ARLINGTON, Va. — Working full tilt, nine contractors have finished crafting
160,000 Interceptor body armor vests, and the equipment is now en route to
units preparing to deploy to
Iraq and a central distribution point in Kuwait, according to Army officials.
This month's production run of the Interceptor tactical vests fulfills a
promise to Congress by Army officials, who said that by January the service
would have enough of the vests to outfit every soldier deployed to Iraq,
according to Army spokesman Maj. Gary Tallman.
"Congress has been notified that the requirement has been met," Tallman said
Friday.
Interceptor vests are the Army's best body armor. The $1,585 items are
composed of layered sheets of Kevlar, with pockets in front and back for
ceramic plates that protect vital organs. The vests are highly effective
against ammunition and shrapnel. Soldiers wearing the vests in Iraq have been
shot at point-blank range with AK-47s and lived to tell about it.
As units assigned to Iraq's first rotation make their way home through
Kuwait, they will turn in their assigned vests to a central collection point at
Kuwait's Camp Victory, Tallman said.
Those vests will be checked out and reissued to Operation Iraqi Freedom 2
personnel who are staging in Kuwait.
Other units will get their vests before stepping off American soil, Tallman
said.
"Deploying units for OIF2 will be issued [the vests] either here [in the
United States], or in theater before they enter Iraq," Tallman said.
But one state legislator isn't sure that's going to happen.
Ohio State Sen. Marc Dann, a Democrat from the state's 32nd district,
introduced a bill in the Ohio Senate last week that would set aside $500,000 to
buy body armor for Ohio National Guardsmen who are deployed or deploying to
Iraq.
In a Monday telephone interview, Dann said that he became concerned after
being approached by the mother of a soldier with the 216th Engineering
Battalion, one of nine Ohio Guard units slated to deploy to Iraq in March.
The mother said she was considering buying a vest for her son because she was
not confident the Army would provide one, Dann said. He promised to look into
the matter.
"Frankly, I didn't think it was that big a deal," Dann said, and that the
Army would immediately allay any concerns.
After days of intense staff work produced no such assurances, Dann and
another state senator, Toledo Democrat Theresa Fedor, met to discuss the matter
with Air Force Maj. Gen. John Smith, adjutant general for the Ohio National
Guard, and senior members of his staff.
Dann said he left the meeting unsatisfied by what he called Smith's "vague
assurances."
Tallman said he was not specifically aware of Dann's legislation, but said it
was unnecessary.
"The Army will ensure that all soldiers in OIF2, regardless of [active or
Reserve status], will have [Interceptor vests] before they deploy to Iraq,"
Tallman said.
Moreover, the Army is discouraging families or other donors from purchasing
body armor that the Army has not tested, certified or approved, Tallman said.
"It is not recommended that units accept public donations or individually
purchased body armor," Tallman said. "The Army cannot attest for the
effectiveness of body armor not procured through an approved Army contract, and
validated by tests."
Dann plans to hold a hearing on the vest issue Wednesday.
"Maybe I have absolutely nothing to worry about," Dann said. "I hope that's
true."
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