Posted on 05/18/2005 2:10:38 AM PDT by kingattax
A Ladson-based companys new armored vehicles will protect U.S. troops from roadside bombs in Iraq and Afghanistan.
And the company will receive nearly $90 million in the process.
The Department of Defense has hired Force Protection Inc. to build 122 Cougars, which can survive a blast from an improvised explosive device, said Michael Aldrich, Force Protections vice president for sales.
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Force Protection must complete the first order of 71 vehicles by May 2006. The companys 240 employees can build 20 Cougars a month, Aldrich said.
In combat, soldiers who specialize in disarming land mines and improvised explosive devices (called IEDs) will ride in the Cougars, Aldrich said. These soldiers are called on by infantry and other combat units to inspect and defuse possible explosives on the battlefield. About 10 percent of explosive devices detonate while they are being inspected by troops, according to a Defense Department report.
Marines have been using the Cougar in Iraq since October, Aldrich said. The Defense Department watched the Cougar in action and decided to buy some for the other branches of service.
The Cougar looks like a super-sized Hummer. It comes with a V-shaped hull that deflects any explosions away from the cabin. The vehicles steel body packs on the weight 19 tons, or as much as 12 Toyota Camrys but can travel 70 miles per hour on asphalt, Aldrich said.
It quickly became known as the Humvee on steroids, Aldrich said.
Force Protection also makes a big brother to the Cougar.
The 26-ton Buffalo looks similar but comes with a monstrous claw attached to the front. The Army Corps of Engineers uses the Buffalo to clear explosives from routes traveled by the military in Iraq and Afghanistan.
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Troops inside the Buffalo can attach steel wheels and then trample the IEDs, Aldrich said.
Weve been operating for two years now, and weve had one broken wrist in a Buffalo, he said. Weve taken out explosives that would take out an Abrams tank.
Force Protections contract is a result of the Pentagons efforts to protect soldiers from roadside bombs, said John Pike, director of Globalsecurity.org, a defense analysis Web site.
The Defense Department has been criticized for its slow pace in outfitting troops with armored vehicles.
In December 2004, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld launched a firestorm of criticism after he answered a soldiers question about armored vehicles by saying, As you know, you have to go to war with the Army you have, not the Army you want.
Improvised explosives frequently kill Americans in Iraq. But the military says it is getting better at preventing the death and injury they cause. In the spring of 2004, every explosion caused a casualty, but today one in four explosions kills or wounds a soldier, said Army Brig. Gen. Joseph Votel, who heads the Pentagons task force on defending against the explosives.
In May 5 testimony before the House Armed Services Committee, Votel said developing new vehicles with armor, ballistic windows and air conditioning was one step being taken to protect soldiers.
This protects the soldiers from small-arms fire, many types of mines and IEDs, Votel said.
Pike said the purchase is a good move for the Army, although the service has been slow in developing armored vehicles to protect its troops. The Armys bureaucratic size got in the way, Pike said, but it also took time to figure out how to defend against enemy tactics.
You dont want to run out and spend money on something you dont need, he said.
The contract is good news for Force Protection, which has been losing money as it prepared itself to compete for business with large defense contractors, like General Dynamics.
The S.C. company lost $10.2 million in 2004 and $5.2 million in 2003.
Its from trying to do business with the federal government, Aldrich said. You have to be big enough to get the contract.
Reach Phillips at (803) 771-8307 or nophillips@thestate.com
Cool truck!
And after the war, they can sell it to Arnold and the soccer moms!
What a freeway machine!! I want one....
Cool mil equipment ping.
SWEET!
I could see road rage at a whole new level in this beast.
Coming to a news broadcast in the fall of 2006:
"In traffic news today, 473 motorists were eliminated from the Cross Bronx Expressway by a 74 year old woman from Queens, driving her new Buffalo. Now over to the weather with Doppler Jim."
What kind of mileage does it get?
Does it come with heated seats?
I have an almost teenaged daughter - so let's get to the important stuff. Is there a lighted vanity mirror??
Bump
Does she play the radio preset buttons like it's a keyboard the same way mine does?
Nah - she sits in the back seat where she can't reach them. We like to listen to the same kind of stuff, so we're good to go there.
However, from where she sits, she can see the speedometer, so I get a lot of "Dad, what's the speed limit, and should you be going 70?"
Of course, what we nearly died from was the *laughter*.
what a pimped out ride !! Id like one too!!
Kathy,
Check out the rides.
Jay should have one, ya think?
Thanks for the ping Swamp Fox.
So are they going to come with red fenders like we use to have??
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