New
Zealand is now part of the big boys and Kiwi’s apparently love this
idea. In fact they can’t wait to play the bad guys so the good guys
can practice how to implement REGIME change which while spun like it
is a good thing is of course a WAR CRIME.
Largely
outside of the scrutiny of the NZ media who spin the exercise as a
good ole boys Kiwi military exercise and entirely outside of the
global media the military of the US, the UK, France and Poland to
name a few are practicing the removal of a political figure head who
doesn’t want to leave office and is protected by a militia.
No
matter how you turn this, regime change in a country which is not
engaged in military action against your country is a war crime and
for New Zealand to be engaged in such an exercise ney to actually
host such and exercise is highly questionable. Where is the MSM in
this and why is nobody asking questions. Are Kiwis this lethargic and
ignorant?
---
Travellerev
Timaru
invaded in large-scale war game
Farmers,
shopkeepers, police officers and a mayor have volunteered to play
"bad guys" in a large-scale realistic war game.
11
November, 2013
The
military exercise, involving 2200 personnel from 10 countries
including crack US Marines, is being played out in South Canterbury
towns, ports, and farms.
Backroom
staff at the New Zealand Defence Force have spent months concocting
Exercise Southern Katipo 2013 - a scenario where the lower half of
the South Island is a made-up Pacific nation called Mainlandia.
After
29 members of the 'Mainlandia Defence Force' were killed in a
supposed 'training accident' in 2010, ethnic tension has erupted
between the imagined 'Bekaran' and 'Alpirian' regions.
Peace
talks failed and now a New Zealand-led task force has been sent to
the region, arriving by air and sea, in Timaru - the centre of the
Bekara region.
The
soldiers, sailors, and airmen have been told to restore law and
order.
Today,
ominously-grey warships sat in Timaru harbour and giant US Air Force
C-17 Globemasters sat on the tarmac at the local airport, where the
entrance was blocked by a heavily-fortified checkpoint, manned by a
high-calibre machinegun.
Quiet
streets, backroads and fields of South Canterbury were swarming with
camouflaged, armed soldiers on fake patrols.
And
the local population has been enlisted to play their part and bring
as much realism to the exercise - billed as New Zealand's biggest
ever international military exercise - as possible.
While
it's the stuff of fantasy, it closely mirrors situations which have
occurred in overseas conflicts in recent times.
Commander
of the coalition forces on exercise, Colonel John Howard said some
farmers had "agreed to play the bad guy", and would provide
access to their land, outhouses, and buildings, while giving "cover
stories for their nasty business".
"It's
role playing, like kids do in the backyard at weekends, only a little
bigger," he said.
"The
good guys will come looking, so it'll bring another dimension to
their Saturday or Sunday.
"We'll
be in and around town doing a range of activities... engaging with
the local community. It will be a real experience."
The
mixture of maritime and alpine terrain, set amongst a small
population, made South Canterbury an ideal location, Colonel Howard
said.
Timaru
District mayor Damon Odey is one of many civilians taking part in the
role playing.
He'll
be playing himself as mayor of the local populace, and the figure in
charge of the strategically critical port.
Army
officers will be grilling him, and he's looking forward to the
different challenge - like most civilians who've volunteered to be
involved, he says.
"We
roll pretty easily here," Mr Odey said.
"In
the North Island, and in the bigger centres, it'd be much harder to
put something like this together.
"But
in a smaller area like South Canterbury, we can see the benefits of
being involved and making it happen."
To
be training amongst the civilian population was "extremely
unique", according to Lt. Col Patrick Aspland, commander of a US
Army task group involved in the exercise.
"In
the US Army, we typically do exercises in a training area isolated
from the local population, replicating the local population with role
players," he said.
The
US Army was looking forward to working alongside Kiwis, Tongans and
Papua New Guineans, and seeing how they operate in the field.
Other
nations involved in the joint exercise include Australia, Canada,
France, Malaysia, Singapore and the UK.
Interacting
with the public, and being so visible, the Defence Force hopes the
exercise - which will run until November 29 - will prompt the public
into asking questions about what it means to New Zealand, and also
act as a recruitment tool.
The
Defence Force says the exercise will test its capability to mount a
medium-scale operation that involves maritime, land and air assets.
And
given the level of operations overseas over the last decade,
especially in Iraq and Afghanistan, it will give the Defence Force a
chance to "reevaluate how we do things," said Col. Howard.
This
story is from 2 years ago
Regular
constable to Robocop
Police
reveal flash new riot gear
ROBOCOPS:
Police in riot gear training at Porirua police college
27
May, 2011
Flash
new police riot gear got a rare public showing yesterday, turning
your average constable into Robocop.
But
police insist yesterday's training session in Porirua was not in
preparation for the approaching Rugby World Cup and that the red bibs
have nothing to do with the infamous Red Squad set up to deal with
anti-Springbok tour protests in 1981.
Throughout
the country, police have been kitted out with the sleek armour, and
are training to better prepare for public disorder.
"It's
on the back of events like the Undie 500 and other events of that
nature," national manager of operations Barry Taylor said.
"I
don't anticipate it being used or seen during the Rugby World Cup."
About
600 university students lit fires and pelted police with bottles in
2009 after taking part in the Undie 500 pub crawl from Christchurch
to Dunedin.
The
new armour had been distributed to ensure all officers had the same
level of protection in all police districts, Mr Taylor said.
Two
Australian officers are spending two weeks at the Royal New Zealand
Police College, training teams of riot police from around the
country.
One
team wore red bibs and another wore blue, Mr Taylor said. The colours
were "irrelevant".
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