(1) How the IED Changed the US Military; Makeshift bombs caused death and agony--and triggered changes in gear. USA Today, Dec 20, 2013 (Under the heading"10 Years of LED").
www.usatoday.com/story/news/nati ... mputations/3803017/
Quote:
(a) "When one of the first Americans serving in Iraq, 25-year-old Pfc Jeremiah Smith, 25, of Odessa, Mo, died in an explosion under his vehicle in May 26, 2003, six weeks after the US invasion ended, the military wasn't even sure what to call the thing that killed him.
"The Defense Department inadvertently applied an oxymoron, saying he was 'hit by unexploded ordnance.' Officials couldn't possibly know at the time that this weapon — what would come to be called in military parlance an improvised explosive device, a term now in common usage by those in and out of uniform — would be the most destructive of two wars.
(b) "SURVIVING A BLAST
"They call it 'going boom.' The first time for Spec Leif Skoog, 23, a roofer back in Phoenix, was Oct 3. He and Crane were in an RG-31 that was pushing an 8,000-pound roller in front of the vehicle, a device designed to detonate anything buried before the truck passes over it.
"That's exactly what happened. The roller was destroyed, but the RG-31 survived. For those inside, there was the shock of the explosion, painful ear pressure, air made black with billowing dirt and dust, and a chemical smell that burned the nostrils.
"Skoog, closer to the blast in the driver's seat, was stunned and disoriented. "It's not a physical wound," he recalls. "It's more like something doesn't feel right."
(c) "And bomb-defeating technology on board has reached a crescendo.
"The trucks are wrapped in netting that can deflect rocket-propelled grenades. Inside, soldiers wearing helmets, body armor, protective goggles and fortified underwear sit on shock-absorbing seats and track potential IED hot spots on computer screens.
"From inside their armored vehicles, they can remotely inspect and probe suspicious ground with long metal arms. They can deploy robots big and small. They have electronic jammers, ground-penetrating radar and giant IED-uncovering rakes.
My comment:
(a) There is no need to read the rest.
(b) The pribt version has a graphic that the online version does not have. The graphic helps a reader know what improvements have been made on the armored pesonnel carriers, but it (graphic) is not crucial.
(c) RG-31 Nyala
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RG-31_Nyala
(manufactured in South Africa by Land Systems OMC, a division of BAE Systems) |