WASHINGTON – In February 2005, Marines in Iraq made a ‘priority 1 urgent’ request for 1,169 military vehicles with V-shaped undersides that save lives by deflecting blasts from roadside bombs. But instead of those Mine Resistant Ambush Protected vehicles, or MRAPs, the Marines back home sent armored Humvees, vehicles that offer far less protection. It wasn’t until May 2006 that the Marines ordered the MRAPs, and then only 185 of them. Defense Secretary Robert Gates now is asking the Marines to investigate and explain what happened. Today MRAPs are a priority with Gates. Congress is spending $8.4 billion to meet the military’s request for 7,774 MRAPs. And the Army is checking to see whether it needs thousands more to replace Humvees. Sen. Joe Biden, D-Del., a longtime critic of the war and a presidential candidate, wrote Gates in May asking him to determine by Friday how many more MRAPs are needed, and to set a production plan to get them into Iraq as fast as possible. He also has asked President Bush to declare the drive to build MRAPs a national priority. Roadside bombs cause 70 percent of American casualties in Iraq, and MRAPs reduce the […]
Friday, June 15th, 2007
Controversy Over Military Vehicles for Iraq Heats Up
Author: RENEE SCHOOF
Source: McClatchy Newspapers
Publication Date: 14-Jun-07
Link: Controversy Over Military Vehicles for Iraq Heats Up
Source: McClatchy Newspapers
Publication Date: 14-Jun-07
Link: Controversy Over Military Vehicles for Iraq Heats Up
Stephan: All the patriotic verbiage boils down to this reality; and it is a shameful one.