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January 4, 2005
[Have an opinion about the issues discussed in this article?
Sound
off in our Discussion Boards.]
By Joseph L. Galloway, ©Knight Ridder
Stars and Stripes European edition
WASHINGTON — The Army,
beset with complaints that its troops are going into combat in inadequately
armored Humvees, will send an older and less used class of armored
personnel carriers to Iraq
after spending $84 million to add armor to them.
These vehicles, both veteran warhorses, are the M113/A3 armored
personnel carrier and the M577 command post carrier. Both will be
tougher and safer than newly armored Humvees.
Army officials who pushed hard over the last two years for getting
the M113 into duty in Iraq said it was more useful, cheaper and
easier to transport than the Army's new wheeled Stryker armored
vehicle, which also is in use in Iraq.
The Army and Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld found themselves
at the center of a firestorm last month over the pace of adding
armor to the Humvee, a small transport vehicle that's been pressed
into service in Iraq as a combat vehicle. Critics have charged that
even with armor the Humvee is too easily destroyed by rocket-propelled
grenades and improvised explosive devices.
An Army representative, who didn't want to be identified, said
Monday that $84 million was being spent to add armor to 734 M113/A3s
and M577s.
For the M113s,
that includes hardened steel side armor, a "slat armor" cage that
bolts to the side armor and protects against RPGs, anti-mine armor
on the bottom and a new transparent, bulletproof gun shield on the
top that vastly improves gunners' vision.
The M577, nicknamed the "high-top shoe" for its tall, ungainly
silhouette, will get only slat armor and anti-mine armor. Its high
sides can't take the steel armor without making the vehicle unstable
and even more liable to roll over.
The slat-type armor essentially is a metal cage designed to detonate
RPGs before they breach the steel armor and the light aluminum wall.
Similar slat armor has been added to the Stryker vehicle.
The armor kits will be produced in the United States, the Army
representative said, and installed in Kuwait.
The representative said the M113 upgrade was requested by Lt. Gen.
Thomas Metz, the ground commander in Iraq, and approved by Gen.
George Casey, the commander of multinational forces in Iraq.
The M113 typically carries a driver, a commander and 11 infantry
soldiers. It can be fitted with a .50-caliber machine gun or a MK19
40 mm grenade launcher. The M113/A3 version, introduced in 1987,
has a bigger turbo-charged diesel engine, an improved transmission,
steering and braking package, and inside liners to suppress spall,
the superheated molten metal produced by RPG and tank-round hits.
It has a range of 300 miles and a road speed of more than 40 mph.
It also can swim.
More than 80,000 M113s in 28 configurations have been manufactured
since they were introduced in 1960, and they still do yeoman duty
in many of the world's armies.
At around 13 tons, the M113 is much easier to transport than the
behemoth M1A2 Abrams tank, the Bradley Fighting Vehicle or even
the wheeled Stryker.
The Army has spent hundreds of millions of dollars buying armored
Humvees at $150,000 each and buying and making special tempered-steel
and bulletproof-glass kits to add armor protection to the thin-skinned
variety. The demand for armor on the Humvees grew as insurgents
began pouring RPGs onto American patrols and convoys, and detonating
deadly homemade bombs in the late summer of 2003.
The current demand in Iraq is for more than 22,000 armor-protected
Humvees, a goal the Army says it will meet sometime between now
and March. Its prime focus has turned now to armoring the five models
of trucks that travel Iraq's dangerous roads to supply American
forces.
Rumsfeld recently told a Tennessee National Guard soldier, who
asked why his outfit had to scavenge dumps in Kuwait for scraps
of armor for their Humvees, that "you go to war with the Army you
have, not the Army you might like to have."
One serving officer, who asked not to be identified, said Rumsfeld
"didn't even let us go to war with the Army we had; he made us leave
half our armored vehicles at home in pursuit of lighter, faster
and cheaper."
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