Posted on 12/28/2009 4:02:06 AM PST by Jet Jaguar
GRAFENWÖHR, Germany British and American soldiers soon could be hard to tell apart if the U.S. Army adopts a camouflage pattern similar to one that the British have already picked out to conceal their troops in Afghanistan.
U.S. soldiers with 2nd Battalion, 12th Infantry Regiment in eastern Afghanistan are wearing new uniforms featuring the "MultiCam" camouflage pattern as part of a trial conducted by the Army to determine the best way to help troops blend in with their environment.
Last week the British Ministry of Defence announced that its troops would soon start wearing a new uniform with a version of MultiCam dubbed the "Multi-Terrain Pattern."
Uniforms in the new pattern will be issued to troops with 4 Mechanized Brigade deploying to Afghanistan in March. The uniforms will later be introduced across all three services, the ministry said in a statement posted on its Web site.
"This new camouflage will help our troops blend into different environments in Helmand province to stay hidden from the Taliban," British Defence Secretary Bob Ainsworth said in the statement. "Patrols take our troops through the Green Zone, scrubland, desert and arid stony environments and it is crucial that the camouflage can work across all of them."
The U.S. Army is testing MultiCam alongside a version of the digital Universal Camouflage Pattern already featured on the Army Combat Uniform.
Sgt. Michael McCormick, 23, of San Diego, said Monday that hes wearing the new version of the digital uniform, which has "coyote brown" splotches, on patrols with 4th Brigade, 82nd Airborne Division out of Kandahar, Afghanistan.
But he said he prefers the MultiCam pattern that other soldiers are testing because its not digital and therefore blends in better with Afghan terrain. He added that any new uniform should do away with the fabric fastener pockets and attachments that are on his ACUs.
"[The fabric fastener] gets dusty or dirty and it doesnt work anymore. You cant keep your sleeves or collar down and its not tactical. If you have to adjust something during a mission it makes a loud noise," he said.
The prospect of being mistaken for one of his British counterparts doesnt faze McCormick.
"Ive worked a lot with the Brits, especially on my last deployment to Afghanistan," he said. "A common [camouflage] scheme wouldnt be bad in any shape or form. Its not like the Afghans know the difference between British and American soldiers."
And a common uniform might provide a psychological advantage over the Taliban, who would be unable to use knowledge about a particular nations standard operating procedures when planning attacks, he said.
No problem. The Brits will be the ones with the "silly walk".
The Brits will also be the ones with crappy equipment.
Looks like some Realtree camo I had my eye on in the Cabelas catalog.
"[The fabric fastener] gets dusty or dirty and it doesnt work anymore. You cant keep your sleeves or collar down and its not tactical. If you have to adjust something during a mission it makes a loud noise," he said.
The ACU's are crap. They wear out too soon, look dirty, and all that velcro is a throw-back to the 90's. Buttons have always been better closures in a field uniform.
Very effective. The platoon standing behind that soldier was not even visible.
“Very effective. The platoon standing behind that soldier was not even visible.”
Good one.
...OK, I’ll admit it, you got me to scroll up for a second look. :-P
Kind of reminds me of the old tiger strips.
“..and now for something completely similar”
It doesn't work unless you're logged in.
Mark
Needs a powder blue beret...
GRAFENWÖHR... The coldest I’ve ever been, February 14, 1967. 4th Armored Division, 144th Signal Battalion.
We had the infamous.... TA-50 Gear.
What??? No “Mossy Oak?”
Well, that soldier is definately American. The only British soldier wearing that colour beret would be SAS, and they don’t generally stand around posing for photos...
That was TA 50-901 : >)
You are so correct.... along with the “Micky Mouse” boots.
You guys obviously didn’t have polypro, silkweights, goretex, microfleece, waffle tops/bottoms, bear suits, and marshmallow suits... :0)
Wrong shade of tan to be a Ranger beret, plus the flash and shaping are all wrong. Gotta be a Brit.
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