June 5,2008:
The U.S. Department of Defense has
ordered 14,200 MRAP (Mine Resistant Ambush Protected) vehicles, and about 43
percent have been delivered. No more orders are expected. MRAPs are basically
heavy trucks (7-12 tons) with lots of armor. They are expensive to operate,
mainly because of the ever-increasing cost of oil.
The MRAP
was designed to deal with a weapon somewhat unique to the Iraq war; the
IED (Improvised Explosive Device). Why were these roadside bombs so
unique? For one thing, it was the number
of American casualties it caused. About half of all American wounded were hit
by IEDs, and nearly as many of the dead as well. While the new body armor made
the infantry less vulnerable, armored vehicles did not do as much for the
combat support troops who get hit by most of the IEDs. The specially built
MRAPs, with the V shaped bottoms (to deflect explosions) were further
customized to minimize IED casualties.
But at the
same time, IEDs are not likely to be seen in future wars. That's because of
some unique circumstances in Iraq. The main one was the presence of so much
unguarded explosives. Saddam had bought enormous quantities of artillery shells
and bombs during his 1980s war with Iran. When that war ended, Iraq found
itself with thousands of tons of unused munitions. Saddam's secret weapon in
getting the Iranians to agree to a truce, was his heavy use of artillery. The
Russians were eager to sell Saddam all the ammo he wanted, at cheap prices as
well. This was because the Russians maintained huge stocks of artillery ammo,
and did not use the older stuff up for training (as was the case in the West).
So the shells just sat there until they got too unstable to use, or the
Russians found someone to sell it to. Saddam was their man, and the 1991 war
over Kuwait used up very little of this leftover ammo. Not much got used during
the 2003 war either. American troops moved too fast for the Iraqi artillery to
get into action much at all. So when the invasion was over, hundreds of ammo
dumps in Iraq were suddenly unguarded.
Despite
all the oil money (which Saddam reserved for himself and his cronies), most
Iraqis were poor. With Saddam's thugs gone, for the moment, looting became a
form of payback for decades of deprivation. Hauling off 90 pound artillery
shells (to be broken open to separate the explosives from the scrap metal) was
a popular, lucrative, although dangerous, activity for most of 2003. Suddenly
there were lots of explosives for sale, cheap. There were also thousands of
artillery and mortar shells that had not been busted open yet, when the Baath
Party and al Qaeda decided to stage a campaign of terror against the Shia
Arabs, Kurds, and anyone who was helping them (the coalition.) Baath had lots
of cash, and there were lots of shells available cheap. This is not a normal
situation in most of the world. Without lots of cheap, and easily available,
explosives, you can't have a lot of IEDs going off.
Moreover,
the United States spent billions of dollars to develop new ways to find or
disable IEDs. So the next time someone tries to use IEDs as their principal
weapon, they will find, as the Iraqi terrorists have found, that over 90
percent of their IEDs will be detected, destroyed or otherwise wasted before
they get a chance to hurt anyone. Well, someone will get hurt anyway, mostly
the people building the IEDs. Iraq's anti-government forces had lots of people
expert at working with explosives. Saddam had thousands of his loyal followers
trained in these deadly arts, and many were available for hire after Saddam was
out of power and no longer meeting his payroll. Less expert bomb makers tend to
blow themselves up. This was seen happening with increasing frequency in Israel,
after Israel identified and killed or captured most of the Palestinian
terrorist bomb makers. The same thing happened in Iraq, as expert bomb makers were
taken out. And the same thing will happen in any part of the world where there
are many guys who want to build IEDs, but don't have the skills to do it and
survive the process.
Attempts
to duplicate the heavy Iraqi use of IEDs have failed in places like Somalia and
Afghanistan. IEDs have been used in previous wars, like Vietnam, but because of
the unique conditions in Iraq, none of those earlier uses were nearly as
intense, or deadly.
So the
MRAPs will soon go into storage, with some sold off to nations have a terrorist
problems, and needing some bomb-proof trucks for areas of intense terrorist
activity.