Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by Gunther
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I read the character sheets for Marlena Abdelkadaar, 26, Algerian; Alexander Fox, 24, USA and Esteban Pereyra-Mateo, 28, Cuban FAR. I like Esteban Mateo and what you have stated earlier. It is nice trying on a smaller nation once in awhile. There is no definitive comparison between a Cuban SFC and an American SFC. The trick is in discerning which ranks perform what tasks at various levels/echelons within their army.

Some armies may use Corporals or Sergeants as squad leaders while the American "Army" uses Staff Sergeants. The USMC employ Sergeants as squad leaders. Some armies use the rank Sergeant to describe the platoon sergeant and another higher rank as the Company Senior Sergeant. The British Army may use a Warrant Officer 2 as the Company Senior Sergeant. In an infantry unit, this person would be addressed as Company Sergeant Major even though he wears the rank of a WO2 or WOII. The Warrant Officer 1 is more closely associated with the American rank of Command Sergeant Major or Sergeant Major. There are various infantry and cavalry units in the British Army, that have a different insignia for those soldiers who attained the rank of "Regimental Sergeant Major", but are paid the equivalent of a WO1 or WOI.

But for our Role Play, we aren't really overly concerned with rank. It is meaningless to what we are doing. If you are a rifleman in this new army, that is your title, Rifleman. If you are an Auto Rifleman, Grenadier or Machine Gunner, that is your title. The employers are not assigning ranks to the employees of their Private Military Corporation. You could have been a 28 year old Captain and still get slotted as a Rifleman. It depends more on your character's experience than what rank he/she attained. In fact, your character doesn't have to have been a soldier. A law enforcement background works too, assuming the character has comparable work experiences as an infantryman. Some paramilitary forces around the globe do have combat experiences; namely the Brazilian Police Forces in Sao Paolo.

Welcome Marlena Abdelkadaar to the unit. I see nothing wrong with her.

The recruiter eyeballs Alexander Fox's 201 File and distorts his face in that skeptical sort of way, only a real veteran could. Yea, something's not right in the state of Denmark. This guy could be a case of Stolen Valor; faking it. At 24 years of age, he might be a young Staff Sergeant, but most likely Sergeant with the way promotions are for young NCOs in the 11B (Infantryman) and 18B (Special Forces Weapons Sergeant) MOSes.

The Recruiter's eye is immediately drawn the Asberger's anotation and marks him as unfit for duty. In fact, he would never have been permitted into the US Army with this condition. He would have failed his physical and gone on to flip burgers at McDonald's.

As writers we all know that creating a weakness in our character is important for writing a good story. I say go for it. Weaknesses make a great story. But the men and women being recruited here are professionals. That does not mean you have to possess a wealth of knowledge about the experiences of your character. The true test of the author within you is knowing how to fake it. ;)

Professional Soldiers all KNOW without any doubt that teamwork is the only way in any military operation. Not getting along with others means, you get kicked out. You are not part of the unit. Anyone who cannot be a team player cannot play. It is plain and simple.

The weakness for your character in an RP of this nature, should exist within their character; a lack of confidence, alcohol addiction, emotional issues, laziness (or doing what needs to be done to get by) or a whole host of other character maladies we as authors may sometimes take for granted. But they do exist and we deal with them on a daily basis. What about a person who is constantly negative? No matter what happens, he is always focused on the negative. Wouldn't that also be a huge character flaw in a military organization? "Oh fuck it! We're all just going to get our asses shot off! Fuck this shit!" I know I've heard that line a few times. It is tough to be positive when the shit is going to hell PDQ.
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by Gunther
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This site needs more fixing, HS.
It has been down for what? two days now?
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by HeySeuss
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The fix is actually en route; mahz is coding, it's just that there is a lot of mess to untangle there.
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by Barioth
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Is this still open to drop ins?
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by Foster
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Note on Asperger's and getting it waivered: It's easier if you:
1. Didn't take any meds (and have it documented).
2. Don't fail a class, ANY class.

Getting it waivered aside (essentially, convincing the docs at meps to declare your diagnosis bullshit, in writing), it's still going to be flagged for someone to find an excuse to dismiss them from duty.
-More discerning recruiters (such as for special forces) would likely outright dismiss from the from selection-process such individuals.

What kept me out was triple-failing the hearing-test.
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by Gunther
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Those MEPS doctors are pretty particular, like Mr. Foster states.
Look for weaknesses in your soldier's character rather than his physical abilities.
Psychological weaknesses may get past MEPS, but they will be discovered by Drill Instructors.
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by Mr_Wiki_96
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Gunther said The Recruiter's eye is immediately drawn the Asberger's anotation and marks him as unfit for duty. In fact, he would never have been permitted into the US Army with this condition. He would have failed his physical and gone on to flip burgers at McDonald's.


Actually, you are allowed into the military with Asperger's Syndrome. It;s not a disability that rejects military duty. In fact, some special forces have a preference for people with Asperger's due to their lack of empathy and high endurance for repetitive activities. I was cool with Centurions not allowing Asperger's because the Centurions are the elite of the elite, that's understandable, but for your run-of-the-mill army, there's no problem.

Also, I'm not sure if these were your words or the recruiter's words but the bit on flipping burgers because he failed his physical due to Asperger's, as someone with Asperger's as well, was incredibly offensive.
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by Foster
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It may be they loosened that requirement around '05-'08 when I was going through the recruitment-process due to issues with 'Stop-Loss' on moral and the desire to get boots on the ground for the 'surge.
-Anyways, that was as far as I got. Which is like saying you didn't get your hand caught in the door, but it sure did crush your leg.

*Decides to continue discussing the RP in the roleplay's context of screened individuals being trained as unwitting space-marines... or space-desceant infantrymen.

And agreed on the psychological aspect.

The ridiculously brutal training [to the point of Hollywood-style hell-training from Divergent] I had for Marlene's original psych profile probably will not apply; the result will likely be a softer and kinder person, hopefully.
-No, wait... that was Alexi... I haven't killed her yet. Scratch that.

Marlene is probably going to be a bit grittier and jaded than recent efforts since this isn't an upbeat anime-inspired highschool-RP.
-Having a good chunk of her team get splattered on the desert sands and then discharged purely for political reasons would probably make her a bitter tsundere.

A tiny youtube/wiki-trek reminded me of my late next-door neighbor.
-In 7 weeks, nearly 3 out of every 10 Americans of the 32nd division had to be carried-out on a stretcher of which one would be dead.
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Thanks Foster. I'll have to take some time to read up on the 32nd ID in New Guinea. Most of what I know about the South Pacific is either USMC or USN. I see that corps operation involved the 6th and 7th Australian Divisions as well.
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Gunther said
Thanks Foster. I'll have to take some time to read up on the 32nd ID in New Guinea. Most of what I know about the South Pacific is either USMC or USN. I see that corps operation involved the 6th and 7th Australian Divisions as well.


If you can decide how bad the fighting in an area was by how many medals of honor resulted from it... New Guinea was pretty bad.
-I think we handed out 12 of them. Doesn't sound like much until you remember that the US forces sent there didn't get into many history-books.

Which is one of the downsides of having multiple smaller engagements happening in and around and/or supporting a larger one, especially in a protracted war, such small actions seldom get noticed unless you happen to have a reporter from Rolling-Stones following your unit (in which case only the eccentric are noticed).
As for any further changes to equipment, Grathnik could issue body-armor and just tell people to deal with it. As personal tastes in attire may be a way for nationalism to creep-into the RP.
-That and my knowledge of combat-attire gets pretty horrible after they replaced Doron/fiberglass plates with Kevlar.
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Foster said
If you can decide how bad the fighting in an area was by how many medals of honor resulted from it... New Guinea was pretty bad.-I think we handed out 12 of them. Doesn't sound like much until you remember that the US forces sent there didn't get into many history-books.Which is one of the downsides of having multiple smaller engagements happening in and around and/or supporting a larger one, especially in a protracted war, such small actions seldom get noticed...

Thanks for that. I do appreciate reading military history. It is my favorite subject. Have been doing so for most of my life.
That Centralized planning/Decentralized execution which the 32nd ID performed in New Guinea is exactly the sort of operation the US got into in Vietnam and were up until recently performing in Afghanistan. Yes, small fire fights don't get the headlines. Events like the 7th Cavalry at Ia Drang Valley make the headlines. Primarily because it was the battle with the highest American casualty total up until that time of the war (1965). It was also a Battalion (+) sized operation. The Tet Offensive gets the press because it was decentralized execution that occurred on teh same day all over the country.

What you say about the MoH is speaks volumes. Those things aren't handed out very frequently. For one division to receive 12 for one campaign speaks volumes.
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Gunther said
Thanks for that. I do appreciate reading military history. It is my favorite subject. Have been doing so for most of my life.That Centralized planning/Decentralized execution which the 32nd ID performed in New Guinea is exactly the sort of operation the US got into in Vietnam and were up until recently performing in Afghanistan. Yes, small fire fights don't get the headlines. Events like the 7th Cavalry at Ia Drang Valley make the headlines. Primarily because it was the battle with the highest American casualty total up until that time of the war (1965). It was also a Battalion (+) sized operation. The Tet Offensive gets the press because it was decentralized execution that occurred on teh same day all over the country.What you say about the MoH is speaks volumes. Those things aren't handed out very frequently. For one division to receive 12 for one campaign speaks volumes.

Actually the 12 are for the entire campaign and the 1944 follow-up (including Army Air units). There was also a bit of geographical confusion regarding a man who single-handedly assaulted a position with a B.A.R. at a distance so close he had to use it for a club because bullets impacting the firearm (and himself) had rendered the machine-gun completely inoperable. Said incident happened in Dutch New Guinea as part of the 506th PIR, and was not included.

Another man had done similar in the actual New Guinea campaign, survived, only to die in the dutch part.

Of the 32nd ID, there were only 4 MOH handed out*. The rest went to members of smaller units such as the 532nd Engineer Amphibian Regiment and 405th Bomber Squadron (B-25s in Port Morsby).

*In chronological order:
1942:
Sgt. Kenneth E. Gruennert + (Cleared 2 bunkers despite wounds, killed by sniper a minute later)
1st Sgt. Elmer J. Burr + (Mortally wounded by grenade)
1944:
Staff Sgt. Gerald L. Endl + (Automatic Weapons fire to the back while carrying wounded)
Pvt. Donald R. Lobaugh + (Mortally wounded by concentrated automatic weapons-fire, clearing a path for his surrounded platoon to withdraw through)

Note: Most of these went to members of a single regiment of a single division, on a single island.
By end of war, 32nd ID received:
Awards: MoH-11; Croix de guerre-1; Distinguished Service Cross-157; Distinguished Service Medal-1; Silver Star-845; Legion of Merit-49; Soldier Medal-78 ; Bonze Star Medal-1,854; Air Medal-98.


Tracing the legacy of the 127th/128th IRs goes back to the Iron Brigade (lead element of I Corps) of Gettysburg. And had seen 654 days of combat before (and after) the end of the 2nd world war despite suffering 110% casualties due to being deployed to Luzon.
Do we start or do we wait for more?
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by HeySeuss
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Hi Barioth, I like the sheet, plus the Vinnell experience, though I'd change it to Dyncorp and have him perhaps working at the Thai embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan or something high risk. Granted, the Thai Army has a lot of counterinsurgency experience as they have ongoing issues, not to mention coups. So this makes an exciting entry.
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Interesting. Right off the bat, I got an idea for a GSG 9 Des-Mark. Would you have any qualms about that?
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Thanks, I wanted a character from a country people would least expect an elite mercenary and I found that Thailand would make a good backstory for my character. A country not many pay attention to but still has an active modern army and conflicts that can provide past experience. I'll be sure to change the PMC and add a bit to his bio.
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Thailand is also known as some of the more effective counterinsurgency militaries in the world. Anyway, it was a good pick, not the least of which being that he knows the Negev, because the Thais use Israeli shit.
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The Thais have got the best of the U.S. And Israeli equipment, gives Samart some badass weapon experience ;)

On a side note though, our characters don't know they are going to space, but is the knowledge of the existence of extraterrestrials common, or are our characters really making history?
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Barioth, Smarty is squared away. I like him too. :)

-Muay Thai Expert, 20 Years Started at age 6
-Muay Boran Expert
-Krabi-krabong Expert

^ This says, "hand to hand proficient.
The line below is mere redundancy.
-Hand-to-Hand proficient

The head instructor at my martial arts school holds a 4th degree black belt in Muay Thai, Krav Maga, Kempo Karate and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. He has also done some MMA cage fighting. He is only 25 years old, so for your guy to be an expert at these disciplines by age 29 sounds quite reasonable to me. What I have found about these various disciplines, is they specialize in certain areas. Muay Thai specializes in their strike sets; mostly strikes with the hands and some kicking; TKD specializes in kicks and BJJ specializes in ground work. It is nice to have a good frame work in those three. Krav Maga is simply the art of self-counter-attack. Someone comes at you, and you react. Some attempts to start some shit with you and you overwhelm their senses leaving them in a bloody mess. In our school, we train in Muay Thai Strike sets mixed in with our Krav Maga. It is a lot of fun.
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Barioth said
The Thais have got the best of the U.S. And Israeli equipment, gives Samart some badass weapon experience ;)On a side note though, our characters don't know they are going to space, but is the knowledge of the existence of extraterrestrials common, or are our characters really making history?

We are making history and we don't know it yet.
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by HeySeuss
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Like Gunther said, they're gonna find out that they aren't deploying to Uzbekistan like they were told.
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