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Adaptation
The Army Reserve troops in Iraq have come up with specialized vehicles for detecting and removing roadside explosives.
Anyone who's ever dealt with the Pentagon procurement bureaucracy knows that it can be a nightmare, but when we're actually in a fighting war and people are dying, it's surprising how fast red tape can be cut:
The operation caught the attention of top brass, said Lt. Col. Kent Savre, commander of the Fort Lewis Wash.-based 864th Engineer Battalion, the team?s higher headquarters.
Savre, 43, of Edina, Minn., recommended that the Army supply one system to each division in Iraq. Three weeks after filing the request, a half-dozen more sets were shipped out, Savre said.
?I?ve never seen anything like this in my 19 years in the Army,? Savre said. ?The senior leaders saw the threat and immediately bought more [systems].?
Posted by Rand Simberg at January 06, 2004 04:46 PM
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Rand, the link appears broken at the moment. I assume it's this story.
Also, we're apparently seeing a decline in the explosive power of roadside bombs. Could be that we're turning the corner.
Posted by Karl Hallowell at January 6, 2004 05:29 PM
When the American people decide to fight a war coherently, it tends to focus the attention of even hardened procurement prole bureaucrats working within the beltway.
That's the way the system is supposed to work. Nice to see that it still can.
Posted by John J. Coupal at January 7, 2004 07:23 AM
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