The U.S. Army has altered its government-owned Scorpion camouflage pattern to look almost identical to MultiCam, the trademarked pattern the service has been using in Afghanistan since 2010. Earlier ...
We received this memo directly from Caleb Crye, executive director of Crye Precision and the designer of MultiCam. It relates the company's frustration with the U.S. Army's 10-year camouflage debacle.
Key point: Camoflague needs to reflect the environments that soldiers are fighting in. Thirty years ago, if you looked at a picture of a multinational field exercise involving the United States and ...
source GAIA package: Sx_MilitaryTimes_M6200910909150315_5675.zip Origin key: Sx_MilitaryTimes_M6200910909150315 imported at Fri Jan 8 18:18:02 2016 The Army's Universal Camouflage Pattern, now under ...
This is from the Army Times: This isn’t the only option, however. The Army continues to consider dressing soldiers in Marine and Navy camo patterns, under certain scenarios, according to the source, ...
The U.S. Army has altered its government-owned Scorpion camouflage pattern to look almost identical to MultiCam, the trademarked pattern the service has been using in Afghanistan since 2010. Earlier ...
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