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Replace the hopeless Humvee, Pentagon chiefs are urged
telegraph.co.uk ^
| 28/04/2004
| David Rennie
Posted on 04/28/2004 10:14:41 AM PDT by Destro
Replace the hopeless Humvee, Pentagon chiefs are urged
By David Rennie in Washington
(Filed: 28/04/2004)
Humvees are proving easy prey on the streets of Iraq
Armoured cars being sent to Iraq are not up to the job, according to a senior United States army general, prompting calls for Pentagon chiefs to swallow their pride and reactivate thousands of mothballed Vietnam-era armoured personnel carriers.
With improvised bombs, rifle fire and rocket-propelled grenades taking an ever deadlier toll on coalition forces, the Pentagon is spending £225 million to replace thin-skinned versions of the Humvee, the US military's ubiquitous jeep-like transport, with an "up-armoured" model, as fast as they can be churned off the production line.
Commanders have shuddered as troops attached home-made armour plating and even sandbags to ordinary Humvees, whose thin skin, canvas doors and shoulder height windows have made them highly vulnerable to attack.
The new, armour-plated Humvees have been touted by Pentagon chiefs as the best solution to complaints from the field about the standard version of the vehicle.
But Gen Larry Ellis, the commanding general of US army forces, told his superiors that even the armoured Humvee is proving ineffective.
In a memo leaked to CNN television, he wrote: "Commanders in the field are reporting to me that the up-armoured Humvee is not providing the solution the army hoped to achieve."
Reports from the field say that even with armour plating, the Humvee's rubber tyres can be burnt out by a Molotov cocktail, while at two tons, it is light enough to be turned over by a mob.
Gen Ellis said it was "imperative" that the Pentagon instead accelerate production of the newest armoured personnel carrier, the Stryker, which weighs 19 tons and moves at high speed on eight rubber tyres.
But the Stryker has many influential critics who say it is too big to be flown easily on the military's C-130 transport aircraft, and too cumbersome to manoeuvre in narrow streets. Instead, they want the Pentagon to turn back the clock and re-deploy thousands of Vietnam-era M-113 "Gavin" armoured personnel carriers, which are still used by support and engineering units, and are held in huge numbers by reserve units.
Gary Motsek, the deputy director of support operations for US army materiel command, said: "I have roughly 700 113-series vehicles sitting pre-positioned in Kuwait, though some are in need of repairs. I have them available right now, if they want them."
TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bucket; gavin; humvee; iraq; m113
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1
posted on
04/28/2004 10:14:41 AM PDT
by
Destro
To: Destro; archy; Cannoneer No. 4
Interestig article, thanks for finding it!
Archy, Cannoneer, pre-pinglist preview ping.
2
posted on
04/28/2004 10:23:58 AM PDT
by
Darksheare
(Fortune for the day: Beware, my coffee has become weaponised and was used to take down net servers.)
To: Destro
Read this from Rumsfeld's briefing.
http://www.defenselink.mil/transcripts/2004/tr20040427-secdef0664.html Q General Myers, I need to ask you a capability equipment question that's floating around the building here. General Ellis, the FORSCOM commander, wrote a memo that's getting some circulation where -- he's getting reports from the field that all these up-armored Humvees that the military has moved heaven and earth to get into Iraq are not doing the job, or his words, "are not providing the solution the Army hoped to achieve," and they need to build more Strykers and get those into Iraq. This raises -- it feeds the notion that there's a readiness capability problem over there. Can you address this? How should one interpret this memo, and did you hear any of these complaints when you were in the region?
GEN. MYERS: No, it's -- none of those. And I asked those questions, because obviously force protection is a big issue. And improvised explosive devices have injured and maimed a lot of our troops, not to mention RPGs and AK-47s and other things.
I think -- the facts are this, that the up-armored Humvee and the Stryker have a lot of similar capabilities. And I'd have to get my chart out, which I don't have with me, that talks about their capabilities. The capabilities are actually very similar against RPGs and those sorts of things.
It turns out that a large enough weapon -- a 155 millimeter artillery shell -- can do damage to both of them. That was an improvised explosive damage. It doesn't -- that's upended tanks. We've had tanks blown over by these improvised explosive devices. So a thought that you can ever have enough armor to protect you a hundred percent is not the right notion.
We do have evidence, and we're starting to collect evidence, and we've asked the Army to collect evidence, that on the up-armored Humvees, that they provide added protection. They do -- they've been known to -- in combat in Iraq to reduce the injuries, and that's a fact.
Stryker is a good vehicle. It does a good job of doing that as well. And, you know, how fast they're going to be brought in the inventory and everything I think is an interesting point. We'll have to work that. But it's not a shortage that was brought up by the field commanders, and it's not one that's been brought to us by General Schoomaker up to this point.
Q If I could do a follow-up, please.
Q This is a warning, though, it seems --
GEN. MYERS: Well, just a minute. What I'm saying is there is not a lot of difference in the actual capability, if I remember the chart right. And I may have it wrong. So we'll get it and give it to you, if it's unclassified. But they're very similar capabilities in terms of RPGs and small-arms fire between an up-armored Humvee and a Stryker vehicle. There is no vehicle we have, to include the M1 tank, that can withstand a big shell going off next to it, okay? So that's not the right notion. And we do find -- one more time -- we do find that up-armored Humvees do provide much more protection than the thin- skinned Humvees. I mean, it's just more steel and more material between you. So it does.
So I don't --
Q Where are you on the soft-sided Humvees and the up-armored Humvees?
Q And to follow up -- I just had a follow-up question here.
Q Follow-up as well.
Q Just a follow-up, Martha, please, if I may.
What about the APCs [Armored Personnel Carrier] that are in mothballs, that many people consider to be much more protective for the troops inside than the Humvees?
GEN. MYERS: I go back to the same thing. I think if you look at --and we'll have to get the figures on APCs. But, you know, all these systems -- none of these systems provide 100 percent protection, that's the fact. And what it comes down to, what it boils down to in the end is there something technology can help you with, and in this case, more steel is probably better for personal protection, but it's not the 100 percent solution. Your tactics, techniques and procedures are probably the bulk of what's going to protect you. And as the British said in Northern Ireland, you take those two and add a little bit of luck, and then you get the rest of your package. But it's not-- it can't all be done with technology.
So obviously, whatever is required by the Army, we have made a big effort to get up-armored Humvees. The requirement continues to go up as the nature of this fight changes, as we adapt to the enemy tactics. And what people forget sometimes, that we're actually at war here, and we have adversaries that think, and they adapt to our tactics. And part of the requirement was to come up with more up- armored Humvees. We have about a little over half of the requirement as it keeps going up; we have a little over 2,000 in country. Essentially everything in the U.S. inventory, no matter what service, is in country. We've ramped production up as much as the manufacturer can sustain, as I am informed, and we're pushing that way.
Q Can I just ask about a study, an unofficial Army study apparently said of about the 789 coalition deaths, 142 were from roadside bombs, and most of those were in unprotected vehicles.
Does that sound right to you?
GEN. MYERS: I have no idea. I have to look at it. I know we've -- I know that the improvised explosive device is one of the bigger threats, clearly.
Q Do you have a substantial number of unprotected or soft-sided Humvees still in country?
GEN. MYERS: Oh, sure. And -- sure we do.
3
posted on
04/28/2004 10:25:14 AM PDT
by
finnman69
(cum puella incedit minore medio corpore sub quo manifestus globus, inflammare animos)
To: Darksheare
4
posted on
04/28/2004 10:27:34 AM PDT
by
Destro
(Know your enemy! Help fight Islamic terrorism by visiting www.johnathangaltfilms.com)
To: Destro
It's just dawned on them that this is nonlinear, asymmetric warfare?
To: Destro
The suthor seems to feel that the M-113 would be a good answer the current needs. I'm not a big-time expert on this, but I'm not so sure. The M-113 doesn't necessairly protect against RPG's or IED's. It's slower and nosier than Humvees, and it takes far more fuel and maintenance --exposing more POL troops and maintenance folks to hostile fire. It also does a lot of damage to roads. I think this writer is just semi-informed -- he knows enough to be dangerous, as the saying goes.
6
posted on
04/28/2004 10:34:25 AM PDT
by
68skylark
(.)
To: Destro
The Hummer was never meant to be armored. It was a replacement for the Jeep. And a mighty fine one at that.
7
posted on
04/28/2004 10:34:46 AM PDT
by
Blood of Tyrants
(Even if the government took all your earnings, you wouldn't be, in its eyes, a slave.)
To: valkyrieanne
you know how many Freepers flamed me over these last 2 months when I pretty much posted the same thing this article said about their beloved humvee??
8
posted on
04/28/2004 10:35:27 AM PDT
by
Destro
(Know your enemy! Help fight Islamic terrorism by visiting www.johnathangaltfilms.com)
To: Destro
The APCs would make good lend-lease stuff for the Iraqis as well!
9
posted on
04/28/2004 10:35:29 AM PDT
by
claudiustg
(Go Sharon! Go Bush!)
To: Destro
Old reliable !!!
10
posted on
04/28/2004 10:36:29 AM PDT
by
Robe
(Rome did not create a great empire by talking, they did it by killing all those who opposed them)
To: Destro
At least their not driving the iltis like our Canuck soldiers.
Although, that is changing as we phase in the G-wagon ...
To: 68skylark
Do you own a magic machine that can pump out the ideal vehicle - the article's point is that these vehicles are already in our inventory. Use them until something better comes along - better then the humvee by far.
12
posted on
04/28/2004 10:37:38 AM PDT
by
Destro
(Know your enemy! Help fight Islamic terrorism by visiting www.johnathangaltfilms.com)
To: Destro
The M113 remains just about the last vehicle in the Army inventory with an amphibious capability. If we're ever in a theatre of war with rivers, we'd better have a way for line units to cross them without waiting for helicopters or engineer bride companies that may or may not arrive. And even they need security detatchments on the other side of the *blue lines* on the maps.
The Humvee has been a good and useful replacement for the 3/4 and 5/4 ton truck. But now we ought to have something a little smaller, better armored, and amphibious as a direct replacement for the old Jeep without that earlier vehicle's shortcomings.
13
posted on
04/28/2004 10:38:14 AM PDT
by
archy
(The darkness will come. It will find you,and it will scare you like you've never been scared before.)
To: Destro
My old artillery unit used the M1097 and 1098 version of the Humvee, with a few 998 versions thrown in for good measure.
What's interesting is the notion being fostered by a few, some in the press, that there is such a thing as 100% protection against explosions and projectiles.
The General touches on that and states specifically that notion is a fallacy. (Obviously paraphrased but the sentiment is the same. This line isn't for you Destro, but for the nitpickers that seem to like to pick these posts apart.)
During annual training at Drum, we were always told to put sandbags everywhere inside the vehicle, but we knew that the sandbags weren't going to stop much from coming through and dicing us up.
Especially since we had canvasback Humvees.
The 'uparmored' Humvee is a good idea, it does reduce the injuries.
So instead of being dead you're merely pretty badly hurt or mildly shaken depending on what happened.
The quote about teh Humvee never being intended for frontline use is accurate and spot on.
My artillery unit was viewed as a 'rear area occupancy' unit, meaning we weren't ever likely to see the other guy -ever.
(My nephews can see the holes in that idea..)
But Iraq has, as the article says, become a 360 battlefield.
(A surround sound event.)
and teh Humvees are ending up performing tasks under conditions they weren't designed for.
Seems the press doesn't understand this, can't understand this, or refuses to understand this.
And there's those who'd use teh current situation for political gain.
*sigh*
Again, thanks for finding the article!
14
posted on
04/28/2004 10:38:27 AM PDT
by
Darksheare
(Fortune for the day: Beware, my coffee has become weaponised and was used to take down net servers.)
To: finnman69
"Your tactics, techniques and procedures are probably the bulk of what's going to protect you."bump.
15
posted on
04/28/2004 10:40:58 AM PDT
by
spunkets
To: Blood of Tyrants
The Hummer was never meant to be armored. It was a replacement for the Jeep. And a mighty fine one at that. Amen. The guy who wrote this article didn't know this? Sheesh!
16
posted on
04/28/2004 10:42:44 AM PDT
by
SkyPilot
To: Blood of Tyrants
The Hummer was never meant to be armored. It was a replacement for the Jeep. And a mighty fine one at that. Amen. The guy who wrote this article didn't know this? Sheesh!
17
posted on
04/28/2004 10:42:45 AM PDT
by
SkyPilot
To: Destro
"I have roughly 700 113-series vehicles sitting pre-positioned in Kuwait,Sounds like the ticket to me.
18
posted on
04/28/2004 10:44:28 AM PDT
by
1Old Pro
To: archy
we'd better have a way for line units to cross them without waiting for helicopters or engineer bride companies that may or may not arrive... Typo, of course, *bridge* intended. But you've gotta admit that the image of combat engineers in formal white dresses tossing the bouquet to hopeful grunts is an interesting, if bizarre, one....
19
posted on
04/28/2004 10:45:39 AM PDT
by
archy
(The darkness will come. It will find you,and it will scare you like you've never been scared before.)
To: SkyPilot
still, its a sad testament to the technology in american industry that we cannot have some kind of advancement in lightweight armor or composite materials to make a better military vehicle then this.
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