So sez the New York Times:
1/6/2006 9:38:28 PM
yes. because clearly not buying every single marine prohibitively expensive body armor which few other militaries do for every soldier really means that the pentagon is trying to kill marines. I'm also willing to bet that the majority of marines killed are not "front line marines," but rather marines in a more logistical role, thus increasing the number of people for which you must armor in order to skew your statistics.of course, if the pentagon really cared about our troops, they would purchase a tank for each and every marine, because it is clear that a tank provides more protection than just body armor.
1/6/2006 9:41:25 PM
in addition to the 2000 troops killed, 16,000 have been wounded, including over 7,000 wounded to the point they can't return to dutyjust thought i'd throw that in there
1/6/2006 9:41:48 PM
wait, you are telling me that people get hurt, or even *gasp* KILLED in war? STOP THE PRESSES!
1/6/2006 9:42:31 PM
1/6/2006 9:45:42 PM
Don't be stupid, Woodfoot.Clearly if our only consideration was protecting our troops, we could minimalize casualties, yes. But armor slows troops down, especially in desert heat. We can easily make a soldier bulletproof, but he won't be able to move. It also costs money -- money that also has to go to things like armor for the humvees, armor for the tanks, other equipment.Now, should armor have been sent up? Yes, if we had it available and it wasn't ludicrously pricey. The leaders at the front clearly thought they needed it, so the mobility factor must not have been worth the exposure to bullets.As to your 16,000 wounded...the number is actually quite a bit higher, but a large part (a majority I think) are wounded so slightly that they're back in combat in a week. I posted here a week or two ago, but now I can't remember where.[Edited on January 6, 2006 at 9:59 PM. Reason : ]
1/6/2006 9:57:51 PM
nope, not necessarily. but I do realize that its a pipe dream to think that we could outfit every man on the ground in iraq in the kind of body armor that hateon.org claims every soldier deserves.
1/6/2006 9:58:48 PM
1/6/2006 10:06:25 PM
Yes, I know that it's available, but we don't know how much it costs. We don't have any idea what that figure is. If the armor were a hundred billion dollars a plate, would you say we should use it? What if it were just a billion? A million? A hundred thousand? At what point does it stop becoming ludicrous?Obviously I don't think the armor is as expensive as all that, but you shouldn't act as though money is no object when it comes to defending our troops. It is, and that's sad, but ignoring that reality won't improve anything.
1/6/2006 10:11:13 PM
Troops get what is coming to them. They get paid to do a job with risk. They have no right to bitch when they end up on the unhappy side of chance.
1/6/2006 10:17:28 PM
Just think of the Batman armor in Batman Begins. Same problem there.
1/6/2006 10:20:01 PM
The money is not an issueIF THE ARMOR IS SITTING IN AN ARMORY SOMEWHEREif we have procured it for use protecting troopsit is ludicrous to leave it sitting thereunless there are faaaar more sinister plans afoot
1/6/2006 10:23:38 PM
how do you know it's not sitting available in a warehouse owned by the manufacturer and not paid for yet?and it could cost 1229234023829 dollars a pound for all we know.
1/6/2006 10:34:08 PM
PERHAPS THEY'RE RIGHT NEXT TO THE VALID REASONS TO GO TO WAR
1/6/2006 10:36:33 PM
Woodfoot, you're misunderstanding the story.read it again slowly, and try to purge your mind of sinister plots by the military.The technology has been available (to protect the torso from every angle) since 2003, but the military has been slow in ordering this type of body armor. Its not sitting in a damn armory, you fool.
1/6/2006 10:42:59 PM
1/6/2006 10:45:45 PM
1/6/2006 10:47:35 PM
Woodfoot:from the original article
1/6/2006 10:48:16 PM
1/6/2006 10:51:11 PM
PSTHAT "ARTICLE" HAS TOO MANY "I"S IN IT FOR ME TO BOTHER READING ITWHAT BLOG IS THAT FROM?
1/6/2006 10:52:50 PM
The truth is that the military has been slow to provide full-torso body armor that is difficult to design, heavy and costs a shitload. The spin in the NY Times is that 80% of Marine deaths could have been avoided by armor that has been "available since 2003", implying that they've been sitting on that shit.
1/6/2006 10:55:50 PM
1/6/2006 10:58:59 PM
OMG 80% of murders in the ghetto could have been avoided if we fitted gang members with the Interceptor body armor!It is just not realistic for 130,000 troops to wear this.[Edited on January 6, 2006 at 11:10 PM. Reason : 2]
1/6/2006 11:00:28 PM
1/6/2006 11:14:41 PM
The original NY Times article in the first post is also just talking about marines; the 130,000 figure is for the army.
1/6/2006 11:16:18 PM
wait is that the armor?If so thats kinda silly.
1/6/2006 11:20:06 PM
Here's the link to the full story:http://tinyurl.com/csrjt
1/6/2006 11:21:49 PM
If we were closer to two pagesi'd keep goingbut i'm getting tiredand this has been a fun trollPEACEWE OUT
1/6/2006 11:23:12 PM
its OK, I know its hard to admit defeat. just go ahead and do it. there's no shame in doing so
1/6/2006 11:26:00 PM
And suddenly the liberals are all about military spending... Maybe if we spend enough on armor there won't be any left for bombs and guns.
1/6/2006 11:26:33 PM
1/6/2006 11:27:29 PM
1/6/2006 11:29:04 PM
its a good thing it's cheaper to train new troops from scratch than to buy armor
1/6/2006 11:31:01 PM
at least 80% cheaper apparently
1/6/2006 11:32:01 PM
Body armor is the latest hot issue for know-nothing critics. Like the "quagmire" on day 14 or so of the war.You used to never see body armor in such large numbers before. If I remember correctly, the current IBA first started to come out only a few years ago. Considering how many sets the military is trying to field, this is actually quite a good development. Maybe not as far along as we would like, but when was the last time the US went to war with this level of protection for its troops? What other military in the world can offer protection like this to such a large number of people? Body armor is still an emerging technology. In the future, it may be possible to see extremities covered, but the practicality and cost of doing it just isn't there yet. Not to mention, you would need to make it light enough to keep troops mobile, as well as cool enough to ensure people don't overheat in 120 degree heat.
1/7/2006 11:37:07 AM
1/7/2006 5:54:25 PM
1/7/2006 6:10:14 PM
for the recordi was trolling in this threadi don't want mav and duke to be too pissed at me
1/7/2006 6:12:45 PM
1/7/2006 6:51:13 PM
1/7/2006 7:16:24 PM
Also worth noting that this is the first time the military has given serious consideration to eye protection--favoring the Wiley-X ballistic tolerant sunglasses.
1/7/2006 7:58:53 PM
i'm fairly certain that a bullet to the eye region is gonna fuck you up, protective glasses or not
1/7/2006 9:48:06 PM
Of course, neglecting the large amount of shrapnel and stray debris usually kicked around in a firefight. Which was probably the intent.[Edited on January 7, 2006 at 10:16 PM. Reason : .]
1/7/2006 10:16:06 PM
1/8/2006 2:57:30 AM
Cheaper to recruit and train a new soldier then spend $500 on body armor. Yes that sounds about right.[Edited on January 8, 2006 at 9:35 AM. Reason : 2]
1/8/2006 9:34:17 AM
theDuke866 asks me:
1/8/2006 11:30:18 AM
You need to get over the fact Jerry Garcia is gone and never coming back.Marineburgers? What's wrong with you?
1/8/2006 12:15:33 PM
having worn the intercepter body armor for about a year, i can say that the extra armor that they are talking about (upper shoulders and now the adominal side armor) may have been nice to have, but its use in what i was tasked with limited.gunners would have benefited it from it, and i did see it used, but in practical application in dismounted patrols, house searches, city block searches, standing checkpoints, palm grove searches, all possible of lasting hours in extreme heat with minimal enemy contact 90% of the time, i would have left the shoulders and side armor in the bradley or the base. now in such hot spots that i visited, like najaf, i put on my nut protector and neck guards while i was there, and i probly would have used the extra armor if it were available. in places like fallujah, mosul and baghdad where heaving fighting is constant, body armor should be made available to those there.but typically the military doesnt work like that, and the hardest hit areas of operation are sometimes the last to get anything nice like extra armor. you could walk around kuwait and see guys that have never heard a round fired in anger with the extra armor, but the guy in najaf would never see it till he was on his way out and passing through kuwait.unfortunatly thats the way it sometimes works.oh and a helicopter crash has nothing to do with body armor FYI.
1/8/2006 1:40:30 PM
nice to have?nice to have.NICE TO HAVE?
1/9/2006 10:58:22 AM