Washington Pulse 

Marines: MRAP Impedes Operations 

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HumveeThe Marine Corps and the Army have decided to curtail their orders for mine-resistant ambush-protected vehicles, ostensibly because they foresee fewer roadside bomb attacks in Iraq. But there are other reasons, such as the impracticality of operating these vehicles off-road and in urban areas. A Marine Corps official says the 60,000 to 80,000-pound vehicles create significant logistics impediments that would make them hard to deploy, not just to Iraq, but to almost any other war zone.

“Seventy-two percent of the world’s bridges cannot hold the MRAP,” says Brig. Gen. Ronald Johnson, assistant deputy commander for plans, policies and operations.
Transporting the vehicles to combat zones also is tough for Marines because the trucks cannot fit aboard the amphibious ships that carry Marine equipment and supplies. “You can’t put an MRAP on a maritime pre-positioning force ship,” Johnson says.

Reader Comments

Re: Marines: MRAP Impedes Operations

Where did BG Johnson get these weights? Yes, the MRAP is heavy, but the MAGTF planner's reference (MSTP Pamplet 5-0.3) Table 2-6 has them weighting fm 28,740 (Cougar 4x4) to 43,000 (Buffalo 6x6) His low number of 60,000 is double the Cougar.

Tom Mullen on 02/02/2009 at 08:52

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