Kinda proud ....
wrote:
On Sun, 30 Sep 2018 16:55:13 -0400, Wayne.B
wrote:
On Sun, 30 Sep 2018 08:55:15 -0400, John H.
wrote:
On Sun, 30 Sep 2018 02:32:16 -0000 (UTC), Bill wrote:
John H. wrote:
On Sat, 29 Sep 2018 15:39:06 -0000 (UTC), Bill wrote:
wrote:
On Fri, 28 Sep 2018 20:08:35 -0000 (UTC), Bill
wrote:
wrote:
We didn't really have guard duty, we had fire watch.
I remember my first night there I saw a guy wearing a cartridge belt
walking around and thinking he was a guard. My first thought was "I
could take that guy".
A couple nights later I was wearing the cartridge belt and walking
around ;-)
Same thick with air force. They explained making you wear the cartridge
belt made you under arms and more liable if you screw up.
There were not any live rounds on our side of the base and our drill
rifles did not have firing pins in them. I am not quite sure what arms
we were under. ;-)
We had the belt. That was all.
We wore the belt, canteen, ammo pouches and toted a real M-14...but no ammo.
Air Force basic we only handled firearms on two days of 6 weeks. One day
of inside, raining, safety and dry fire. Next day at range. In pouring
rain.
I'm thinking we spent about 3 weeks on weapons training - assembly,
disassembly, and cleaning; the
manual of arms; actual firing and qualifying with the weapon, bayonet drill...
===
So what's the spirit of the bayonet?
Even Google knows the answer to that one. :-)
Let me guess ... "Stab him, Stab him NOW!"
We never had bayonets. Our plan was to start shooting at them about
12,000 yards out with the 5", then open up with the M2s if they got
inside 500-1000 yards and prepare to ram. ;-)
We were more inclined to bomb them from 50,000’ or be a taxi service for
army and marine foot soldiers.
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