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oh..........thing escalated quick when im gone :v

Some toys for the the police , usual stuffs but with the new appearance of a Truvelo CMS sniper rifle , .......Quiet rifle from MGS : Phantom pain ? :v
 

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Cmdr. H.B. Le, former commander of Arleigh Burke class guided-missile destroyer USS Lassen, now commander of Destroyer Squadron 7. we remember, the ship provoked the chinese recently in the SC Sea.

US Aegis Destroyer USS Lassen
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left: destroyer USS Lassen, right: carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt
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an RPD-armed troop prepare to fire , a normal company of VPA include 3 RPD , 3 M79 , 6 RPG plus organic fire support contigent which usually field 60mm mortars and PKMS , may come heavier if attach to breakthourgh (SPG-9 , 120mm mortars , etc ) specialized units also got specialist troops like sniper and sapper armed from Mosin , LAW to SVD and RPO-A
 

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We Vietnamese will conquer all nations trying to threaten us. We Vietnamese are proud people and will fight for our freedom. We will show our enemies no mercy and we will be brutal to the point where our enemies will shiver. Whenever they hear us coming, they will feel the chill flowing to their bones! We are the Vietnamese proud people on planet Earth!
 
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@Barmaley
you recently asked what efforts have been made to the ground force?
actually here and there a little, not to much, not too little. I find this one, cost saving domestic made atillery is especially nice. origin US atillery gun M101 calibre 105mm mounted on a truck. voila, we have a mobile 105mm atillery. nice, isn´t it?

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Submarine hunter Petya class frigates, with RBU-6000 launcher on board. RGB-60 rocket, weight 110kg, warhead 25kg, distance to target 350-5800m, water depth 500m.

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RBU 6000 can be used against land target too, we had do it
 
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A long journey to home: Vietnam Marine Training Sailship Lê Quý Đôn, departing from Poland, half the globe taking a long trip via North Atlantic and Pacific before entering the South China Sea with the final destination: Nha-Trang sea port.

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actual position Guadeloup/Dominica Strait
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heading to Panama Canal
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Captured M-60 machinegun , mostly in reserve , sometime you can see this in tourist attraction firing range
 

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History

50 years ago today, November 14, 1965, one of the bloodiest battles of the Vietnam war, the 5 day and night long battle of la Drang valley of 1965. it was not a decisive battle, but the outcome decided further the course of the war. that was the first time, when an Elite unit of the US Armed Forces, regiments of the 1st Cavalry Division met the regiments of North Vietnamese Army in direct encounter, face to face, bajonet by bajonet, day and night, in all-out assault. the US soldiers were better trained and equipped, receiving air and artillery support, while the Northvietnamese were determined to give the enemy a deadly punch.

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looks like this: US air assault landing at the La drang valley



How the Battle of the Ia Drang Valley Changed the Course of the Vietnam War

11.14.1512:01 AM ET
James Warren

Fifty years ago today, one of the Vietnam war’s most ferocious battles broke out in the Ia Drang Valley. But the battle’s true toll would prove to be the hubris it bred in U.S. commanders.

Fifty years ago today, November 14, 1965, the first wave of troopers from a battalion of the First Cavalry Division, an elite unit of the U.S. Army that had turned in its horses for helicopters and an experimental “airmobile” assault doctrine, debouched from its Bell UH-1 “Huey” transports into a tree-lined clearing, dotted with patches of elephant grass and red-brown anthills. Suddenly, 90 Americans found themselves in the Ia Drang Valley, deep in South Vietnam’s Central Highlands, a remote Communist base area from the days of the French Indochina War of the late 1940s and early1950s.


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map of the battle location




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US troops at the landing zone X-Ray



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Operation plan




Within seconds of touching down at the base of the Chu Pong Massif, a 2,400-foot high mountain mass that stretched some seven miles westward into Cambodia, the battalion commander, a no-nonsense West Pointer named Lt. Col. Harold G. Moore, had sent out scouting parties into the tree line at the clearing’s edge. The rest of his force began to secure a perimeter in the center of the clearing. The battalion “had come looking for trouble,” Moore wrote years later. “We found all that we wanted and more.”

Army intelligence estimated the presence of a single enemy regiment of about 2,200 soldiers in the immediate vicinity. In fact, Moore’s battalion, the 1st of the 7th Cavalry, had landed within strolling distance of three regiments of the People’s Army of Vietnam (PAVN)—the regular army of North Vietnam. As it happened, the North Vietnamese, too, were looking for trouble.

According to Brig. Gen. Chu Huy Man, commander of the Central Highlands front, most of his troops had only recently arrived in the Highlands after an arduous, two-month trek from North Vietnam down the Ho Chi Minh Trail.They had been very active in the area over the preceding month, laying siege to a Special Forces camp at nearby Plei Me. Now they hoped to lure the newly arrived American forces into a major engagement in order to learn their tactics—especially how they used helicopters to deploy infantry units deep inside Communist-held territory, and to keep them supplied in extended operations.




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X-Ray perimeter, night of November 14



Although it is little remembered today, the battle that unfolded over the course of the next three days proved to be one of the most intense and savagely fought ground actions in American military history since World War II. Moreover, it marked a strategic sea-change with profound implications in the violent struggle for control over South Vietnam that had been escalating slowly since 1959.


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US troops under Northvietnamese enemy fire at LZ X-Ray.



Even before Moore's battalion established a firm perimeter and landed its entire complement of 450 troops into the fighting zone, the 33rd and 66th Regiments had launched multiple assaults against the Americans. All were turned back with very heavy PAVN casualties. One unlucky American platoon from B Company was completely cut off and surrounded by the enemy 300 yards to the northwest of the battalion perimeter. By the time it was rescued about 28 hours later, it had fended off countless enemy assaults, and 20 of its 27 men had been killed or wounded.

Hard fighting continued throughout the afternoon of November 14. Only the deft insertion of another American battalion into the fight under heavy fire, and emergency resupply missions by a helicopter pilot who would later be awarded the Medal of Honor, prevented the North Vietnamese from overrunning the perimeter and routing the Americans on the first day of the battle.

As night settled over the cramped and corpse-littered battlefield, the outnumbered American force had taken 87 casualties. But the American infantry alone had killed around 200 PAVN troops; another couple of hundred of the enemy had fallen well outside the perimeter as a result of fighter bomber attacks and pinpoint-accurate artillery fire.

Around 7 a.m. on November 15, the North Vietnamese launched a furious three-company (about 400 men) frontal assault against the lines of C-Company, killing three of its five officers within minutes. By 7:15, the North Vietnamese had launched two more powerful assaults from entirely different directions. As Moore’s men threw up ******** of machine gun and rifle fire to blunt the attacks, a dozen enemy mortar and rocket rounds exploded within the American perimeter, killing and wounding several of Moore’s troopers.

For a few minutes during that unforgettably intense morning, PAVN assault teams got inside C Company’s lines, and began to kill wounded Americans. According to Lt. Col. Moore’s after-action report, by 8 a.m., the entire LZ was “severely threatened,” and a fair number of soldiers in and around his command post had been killed or wounded by increasingly dense small arms fire. Yet the Americans held on doggedly, as Moore and his company commanders deftly maneuvered squads and platoons from one sector of the perimeter to the next, turning back each enemy thrust in turn.



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Relief of LZ X-Ray on November 15



After the final assaults against Charlie Company that morning, Lt. Rick Rescorla surveyed the grim scene: “There were American and PAVN bodies everywhere … There were several dead PAVN around one platoon command post. One dead trooper was looked in contact with a dead PAVN, hands around the enemy’s throat. There were two troopers—one black, one Hispanic—linked tight together. It looked like they had died trying to help each other.”

“The enemy were aggressive, and they came off the mountain in large groups,” Moore’s after-action report continues. “They were well camouflaged and took excellent advantage of cover and concealment. Even after being hit several times in the chest [with M-16 fire] many continued firing and moving for several more steps.” As the battle progressed, PAVN troops “dug into small spider holes” just outside the perimeter and waited for American defenders to expose themselves before firing their weapons. Others “dug into the sides and tops of anthills” and had to be eliminated with antitank weapons.

By all accounts the battle at LZ X-Ray came to bloody crescendo between 4 a.m. and 6 a.m. on the morning of November 16. The PAVN launched a series of three 100-to-200-man assaults in rapid succession, testing the exhausted American defenders to the breaking point. Thanks to excellent defensive preparation and the skill of forward artillery observers in placing high explosive artillery right in the midst of the assault units as they moved in toward the perimeter, the American infantry handily fended off each assault.

Prior to the Battle of the Ia Dran Valley in November 1965, the fighting in Vietnam had been carried out largely by the proxies of the struggle’s chief architects in Washington and Hanoi.

Badly battered over three days and nights of fighting, the People’s Army’s 66th and 33rd regiments began withdrawing soon thereafter from the battlefield at X-Ray for good. Moore’s exhausted but unbowed battalion was airlifted out of X-Ray as well.

Gen. Man’s forces had taken close to 2,000 casualties, including more than 600 men killed in action, as counted on the battlefield by American forces. American losses at X Ray were 79 killed in action and 121 men wounded, many severely.

But the battle of the Ia Drang Valley wasn’t truly over. Not yet.

The next morning, Lt. Col. Bob McDade had orders to march the 2nd Battalion, 7th Cavalry out of X-Ray, where it had bivouacked uneventfully the night of November 16, to LZ Albany several miles to the northwest for its extraction. As his 550-foot column came into the Albany clearing, scouts captured two PAVN soldiers. McDade assembled his company commanders and sergeants at the front of the column to discuss whatever new intelligence he could gather from the enemy prisoners. Meanwhile, the men in the column dropped to the ground to relax, smoke, or get some desperately overdue sleep.


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Unbeknownst to the Americans, the 8th battalion of the 66th PAVN regiment lay in wait just out of sight beyond the clearing. At 1:20 p.m., the Communist unit, which had been held in reserve during the earlier fighting, executed a textbook-perfect ambush, cutting the column to ribbons with machine gun and rifle fire, and grenades. Caught with all their leaders at the front of the column, all unit coherence was lost among the Americans, and the fighting quickly degenerated into a number of savage, isolated firefights and hand-to-hand combat.

“I gave my orders to the battalion,” said the 66th’s commander, Lt. Col. Nguyen Huu An recalled years after the event. “Move inside the column, grab [the Americans] by the belt, and thus avoid casualties from the artillery and air.” Of the 400 men in McDade’s unit, 155 died and 124 were wounded by the time the fighting ended. The battle at Albany proved to be one of the worst defeats of an American battalion in the entire Vietnam war.




How the Battle of the Ia Drang Valley Changed the Course of the Vietnam War - The Daily Beast
 
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but now back today

Almost complete, a new 2,500 tons coast guard vessel, built by Sông Thu shipyard. expected to launch the long range ship end of November, patrolling the territorial waters.
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Sea Mines

Origin in the former USSR, sea mine UDM-M1, developed by Vietnam´s Department of Engineering, now successfully produced by Military factory X-28. likely use: laying 10,000 mines round the islands and coasts preventing or slowing enemy assaults or bringing all of the commercial sea lanes to a standstill.

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RPG-7 with optic , still most of the training and firing is done with iron sight , probably to save the wear and tear
 

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Images of the recent exercise of 4th Division

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RPG
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BM21 Multiple Rocket Launcher
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57mm artillery
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