MOST?) CASES.

THESE HIGHLY-TRAINED PERSONNEL HAVE NO OUTLET FOR THAT TRAINING, AND THEY HAVE SEEN AND EXPERIENCED HORRORS THAT THE AVERAGE AMERICAN CANNOT POSSIBLY IMAGINE.

REMEMBER THE WIKILEAKS TAPES OF OUR FORCES KILLING INNOCENT CIVILIANS FROM HELICOPTERS? IF NOT, I'LL DROP A COUPLE OF THOSE LINKS AT THE BOTTOM OF THIS BLOG TO REFRESH YOUR MEMORY.
DO YOU THINK THE MEN CAPABLE OF THOSE THINGS WERE BORN THAT WAY?
NO!
THEY WERE TRAINED TO DO THAT!
A [PROBABLY PARTIAL] list of active military special forces units:
THOUGH I CHOSE TO USE THIS LIST FROM WIKIPEDIA SO YOU MAY, ATYOUR LEISURE, EXPLORE EACH LINK GIVEN, THE SAME LIST APPEARS ON SEVERAL CURRENT WEBSITES.
 
I OFFER THE LIST SO WE MAY ALL CONTEMPLATE WHAT EACH OF THESE SPECIAL UNITS/SPECIAL FORCES MAY BE TRAINED FOR, AND REALIZE THE DANGERS INHERENT FOR THE MEN SO TRAINED. HOW "AT RISK" ARE THEY, AND WHY WOULD WE ASK THEM TO BASICALLY HAND OVER THEIR LIVES TO THEIR COMMANDERS WITHOUT THOUGHT, AND SOMETIMES, WITHOUT KNOWING THAT IS WHAT THEY WILL BE REQUIRED TO DO...
NOW, THESE ARE CURRENT, SUPPOSEDLY, BUT THERE WERE SPECIAL UNITS BEFORE THESE IN AMERICA'S MILITARY, AND THAT IS IMPORTANT SO WE CAN UNDERSTAND HOW FAR BACK THE HISTORY OF THESE GOES.
YOU MAY SKIP PAST THE LIST IF YOU DON'T CARE FOR HISTORY. 
AGAIN, I LEAVE LINKS INTACT AS SOME OF THESE UNITS MAKE FOR VERY INTERESTING, IF NOT GREATLY DISTURBING, READING.
FASCINATING...OFTEN HORRIFYING, SOME...
The Civil War
World War II
Korean War
Vietnam War
Other 
  • 1st Battalion, 245th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (Airborne)
  • 5th Force Reconnaissance Company
  • 6th Special Forces Group
  • 8th Special Forces Group
  • 11th Special Forces Group
  • 12th Special Forces Group
  • 55th Special Operations Squadron
  • 129th Air Commando Group
  • 129th Special Operations Aviation Company (SOAC)
  • 437th Combat Control Squadron
  • 617th Special Operations Aviation Detachment
  • 1730th Pararescue Squadron
  • Army Aviation Support Element (AASE), US Special Operations Command
  • Blue Light
  • Detachment A (DET A, 39th SFOD)
  • HAL-3 "Sea Wolves"
  • HAL-4 "Red Wolves"
  • HAL-5 "Blue Hawks"
  • Marine Corps Special Operations Command Detachment One (MCSOCOM-Det 1) (Operation Iraqi Freedom)
  • Red Cell
  • SEASPRAY
  • Special Forces Groups Aviation Detachments
  • Special Warfare Aviation Detachments (SWAD)
    • 22nd Aviation Detachment (Special Forces)
    • 23rd SWAD (Surveillance)
    • 281st Assault Helicopter Company, Airmobile Light (AML)
  • Special Boat Unit 11 (SBU 11)
  • Special Boat Unit 13 (SBU 13)
  • Special Boat Unit 24 (SBU 24)
  • Special Boat Unit 26 (SBU 26)
  • Task Force 5 (forerunner of Task Force 11)
  • Task Force 11 (Operation Enduring Freedom)
  • Task Force 20 and Task Force 121 (Operation Iraqi Freedom)
  • Task Force 98
  • Task Force 157 (Covert USN Intelligence unit)
  • Task Force Bayonet (Operation Just Cause)
  • Task Force Ranger (Operation Gothic Serpent)
  • Underwater Demolitions Teams (UDT)
  • US Army Special Operations Division
  • USAF Special Operations Combat Control Team (SOCCT)
  • US Coast Guard Drug Interdiction Assist Team (DIAT)
  • Yellow Fruit 

    THEY FAILED TO INCLUDE THE "COVERT OPS", ETC, GROUPS FROM THE AMERICAN REVOLUTIONARY WAR, BUT, REST ASSURED, THEY EXISTED.
    AMERICA HAS ALWAYS HAD "SPECIAL FORCES".

    NO MORE GREEN LIGHT UNITS!!!
    WE NEED TO KNOW HOW TO REPAIR THE DAMAGE DONE TO HUMAN MINDS ONCE THE TROOPS COME HOME.
    WE NEED TO FORCE THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT TO SUPPORT THE TROOPS, THE VETERANS COMING HOME FROM THEIR "ASSIGNMENTS", AND HOW WE CAN RESCIND THEIR ORDERS TO KILL, KILL, KILL...
    THE MILITARY MUST TAKE RESPONSIBILITY FOR HELPING THOSE WHO SURVIVE THEIR TRAINING AND SURVIVE THEIR DEPLOYMENT.
    WE HAVE TO FIND A WAY TO BRING ALL OUR TROOPS HOME AND MAKE SURE THEY CAN HANDLE COMING BACK TO US.

    NO MORE SUICIDE MISSIONS, NO MORE THINKING THAT THEIR LIVES ARE NOT WORTH ANYTHING. NO MORE FORT HOOD SHOOTINGS, NO MORE COMING HOME AND KILLING SPOUSES, STRANGERS, OR THEMSELVES!
    DO YOU REALLY "SUPPORT YOUR TROOPS"?
    THEN MAKE SURE THEY CAN HOME TO A TRUE AND LASTING PEACE...OF MIND.
   
GRAPHIC, WARNING, BOTH THESE VIDEOS ARE INCREDIBLY GRAPHIC.
BOTH WERE WIKILEAKED.

5 comments:

  1. Thanks for posting this information. A veteran in a Youtube comment suggested people look up "Operation Greenlight" as it was run at Fort Bragg. I hadn't heard of it. In checking, I found your blog, and so I responded to the veteran with a link to it, and this: "Eisenhower authorized the program of tactical nukes to be deployed with two man teams, one carrying an 80 pound warhead, and the other carrying the launching device to be assembled when they reached proximity to their target. Some of Eisenhower's program called for suicide bombers using nukes. In 1964, under LBJ, a number of such teams were placed in the context of NATO with potential European targets that couldn't be effectively reached by an airstrike." https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oRtfvQfZ-qU

    The veteran, gordy threehorses wrote 3 months ago, "the military had use of tac nukes going back to the 1970's, don't believe me look up operation green light under us special forces control at ft. bragg. what we had back then was an artillery shaped nuke device that a team could infiltrate a target with, like a dam, we were trained to get it on target and to detonate it, there are three phases to testing on this, a written test, and showing inspectors every part of the bomb also and last, was the field game where we took the bomb and planted it on a target. we could score no less than 100% on each part of the testing less our group commander would be relieved if any of us scored less on the testing."

    The Atomic Veterans were subjected to fallout from nuclear blasts in Eisenhower's absurd aspiration that the battlefield operation could continue subsequent to a nuclear detonation.

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    1. Many thanks, POW. I always trust what vets say 1000000 times more than any other source. Those who have been there, done that carry more knowledge than those who merely 'research' such things & write about it.
      Forever and humbly indebted to all who have stepped up and served this nation. No words can say how grateful this old heart is.
      All the best, all the time.
      //WW

      Delete
    2. 'Green Light', U.S. commandos once assigned to suicide missions
      July 27, 1994|By Knight-Ridder Newspapers

      WASHINGTON -- For many years, American commandos were assigned to volunteer teams with the suicidal mission of detonating small nuclear weapons at very close range, according to authoritative military sources.

      The so-called "Green Light" Army demolition squads were supposed to deliver, arm and then "watch the device until it went off" to assure that enemy forces did not interfere with the explosion, said a former Special Forces member trained in the mission.

      "If that meant staying inside the hydroelectric plant, standing 20 feet away from the warhead, that's where you stayed," he said. "It was suicide and we all knew it."

      Retired Army Maj. Gen. David Einsel, deputy assistant secretary of defense for atomic energy from 1980 to 1985, confirmed the "Green Light" teams' assignment. Man-portable nuclear warheads "were not the weapon of choice, and it had to be a very worthwhile mission or you weren't going to set it off in the first place," General Einsel added.

      George Grimes, spokesman for the U.S. Special Operations Command, said he could not discuss the capabilities of forces assigned to the command. The Special Forces member trained in nuclear detonation asked not to be identified because, he said, he had signed confidentiality agreements while in the Army program.

      A classified Army manual on nuclear demolition supports his account and General Einsel's, and civilian experts in nuclear weapons say it is consistent with their understanding of nuclear war tactics.

      No devices ever were actually fired by the Army's tactical nuclear demolition teams. The last of 300 so-called "backpack nukes" built for such missions were withdrawn from NATO arsenals in 1988 and destroyed."
      I'D BET THE FARM THEY WERE NOT DESTROYED. TOO MUCH $$$ WENT INTO THEM AND THEY'RE JUST TOO DAMNED 'HANDY' TO HAVE AROUND.
      http://articles.baltimoresun.com/1994-07-27/news/1994208148_1_nuclear-weapons-warhead-nuclear-devices

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    3. THAT TOOK PURE, RAW GUTS!
      For 25 Years, U.S. Special Forces Carried Miniature Nukes on Their Backs
      The B-54 Special Atomic Demolition Munition was a nuclear bomb the size of a backpack
      Adam Rawnsley and David Brown chronicle in a sprawling feature the stories of the special forces troops. “Soldiers from elite Army engineer and Special Forces units, as well as Navy SEALs and select Marines, trained to use the bombs, known as “backpack nukes,” on battlefronts from Eastern Europe to Korea to Iran,” they write. The troops were trained to parachute or SCUBA dive behind enemy lines with their little nukes, to using them to take out strategic installations or render vast tracts of land uninhabitable. According to Rawnsley and Brown, “These “small” weapons, many of them more powerful than the nuclear bomb dropped on Hiroshima, would have obliterated any battlefield and irradiated much of the surrounding area.”
      https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/25-years-us-special-forces-carried-miniature-nukes-their-backs-180949700/

      Delete
  2. For other readers, " Operation Greenlight" does NOT refer to the project to end child sexual abuse and child trafficking, nor does it refer to the HBO series,"Project Greenlight".

    ReplyDelete