Military adds armor to Iraq vehicles as roadside bombs surge
Associated Press/AP Online
WASHINGTON - The U.S. military is reinforcing the sides of
its topline mine-resistant vehicles to shore up what could be weak
points as troops see a spike in armor-piercing roadside bombings
across Iraq, The Associated Press has learned.
The surge in attacks is putting the mine-resistant,
ambush-protected vehicles (MRAPs) to the test, and so far they are
largely passing. Statistics reviewed by the AP show that while
bombings involving the deadly penetrating explosives have jumped by
about 40 percent in the past three months, deaths in such bombings
have dropped by as much as 17 percent.
Officials attribute much of the decline in deaths to the
increased use of MRAPs, pronounced "M-raps." To date,
about a half-dozen troops have died in incidents that involved the
new bomb-resistant vehicles, and several of those deaths occurred in
rollovers rather than from explosives penetrating the armor.
Military officials spoke on condition of anonymity about the
statistics because some are classified. Details of specific
incidents often are not provided, making it difficult to determine
which type of vehicle is involved in each roadside bombing.
Army spokesman Paul Boyce said that commanders are
increasing safety training to help troops better learn how to handle
the heavy, ungainly vehicles.
"We're emphasizing the limitations of the vehicle's
handling and the importance of understanding the lessons learned
after some close calls," said Boyce, adding that the training
also focuses on how to get out in an emergency. In addition,
officials stress the importance of inspecting and using seat belts.
Meanwhile, at Camp Arifjahn in Kuwait, the military is
reinforcing some MRAPs with additional side armor - and it shipped
as many as 20 of the newly upgraded vehicles to the battlefront in
April. An additional 30 are to go into Iraq beginning this month.
Navy Lt. Cmdr. James Hadley, who is overseeing the upgrades
in Kuwait, said not every MRAP is getting the additional armor,
which increases the vehicle's weight by as much as 5,000 pounds. The
extra protection, he said, is being added to vehicles destined for
hot battleground areas.
The additional armor is shipped in kits to Kuwait and
installed on the MRAPs, which only recently arrived at a facility
dedicated to outfitting the vehicles with antennas and equipment
before being sent to troops.
Roadside bombs have long been a primary killer of troops in
Iraq, and in May 2007 Defense Secretary Robert Gates declared that
the speedy purchase of MRAPs was the Pentagon's top acquisition
priority. The vehicles have a V-shaped hull and sit about 36 inches
off the ground, so when a bomb explodes the blast is directed out
and away from the troops riding inside.
Congress has provided more than $22 billion for at least
15,000 of the vehicles the Defense Department plans to acquire,
mostly for the Army. The Marine Corps, citing reduced violence in
Iraq and the awkward size of the vehicles, has already announced it
wants only 2,300 - 1,400 fewer than initially planned.
The vehicles cost between $500,000 and $1 million each,
depending on their size and how they are equipped.
"We will continue to improve the quality of the armor
protection on the vehicles," Army Lt. Gen. Stephen Speakes said
in an AP interview this week. "Our strategy will be a
combination of improving the fleet that is already fielded over in
combat, as well as putting additional capability on in the
factory."
Speakes, deputy chief of staff for Army resources and
equipping, was in Iraq recently and got to test drive one of the
MRAPs and talk to commanders about their use. Roughly 3,000 of the
vehicles are in Iraq now, with thousands more to be delivered in
coming months.
Speakes said that Maj. Gen. Rick Lynch, commander of the 3rd
Infantry Division, told him that using the MRAPs has saved the lives
of about 40 of his soldiers. Lynch's troops control a large region
south of Baghdad.
"We naturally are conscious of cost, and conscious of
how much America has sacrificed to put all that capability in the
hands of soldiers," said Speakes. "But when you hear a
division commander just say 'thank you ... I estimate you've saved
40 of my soldier's lives,' it kind of puts it all in a different
perspective."
Details of deaths related to the MRAPs are not readily
available. But one soldier died early this year when his MRAP hit a
very large, deeply buried roadside bomb and overturned. The soldier
was the gunner, and he was sitting atop the MRAP, so it was not
immediately clear whether he died as a result of the explosion or
the rollover.
In other instances, one service member who was not wearing
his seat belt was killed when a bomb exploded near his vehicle, and
two soldiers were killed when their MRAP overturned. No other
details were available.
Finally, in what may be the only instance in which
explosives penetrated the MRAP, two soldiers were killed last week
when the MRAP they were riding in was hit by what appeared to be one
of the highly lethal explosively formed penetrators, called EFPs.
One or two other troops may have been killed previously in
incidents that involved earlier, less heavily armored versions of
the MRAP.
The spike in the use of EFPs can be tied in part to the
surge in violence last month in Sadr City and Basra. U.S. and Iraqi
troops have been battling Shiite militias there, including many
armed with Iranian-made weapons.
According to military statistics, in the past three months:
- EFP incidents in Iraq jumped by nearly 40 percent, while
casualties related to those attacks went down by about 17 percent.
- Overall roadside bomb incidents in Iraq increased about 10
percent, while casualties dropped by more than 40 percent.
- Roadside bomb incidents in the Baghdad area, including
Sadr City, rose by about 20 percent, and casualties went up 30
percent. Fighting spiked recently due to battles with Shiite militia
members in Sadr City.
- In the Baghdad area, EFP incidents increased by about 17
percent, while casualties fell by 43 percent.
Officials said that the bulk of the casualties around
Baghdad during April were the result of the armor-piercing
explosives.
Associated Press Writer Chelsea Carter contributed to this
report from Camp Arifjahn, Kuwait.
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