5 Things We’d Love to Do With the Army’s Surplus Battleship Ammo

FacebookXPinterestEmailEmailEmailShare

BY LOGAN NYE — WEARETHEMIGHTY.COM



Popular Mechanics dug this gem out of the list of contract requests from a government website this week: The U.S. Army is soliciting a contract for someone to destroy 15,595 naval artillery rounds originally designed for the 16-inch guns of massive ships like the USS Iowa.


The Army has maintained the shells since the Navy retired the massive battleships that fired them, but these things can’t be safely stored forever and the military needs them gone.


Hiring a responsible contractor with a proven track record is the best way to do this, but WATM came up with these 5 more entertaining ideas:


1. Host history’s best Independence Day party


battleship-firing-uss_missouri_bb-63_rimpac-90-1024x691


It would look like this, but near a beach while you and your mildly intoxicated buddies got to watch from the shore. (Photo: U.S. Navy PH1 Terry Cosgrove)


So, the Army is looking for solutions in October, which is exactly the right month to start planning the perfect party for July 4th. Especially if the plans involve a few thousand 16-inch artillery shells. Pretty sure those require permits or something. Be sure to tell the permit office that the fireworks will explode over the water or an open, uninhabited area. And that they’re pretty lethal loud.


2. Blowing up a mountain, like in Iron Man


%embed1%



Remember that scene where Tony Stark is showing off the Jericho missile and he blows up an entire mountain range? Pretty sure everyone reading this would pay at least $15 to see a mountain disappear. Call me Army. We could turn a profit on this.


3. Play a real life game of battleship


decelerate-your-life-b7-miss-carl


I would tune into this show for literally every episode. (Meme: courtesy Decelerate Your Life)


The Navy is already getting rid of some old ships, and the Army has found itself with way too many naval artillery shells, meaning this is the perfect time to hold a full-sized game of battleship. Pretty sure the TV ratings could pay for the cost of towing the ships into position.


4. Give drill sergeants really accurate artillery simulators


2833779-1024x704


That smoke in the back is coming from an artillery simulator. That’s not realistic enough training for our fighting men and women. (Photo: U.S. Army Reserve Staff Sgt. David J. Overson)


Right now, drill sergeants and other military trainers use little artillery simulators that make a loud whining noise and then a sharp pop to teach recruits to quickly react to incoming indirect fire. They’re great, but it really ignores that sphincter-tightening boom that comes with real incoming fire.


Now imagine that drill sergeants threw the artillery simulator and then were able to remotely detonate an actual, buried battleship shell 100 yards away. Right? No one gets hurt, but it would teach those kids to get their heads down pretty quick.


5. Create claymore mines that shoot grenades

An M18A1 claymore mine detonates during a training exercise at Fort Bragg, N.C., Sept. 16, 2016. Soldiers from the 122nd Aviation Support Battalion, 82nd Combat Aviation Brigade, focus on improving the individual and collective combat skills of their Soldiers. (U.S. Army photo by Capt. Adan Cazarez)

An M18A1 claymore mine detonates during a training exercise at Fort Bragg, N.C., Sept. 16, 2016. Soldiers from the 122nd Aviation Support Battalion, 82nd Combat Aviation Brigade, focus on improving the individual and collective combat skills of their Soldiers. (U.S. Army photo by Capt. Adan Cazarez)

This is what it looks like with 1.5 pounds of C4. Someone has to try this with battleship shells and their little grenade submunitions. (Photo: U.S. Army Capt. Adan Cazarez)


Stick with me here. Claymore mines are brutally effective. A C-4 charge sends 700 steel balls flying in an arc at enemies. But the Army currently needs to get rid of 835 warheads that contain grenade submunitions and a whole bunch of other warheads filled with Explosive D.


So, how about we cut the grenades out of the submunition warheads, and duct tape them in rows around the Explosive D warheads? Sure, it would probably break a few treaties to use them in war, but it’s perfectly legal for a government to create an awesome piece of performance art on a military range. Probably.


(h/t Doctrine Man and Popular Mechanics)




An M18A1 claymore mine detonates during a training exercise at Fort Bragg, N.C., Sept. 16, 2016. Soldiers from the 122nd Aviation Support Battalion, 82nd Combat Aviation Brigade, focus on improving the individual and collective combat skills of their Soldiers. (U.S. Army photo by Capt. Adan Cazarez)


 Logan Nye - Staff Writer at We Are The Mighty

Logan is a former Fort Bragg paratrooper who deployed with the 82nd Airborne Division’s 4th Brigade Combat Team.



MORE POSTS FROM WE ARE THE MIGHTY:


The 6 best things about living in an open bay


4 times armies blasted music to intimidate and infuriate their enemies


How a one-armed Gurkha fought 200 Japanese troops with a bolt-action rifle


We Are The Mighty (WATM) celebrates service with stories that inspire. WATM is made in Hollywood by veterans. It's military life presented like never before. Check it out at We Are the Mighty.

Story Continues