Story Published:
Jan 9, 2006 at 4:22 AM PST
Story Updated:
Aug 20, 2006 at 9:17 PM PST
- By RYAN LENZ
Associated Press Writer
BEIJI, Iraq - U.S. soldiers in the field were not all
supportive of a Pentagon study that found improved body armor saves
lives, with some troops arguing Saturday that more armor would
hinder combat effectiveness.
The unreleased study examined 93 fatal wounds to Marines from
the start of the Iraq war in March 2003 through June 2005.
It
concluded 74 of them were bullet or shrapnel wounds to shoulders or
torso areas unprotected by traditional ceramic armor plating.
Soldiers from the 101st Airborne Division's 3rd Brigade
"Rakkasans" are required to wear an array of protective clothing
they refer to as their "happy gear," ranging from Kevlar drapes
over their shoulders and sides, to knee pads and fire-resistant
uniforms.
But many soldiers say they feel encumbered by the weight and
restricted by fabric that does not move as they do.
They frequently
joke as they strap on their equipment before a patrol, and express
relief when they return and peel it off.
Second Lt. Josh Suthoff, 23, of Jefferson City, Mo., said he
already sacrifices enough movement when he wears the equipment.
More armor would only increase his chances of getting killed, he
said.
"You can slap body armor on all you want, but it's not going to
help anything. When it's your time, it's your time," said Suthoff,
a platoon leader in the brigade's 1st Squadron, 33rd Cavalry
Regiment. "I'd go out with less body armor if I could."
The study and their remarks highlight the difficulty faced by
the Army and Marine Corps in providing the best level of body armor
protection in a war against an insurgency whose tactics are
constantly changing.
Both the Army and the Marines have weighed the expected payoff
in additional safety from extra armor against the measurable loss
of combat effectiveness from too much armor.
According to a summary of the Armed Forces Medical Examiner's
study obtained Friday evening by The Associated Press, the 93
Marines who died from a primary lethal injury of the torso were
among 401 Marines who died from combat injuries in Iraq between the
start of the war and June 2005.
A military advocacy group, Soldiers for Truth, posted an article
about the study on its Web site this week.
On Friday evening, The
New York Times reported in its online edition that the study for
the first time shows the cost in lives lost from inadequate armor.
Autopsy reports and photographic records were analyzed to help
the military determine possible body armor redesign.
Of 39 fatal torso wounds in which the bullet or shrapnel entered
the Marine's body outside of the ceramic armor plate protecting the
chest and back, 31 were close to the plate's edge, according to the
study, which was conducted last summer.
Some soldiers felt unhappy that ceramic plates to protect their
sides and shoulders were available, but not offered, when they
deployed for Iraq in September.
"If it's going to protect a soldier or save his life, they
definitely should have been afforded the opportunity to wear it,"
said Staff Sgt. Shaun Benoit, 26, of Conneaut, Ohio. "I want to
know where there was a break in communication."
Others questioned the effectiveness of additional body armor.
"It's the Army's responsibility to get soldiers the armor they
need. But that doesn't mean those deaths could have been
prevented," said Spc. Robert Reid, 21, of Atlanta.
Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., who was in Iraq on Saturday, said
military leaders told him that body armor has improved since the
initial invasion in 2003 and that the military hoped to gradually
transition to the improved armor.
The debate between protection versus mobility has dominated
military doctrine since the Middle Ages, when knights wrapped
themselves in metal suits for battle, said Capt. Jamey Turner, 35,
of Baton Rouge, La., a commander in the 1st Squadron, 33rd Cavalry
Regiment.
The issue comes up daily on the battlefield in Iraq, and
soldiers need to realize there is no such thing as 100 percent
protection, he said.
"You've got to sacrifice some protection for mobility," he
added. "If you cover your entire body in ceramic plates, you're
just not going to be able to move."
Others in the regiment said the issue of protecting soldiers
with more body armor is of greater concern at home than among
soldiers in Iraq, who have seen firsthand how life and death hang
on a sliver of luck when an improvised explosive device hits a
Humvee.
"These guys over here are husbands, sons and daughters. It's
understandable people at home would want all the protection in the
world for us. But realistically, it just don't work," said Sgt.
Paul Hare, 40, of Tucumcari, N.M.
(Copyright 2006 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)