May
11, 2005
Armor Amour - Suddenly The Beltway Loves Tanks
By Austin
Bay
Like Mark Twain's death, the demise of the tank
has been "greatly exaggerated."
A weekend conversation with my WWII and Korea
vet father spurs this column.
Dad had seen a short video I shot in Iraq that
featured my staff section racing down Baghdad's "Route Irish"
in an unarmored SUV. Dad asked about the handling characteristics
of SUVs and Humvees with "add-on" armor -- light vehicles
that weren't designed to carry the extra weight. He then compared
what I told him about steel plates and Kevlar panels to a Korean
War "armor upgrade" to counter land mines: sandbags
on a jeep's floorboard.
"Dad," I replied. "Sand bags on
floorboards aren't out of date."
Army units began adding sand bags, Kevlar and steel plates to
their vehicles long before last year's press and political debate
over the Pentagon's failure to anticipate the need to "up-armor"
Humvees and trucks.
The hot-button
controversy flared in a bitterly partisan political year. Secretary
of Defense Donald Rumsfeld actually gave a reasonable answer when
he said an administration fights with the military it has. Critics
smacked Rumsfeld for "insensitivity" and excuse-mongering
to cover his own lack of foresight. The fact is, in war surprise
is a certainty, and winning requires adaptation and flexibility.
Troops are often ahead of the generals. After D-Day, tenacious
German resistance in Normandy's hedgerows surprised Allied forces
and frustrated the brass' invasion timetable. An American sergeant
jury-rigged a "cutting plow" that allowed U.S. tanks
to bust through the bocage.
There are more fertile fields for critics of Rumsfeld
and his Pentagon Whiz Kids' lack of foresight.
In early 2001, Rumsfeld overstated the case for
"a generational leap in military technology." I think
Rumsfeld overstated technological and organizational change intentionally.
The military-industrial-Congress complex is intransigent, particularly
when reputations, jobs and political patronage are involved. Rumsfeld
planned for a peacetime Washington political slugfest where military
modernization would be a tough sell.
Sept. 11 damned peacetime plans.
An article
I wrote in August 2001 -- pre-9/11 -- took some hits from Whiz
Kid supporters. Titled "Grunt Work," it argued for retaining
a sufficient mass of high quality infantry (see it here).
The article drew on T.R. Fehrenbach's Korean War classic "This
Kind of War." One Beltway critic labeled me a hapless Luddite.
Nope -- I believed then and now we never know the future and,
when it comes to maintaining U.S. security, all bets must be hedged.
I love robots and smart bombs, but I suspected full-spectrum 21st
century war would also require bayonets and police batons.
In the original Rumsfeld program, heavy armor,
like the M1 tank, was a "legacy system" -- an archaic
technology. Rumsfeld's Whiz Kids weren't the only ones who thought
the tank passe. An Army buddy tells the story of a could-be Democratic
appointee he escorted through DOD briefings. The pipe-smoking
pontificator kept saying, "The tank's dead." My infantry
pal finally turned to him and said: "Yes sir, the tank's
a dinosaur, but it's the baddest dinosaur on the battlefield.
You face one."
Iraq's war in the streets -- and yes, a new examination
of 1993's tragic street battle in Mogadishu, Somalia -- have put
tanks back on the Pentagon's agenda.
The May issue of Armed Forces Journal features
a tough-minded article by Daniel Goure of the Lexington Institute.
Goure notes "the conventional wisdom" assumed that a
"small ground contingent" would wield "decisive
power" by deploying promptly and maneuvering rapidly.
"On reflection, it now appears that the conventional
wisdom is wrong. The overriding lesson of recent conflicts, both
conventional wars and counterinsurgency campaigns, is that some
armor is good and more armor is better."
U.S. forces "are heavier than they were at
the end of major combat operations in Iraq. A principle reason
for this is ... uparmoring."
Goure argues that "the demands of survivability
and tactical effectiveness are trumping the desire for strategic
mobility."
I'm still for strategic mobility -- lighter units are part of
a full-capability force. But "staying power" on deadly
streets requires heavy firepower and heavy armor protection. Common
sense knew this, even if Whiz Kid wisdom didn't.
©
2005 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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