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  #1  
Old 10-30-2006, 05:29 PM
AXEAM AXEAM is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dekeguy View Post
Couple of thoughts here:
Body armor is not a cure-all to the dangers of combat. Training, alertness, agility, and concentration are far more valuable. Body armor is a nice to have extra under some circumstances, it is not a crucial requirement. If you have done a tour in-country you know what I mean. If not, ask some soldiers who have. They will tell you that training and alertness to surroundings beat hell out of all the heavy gear that protects part but not all of you. When the IED goes off, your head, arms, and legs are not covered. In most cases your gut is not protected. If you are using ceramic plate insert armor it weighs a ton and slows you down way too much. If you are using layered kevlar its good but it still slows down your agility and puts you at risk. If you are in the blast radius of a serious package it really doesn't matter what you are wearing, you are history, if you are lucky. You are mangled ground meat if not. A soldier who can "smell" an ambush comes home more or less in one piece. One who relies on protective armor had better have a lot of good luck. Rely on training and knowing how to anticipate trouble and counter it and you will be OK, unless its just that your number is up.
The basic equipment furnished to the American Soldier is the best ever fielded in history. The extras can often come with a price in human vulnerability that no soldier wants to pay. A new kid may desperately want all the extras he has heard about. As that soldier gains experience he will learn to pick and choose the gear that really suits the particular mission in which he is engaged at that time.
How can troops succeed? When they are well trained, equiped with really REQUIRED gear, and led by good NCOs and good Officers they are truly an awesome force that can do just about anything required of it.
As to their being sold a false bill of goods, the Army is not sold its missions, it receives its missions from the National Command Authority and carries out those missions. Its not a matter of having to be sold on anything. As I have said before, in the American tradition the Army is the instrument of the Government, the Government is not the instrument of the Army. We are founded on the absolute principle of civilian control. We don't pick and choose the fights we feel like accepting, and there are plenty of times when the Army sure as hell is not overjoyed by its job. If you don't like the policy the Army has to carry out then vote to change the policy makers, but don't ask the Army to meddle in National Policy. This country doesn't do Juntas and Military take-overs. Soldiers vote and will do so, but we don't choose the jobs we are willing to accept. We just get on with the job we are assigned.
In an all-volunteer military the choice is whether or not to take the Oath and commit to service. Once that choice is made we are good for our word. Its hard to put your life on the line for anything, but that is what Soldiers do. It comes with the territory.
No offense but your post sounds like an Army info-commercial, not to say that you aren't making valid points b/c you are.. I spoke w/several active military members (when I worked @ the V.A hospital as a mental health therapist) who returned back from Iraq,the main concerns were not enough body armour, no metal under plates for their humvees or jeeps and not enough troops to do the job. Getting back to under plates for vehicles I've heard stories of units searching for scrap metal to jimmy rig it under the vehicles as a way of protection against IEDs. The arm forces of the United States of America should not have resort to such B.S as that. Another Big complaint was longer deployments then planned for...I know you and others will say thats the way it goes in war but I can understand the troops frustrations.

Last edited by AXEAM; 10-30-2006 at 07:01 PM.
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Old 10-30-2006, 06:43 PM
dekeguy dekeguy is offline
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Originally Posted by AXEAM View Post
No offense but your post sounds like an Army info-commercial, not to say that you aren't making valid points b/c you are.. I spoke w/several active military members (when I worked @ the V.A hospital as a mental health therapist) who returned back from Iraq,the main concerns were not enough body armour, no metal under plates for their humvees or jeeps and not enough troops to do the job. Getting back to under plates for vehicals I've heard stories of units searching for scrap metal to jimmy rig it under the vehicals as a way of protection against IEDs. The arm forces of the United States of America should not have resort to such B.S as that. Another Big complaint was longer deployments then planned for...I know you and others will say thats the way it goes in war but I can understand the troops frustrations.

Inconvenience and frustration are valid points, and we all have read stories regarding unplanned and/or longer than expected deployments (please see thread titled "AVE ATQUE VALE") but my chief concern is that we understand that as in most things there are no simple answers. Improvised armor applied to vehicles not designed to carry the extra weight most often creates death traps for those who ride in them. One is usually better off using speed and agility along with street smarts to avoid/survive IEDs than to lumber sluggishly along in a grossly overloaded vehicle whose improvised armor not only fails to protect but actually adds to the shrapnel effect.
Our combat vehicles are very very good and can absorb a hell of a lot and still stay mission effective. Our logistics vehicles are also very good for the role they were designed to carry out. Unfortunately, they were not designed to carry armor as well as their payload of supplies, equipment, etc. When you add armor or under plating the suspension is over burdened and the cargo bed settles down low where it can cancel out the suspension, crimp the brake lines, and short out the electrical harness in addition to making the vehicle sluggish and hard to control. The troops in the Transportation Corps are always pointing this out.
Sorry if I sound like I am preaching, but this is a matter of terribly great importance to me. I got all my guys home alive and more or less in one piece, and I get wrapped around the axel when I see discussions about solutions or "improvements" that if followed or applied could actually get soldiers a ride home in a rubber bag. Its a knee jerk protective response for the troops that I saw in my Dad when he talks about Viet Nam (Company Commander on his first tour and Battalion Commander on his second) and now I find in myself (one tour, CO of Armored Cavalry Troop) when the subject of deployment comes up.
dekeguy
Captain, USAR
Been there, done that, hope I don't have to do it again, but ready if needed.
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  #3  
Old 10-30-2006, 06:59 PM
AXEAM AXEAM is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dekeguy View Post
Inconvenience and frustration are valid points, and we all have read stories regarding unplanned and/or longer than expected deployments (please see thread titled "AVE ATQUE VALE") but my chief concern is that we understand that as in most things there are no simple answers. Improvised armor applied to vehicles not designed to carry the extra weight most often creates death traps for those who ride in them. One is usually better off using speed and agility along with street smarts to avoid/survive IEDs than to lumber sluggishly along in a grossly overloaded vehicle whose improvised armor not only fails to protect but actually adds to the shrapnel effect.
Our combat vehicles are very very good and can absorb a hell of a lot and still stay mission effective. Our logistics vehicles are also very good for the role they were designed to carry out. Unfortunately, they were not designed to carry armor as well as their payload of supplies, equipment, etc. When you add armor or under plating the suspension is over burdened and the cargo bed settles down low where it can cancel out the suspension, crimp the brake lines, and short out the electrical harness in addition to making the vehicle sluggish and hard to control. The troops in the Transportation Corps are always pointing this out.
Sorry if I sound like I am preaching, but this is a matter of terribly great importance to me. I got all my guys home alive and more or less in one piece, and I get wrapped around the axel when I see discussions about solutions or "improvements" that if followed or applied could actually get soldiers a ride home in a rubber bag. Its a knee jerk protective response for the troops that I saw in my Dad when he talks about Viet Nam (Company Commander on his first tour and Battalion Commander on his second) and now I find in myself (one tour, CO of Armored Cavalry Troop) when the subject of deployment comes up.
dekeguy
Captain, USAR
Been there, done that, hope I don't have to do it again, but ready if needed.
No you're not preaching. Your posts are both educational and interesting it's always good to have an opinion from someone who has actually served in Iraq.
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