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| NewsThursday, October 18, 2007 1:06 PM CDT |
Are bomb-resistant vehicles worth the cost?
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- An independent study released Wednesday questions whether the Pentagon is buying too many bomb-resistant vehicles for troops in Iraq in its frantic rush to correct earlier shortfalls. The question, put forward by the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments in Washington, is a provocative one. There is a long-held assertion in Congress and the military that the more armor given to troops, the better. But averaging about $800,000 a piece and weighing two- to five-times that of the common humvee, the Mine-Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicles are a hefty national investment that may have a short shelf-life, according to the study. The center estimates the military plans to spend some $25 billion to buy upward of 20,000 vehicles. "We're not saying don't buy them. We're saying, have we thought this through?" said Andrew Krepinevich, the center's executive director. Marine Corps Commandant Gen. James Conway raised a similar question on Monday. Conway said he sees the current procurement plans for the vehicles as a moral imperative, but that a longer-term assessment of military requirements is probably necessary. "Can I give a satisfactory answer to what we're going to be doing with those things in five or 10 years? Probably not," he said at a lunch sponsored by the Center for a New American Security. "Wrap them in shrink wrap and put them in asphalt somewhere is about the best thing that we can describe at this point. And as expensive as they are, that is probably not a good use of the taxpayers money." The study and Conway's remarks are unlikely to affect the Democratic-controlled Congress. "I have a different bottom line: saving American lives now," said Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., in response to the study. "At a time of war, when commanders in the field have requested technology that is proven to reduce casualties by 69 to 80 percent, I think we owe them a full-faith effort to provide it and it's money well spent." Earlier this year, the Marine Corps came under fire for not responding quickly enough to urgent requests for the vehicles from troops in Iraq. In May, Defense Secretary Robert Gates declared the blast deflecting V-shaped hulls the military's highest priority acquisition program. Production problems contributed substantially to the Pentagon's struggle to get more MRAPs to Iraq, officials have said. The Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments says that it is unlikely the fleet of vehicles would suddenly become useless, considering the popularity of improvised explosive devices. But in several cases, MRAPs may not be the panacea many hope, the study concludes. "The reality is that U.S. forces will, at times, have to put themselves at risk in order to destroy enemy forces, protect noncombatants or keep warring parties apart long enough for political solutions to be found and implemented," the study says. |
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