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Home » News » World

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Armored troop carriers called unsafe for duty

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  • First Lt. Joseph Cooper (left), Sgt. Ryan Sutton, Staff Sgt. Stephen Hagenburg (standing in rear), and Capt. Casey Thoreen cram into a Stryker that will take them from Forward Operating Base Ramrod to Combat Outpost Rath, several miles down Afghanistan's Highway 1, or "Death Highway." It got that nickname from the large number of IEDs placed by insurgents in its culverts.
  • Photographs by Mary F. Calvert/ The Washington Times
A U.S. Army Stryker vehicle, known to soldiers in Afghanistan as a "Kevlar coffin," takes to the road with elements of the 5th Stryker Brigade Combat Team out of Fort Lewis, Wash., on Oct. 30 in Kandahar province. Since July, the brigade overall has lost 21 of 350 Strykers, mostly to improvised explosive devices, since July with more than two dozen Americans killed. Nearly 70 others have been wounded.Photographs by Mary F. Calvert/The Washington Times
WAITING: Soldiers with the 5th Stryker Brigade Combat Team take a break before boarding their lightly armored Stryker vehicle, dubbed a "Kevlar coffin" for its susceptibility to improvised explosive devices, on an Oct. 27 convoy in Afghanistan. Left to right are Spc. Chris Klein; Spc. Dustin Richey; Spc. Codey Roberts; and Spc. Tony Siegenthaler.
  • The rear door of a Stryker (above) serves as a handy place to keep the company's automatic weapons and soda cans out of Afghanistan's sand. At right, Sgt. Josh Gooding of the 5th Stryker Brigade recuperates in a field hospital from wounds he received when his Stryker vehicle hit an improvised explosive device.
  •  WATCHING: Spc. David Myers monitors a video panel showing a live feed of the road ahead of his Stryker vehicle as it makes its way along Afghanistan's Highway 1 — or "Death Highway," as U.S. troops call it.
  • Photographs by Mary F. Calvert/ The Washington Times
A U.S. Army Stryker vehicle, known to soldiers in Afghanistan as a "Kevlar coffin," takes to the road with elements of the 5th Stryker Brigade Combat Team out of Fort Lewis, Wash., on Oct. 30 in Kandahar province. Since July, the brigade overall has lost 21 of 350 Strykers, mostly to improvised explosive devices, since July with more than two dozen Americans killed. Nearly 70 others have been wounded.
  • Spc. Ken Philpot, 22, of the Blackwatch Company, 2nd Battalion, 1st Infantry, 5th Stryker Brigade Combat Team, uses his Stryker vehicle as an armchair while he reads a book during a break at Combat Outpost Rath in Afghanistan's Kandahar province.

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By Sara A. Carter

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan | Staff Sgt. Daniel Paul Rabidou nervously rubbed the sweat from his palms onto his Army fatigues.

The tall, well-built 24-year-old from San Bernardino, Calif., had already survived two improvised explosive devices (IEDs) on convoys in the past six weeks, including one on the same road he was getting ready to traverse again from Forward Operating Base Ramrod near Kandahar to a small outpost in the heart of Taliban territory.

Since they arrived at the outpost on Sept. 13, the Blackwatch unit - Bravo Company, 2nd Battalion, 1st Infantry Regiment, with the 5th Stryker Brigade - had lost three soldiers and two civil affairs officers. IEDs had destroyed three of their four Stryker vehicles. Overall, 21 of 350 Strykers have been destroyed since the 5th Brigade deployed in southern Afghanistan in July; more than two dozen Americans have been killed and nearly 70 wounded.

Soldiers call the Strykers "Kevlar coffins," Sgt. Rabidou said.

Photo Gallery

Strykers brave "Death Highway"

gallery photo

The Blackwatch Company, 2nd Battalion, 1st Infantry, 5th Stryker Brigade Combat Team operates on the "Death Highway" -- Highway 1 -- of Kandahar Province, Afghanistan. As of early October, the unit has already seen three soldiers killed in action along with two civil affairs members attached to the unit since arriving at their outpost on September 13, 2009. Three of their four Stryker vehicles have been lost to improvised explosive devices.

"Lead vehicle always sucks," he said, as the convoy set off with a reporter and photographer from The Washington Times in the first Stryker. "It's usually the one to go first if there's a pressure plate bomb. Sure you don't want to get out now? It may be your last chance," he asked half-jokingly.

The eight-wheeled Stryker, introduced a decade ago as a faster, more mobile alternative to tanks and other tracked vehicles, has had a controversial history. In theory, the Stryker's speed and capacity -- it can carry 11 plus a crew of two -- makes up for its lighter armor. But critics say its vulnerability to IEDs make it unsuitable for duty in southern Afghanistan.

The Stryker is "essentially a paramilitary police vehicle," said retired Army Col. Doug Macgregor, a specialist on tank warfare. "It's designed to transfer American light infantry down a road," not to fight an elusive enemy in treacherous terrain.

Col. Macgregor said the U.S. Army would do better to follow the example of Canada, which has bought German Leopard II tanks for use by ground forces in Afghanistan.

"What you need in Afghanistan is tracked armor, off-the-road capability and a stable platform for large-caliber guns," he said.

Many soldiers and officers interviewed by The Times over the past two weeks also questioned the use of Strykers in southern Afghanistan.

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