The
Department Of Homeland Security Is Hard At Work With One Billion New
Bullets
5
January, 2013
Last
March we found 450
million rounds of .40 caliber ammunition slated
for delivery to the Department of Homeland Service and its agencies.
Weeks
later we found an additional request for 750 million rounds. The news
wasn't reported much, though the order
forms are still floating around.
It's
not as demand for ammunition by the DHS is terribly new.
Manufacturer Winchester
posted an award to
its site in 2009 agreeing to deliver 200 million rounds for the
agency over five years. But if that's accurate it's an additional
order
that's still coming in on top of the others.
Major
General Jerry Curry, (Ret) offered up a good point when the 750
million order became public last fall saying that number of bullets
was more than 10 times what U.S. troops used in a full year of Iraqi
combat.
Now
that a new Department
of Homeland Security order for another 200,000 hollow
points has been placed, we're curious to see what happens to that
much ammunition in 12 months. Knowing that DHS trains rural,
regional, and federal law enforcement at their Georgia training
center, we took a look online to see what programs they have
requiring so much firepower.
The
Firearms Division (FAD)
at the Federal
Law Enforcement Training Center (FLETC)
in Glynco, Georgia is the biggest facility of its kind
in the nation and has more than 88 instructors from several federal
agencies.
H&K
MP-5
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Homeland
Security offers a Rifle
Training Program, a Precision
Rifle Observer Training Program (PROP) that
looks like a 37 hour sniper/counter-sniper course. The bonus at PROP
is any uniformed officer can take the course and receive the advanced
training, since assignment to a sniper team or tactical unit is not
required. No rifle or sniper training at all, in fact, is required to
take this one where public servants learn to take out targets at more
than 1,800 feet away.
There's
also the Reactive
Shooting Instructor Training Program (RSITP), which
looks like some sound practical advice for folks facing off against
bad people during their workday.
The Submachine
Gun Instructor Training Program (SMGITP) provides H&K
MP-5 and UMP-40, Colt
M-4, SMG
(9mm) and
our personal favorite the FN
P90 for
testing and training. There are even two qualifications required to
graduate this one. One test goes down with the H&K MP-5 the other
the Colt M-4.
Finally,
the Survival
Shooting Training Program (SSTP) seems
like a challenging 8.5 day Master course where Law Enforcement
Officer's become acquainted with a variety of weaponry, technique,
and the effects of stress.
UMP-40
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Definitely
a comprehensive program, especially the Interesting
Facts About The Firearms Division page.
I'll list them below in their entirety after I point one fact that
states all the firing in the above courses, and whatever else gets
expended, requires about 15 million rounds of ammunition a year.
That
doesn't make the most recent batch of 200,000 rounds seem out of
line, but those billion or so rounds, seem like they could be better
accounted for. Anyway, as promised — all the interesting facts
about the firearms division:
- Firearms Division (FAD) has approximately 49 buildings that include indoor and outdoor firing ranges, offices, ammunition and weapons storage, equipment and supply storage spaces.
- The indoor range complex and the outdoor ranges (to include 2 outdoor ranges currently under construction) have a combined total of approximately 384 firing points for live fire training.
- These do not include the various scenario-based training ranges that FAD uses for tactical training.
- FAD has approximately 9 training ranges used for scenario-based tactical firearms training.
- There are approximately 150 staff members assigned to the Firearms Division including managers, support personnel and instructors.
- The instructor cadre consists of former law enforcement and/or military personnel who now work for the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center (FLETC) and current law enforcement personnel detailed from many of the agencies who participate in training conducted at the FLETC.
- Training requires the use of approximately 15 million rounds of ammunition annually.
- The ammunition includes lead projectiles and reduced hazard (environmentally friendly) ammunition.
- The reduced hazard ammunition accounts for approximately 70 percent of the ammunition expended for training.
- FAD offers 8 advanced firearms training programs. These programs are open to Federal, state and municipal law enforcement personnel. Some international law enforcement personnel attend these programs when they are sponsored by one of the Federal partner agencies.
- FAD offers approximately 120 firearms courses. Many of these are contained in FLETC basic, agency basic and advanced law enforcement training programs.
- FAD conducts advanced export training (off site) at other Federal, state and municipal facilities around+ the country on an as-needed basis.
**
Signing off the DHS FLETC home page we noticed a small banner at
the bottom right stating firearms training requires about 20
million rounds annually.
So give-or-take five million or so. No wonder they need so many
deliveries.
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