Tim Sumner

Missing MRAP controversy, the New York Times makes one up

Three updates. See below.

Online on their front page this morning, front and center in the New York Times is this headline:

Mine-Resistant Ambush-Protected armored vehicle non-story on the front page of the New York Times 01222008

In the Times’ hard copy, on their front page below the fold, they alert readers to the story inside about the latest “scandal” in Iraq as well. The headline (circled below) says, “Worry Over U.S. Vehicle After Iraq Bomb Blast.”

Mine-Resistant Ambush-Protected armored vehicle non-story on the front page of the New York Times 01222008

Yet if Stephen Farrell knows what actually troubles our troops about the MRAP (Mine-Resistant Ambush-Protected armored vehicle), he either did not write about it or an editor found it unworthy to report. In fact, nothing in his 1,320 word article Hopes for Vehicle Questioned After Iraq Blast supports the implication that the MRAP might have failed to protect our troops from blasts from explosive devices within reasonable expections:

…Over a crackling field radio came reports of injuries and then, sometime later, official confirmation of the first fatality inflicted by a roadside bomb on an MRAP, the new Mine-Resistant Ambush-Protected armored vehicle that the American military is counting on to reduce casualties from roadside bombs in Iraq.

The military has been careful to point out that the new vehicle is not impervious to attack, and that a sufficiently powerful bomb can destroy any vehicle. Still, a forensic team was flown in immediately to inspect the charred wreckage, from which wires and tangled metal protruded, to determine whether the bombing had revealed a design flaw.

“It’s a great vehicle, but there is no perfect vehicle,” said Lt. Col. Kenneth Adgie, commander of the battalion that lost the soldier.

Three of the four people aboard suffered only broken feet and lacerations. Pending the results of an investigation, it is unclear yet whether the gunner was killed by the blast or by the vehicle rolling over.

But officers on the scene noted that he was the member of the crew most exposed, and that the vehicle’s secure inner compartment was not compromised and appeared to have done its job by protecting the three other crew members inside. “The crew compartment is intact,” said Capt. Michael Fritz. He said the blast would have been large enough “to take out” a heavily armored Bradley Fighting Vehicle.

On Friday, [Defense Secretary Robert] Gates toured an assembly facility for the vehicles in Charleston, S.C., where he described them as “a proven lifesaver on the battlefield.” He cited Army reports that there had been 12 attacks on the vehicles with homemade bombs since a push began last summer to send more of them into combat zones, mostly in Iraq. No soldiers died in those attacks, he said.

Either Stephen Farrell missed the known problem our troops have with the 12 foot high MRAP or the Times failed to report it.

Yet Michael Yon has been embedded with our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan for much of the past three years and reported:

Low wires in Iraq

…these new gigantic MRAPs (big bomb-resistant trucks) that are being fielded in Iraq seem to be largely ill-conceived. I do not possess that level of expertise, so I’m not making any recommendation on the MRAPs. But I can say that soldiers in Mosul and Baghdad seem to be viewing the MRAPs with a jaded eye. Yes, the MRAPs are said to offer much greater bomb protection, but given that they seem as tall as a double-decker bus in London, the MRAPs simply cannot travel down many of the roads in Baghdad or Mosul, where they would only rip down power wires like those depicted above.

Our troops remain willing to take the fight to the enemy, knowing that is the way to win the war in Iraq. The MRAP might get them to the battle safely yet there will always be a need to put boots on the ground.

The Times also failed to mention what Bill Roggio reported:

Al Qaeda in Iraq’s network has been significantly degraded, but is still a threat. Al Qaeda remains active in regions near Miqdadiyah, Mosul, Hawijah, Samarra, and southeast of Baghdad in the Arab Jabour region. “Although the group remains a dangerous threat, its capabilities have been diminished,” said Odierno. “Al Qaeda has been pushed out of urban centers like Baghdad, Ramadi, Fallujah and Baqubah, and forced into isolated rural areas. Many of their top leaders have been eliminated, and finding qualified replacements is increasingly difficult for them.” Multinational Forces Iraq also estimates it has significantly degraded al Qaeda’s ability to fund operations by dismantling its financier networks and leaders.

Operation Phantom Phoenix, the current nationwide operation targeting al Qaeda’s remaining safe havens, was launched on Jan. 8. Iraqi and US forces have captured or killed 121 al Qaeda fighters, wounded 14, and detained an additional 1023 suspects. Al Qaeda’s leadership has been hit hard during the operation, with 92 high values targets either killed or captured.

Iraqi and US forces have also discovered 351 weapons caches and four tunnel complexes, Odierno said. Iraqi and US forces have also discovered three car bomb and improvised explosive device [IED] factories and 410 IEDs, including 18 car bombs and 25 homes rigged with explosives. Also found were “numerous torture chambers, an underground medical clinic, several closed schools, and a large foreign fighter camp with intricate tunnel complexes,” said Odierno.

But do not blame the Times; it is hard to find the real story while sitting in the Green Zone or Manhattan searching for a controversy in every bomb crater and casualty report.

Update: The name of the soldier killed has been released:

Army Spc. Richard B. Burress, 25, of Naples, Fla.; assigned to the 1st Battalion, 30th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division, Fort Stewart, Ga.; died Jan. 19 in Jabour, Iraq, of wounds sustained when his vehicle encountered an improvised explosive device.

Update II:

Michelle Malkin linked over to this post (thank you Michelle) and had text and links to a report that Saturday was not the first fatality involving the MRAP and an explosive device. Yet the source later retracted, saying while the earlier attacks involved a mine-resistant vehicle, it was not a MRAP.

The New York Times placed the death of Specialist Burgess (while not naming him) on their front page without evidence the MRAP’s armor failed to protect him for the sole purpose of creating a controversy.

While perhaps the Times’ wistful thinking that the armor failed the resistance standards will turn out to be true, they failed to report the successes, to date, of Operation Phantom Phoenix.

In addition, the Times missed (or not) the fact the MRAP’s design is likely interfering with our troops’ ability to close with the enemy in urban areas and forces them to either dismount, use less appropriate assets, or not engage. I will leave it to you to speculate (I have stated my opinion) why the Times would miss that shortcoming. I will offer that if they are deliberately not reporting it; it is worth remembering they never met an American war or offensive weapon they liked and, up armored or not, our troops still go bravely into harm’s way. God bless them all!

Update III:

Sgt Hook linked over as well. HooAH, Sergeant Major!

Kennedy and Dodd cannot prove domestic spying

Update, 12:25 PM EST (see note at the end of this post)

Here is the fear many politicians are attempting to plant in American minds about the NSA’s Terrorist Surveillance Program (TSP): our government is conducting wholesale, domestic spying on the populace’s communications, “Big Brother” is spying on us all. It is a flat out lie.

Yet because the program is highly classified, soup to nut fear mongers — Senator Ted Kennedy to Congressman Ron Paul — can allege it without offering one example of proof, and the administration cannot roll out the program for the public to view to prove them wrong. The allegation of domestic spying stands alone, unproven and undisputed, and is the perfect storm for those seeking to undermine our national security for political gain.

Washington Times columnist Bill Gertz reported this morning:

“There is no evidence to substantiate claims about warrantless spying on Americans prior to the 9/11 terrorist attacks,” the report stated. “Nor is there any evidence to substantiate the claim that the TSP covered domestic calls between friends, neighbors and loved ones. As the president has stated, the TSP involved the collection of international calls involving members of al Qaeda.” [Editor — The report came from the office of Senator Christopher S. Bond, a Missouri Republican and the vice chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence.]

Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, Massachusetts Democrat, said during the floor debate last month that the surveillance program spied on innocent Americans. Sen. Christopher J. Dodd, Connecticut Democrat, also said then that any surveillance without a court order undermines “our democratic society.”

But the report stated that “warrantless surveillance for foreign intelligence collection has been an integral part of our nation’s foreign intelligence gathering. During World War II, our warrantless surveillance of the German and Japanese militaries and the breaking of their codes preserved our democracy.

The staff report said critics of the surveillance program claim it should have been carried out under FISA rules. However, it stated that a decision by a surveillance court judge last year “proved that the TSP could not be done under FISA as it existed at that time.”

“This decision resulted in significant intelligence gaps and led to the need for, and passage of, the Protect America Act,” the report said.

Democratic critics also have said the FISA law is the only permitted basis for conducting electronic surveillance, but the report stated that the Constitution “trumps any statute.”

“It is false to suggest that the president has no inherent constitutional authority to conduct warrantless surveillance for foreign intelligence purposes because Congress tried to limit it in FISA,” the report stated.

There is evidence that the FISA law inhibited the rescue operation of three soldiers kidnapped in Iraq by al Qaeda last year.

Senators Kennedy and Dodd have yet to refute the evidence that their perfect storm is getting our soldiers killed. If asked, they will likely claim they cannot discuss the details of that classified operation, proving my point that their allegation of domestic spying is scurrilous and the TSP is only being used to target the enemy.

Update: I spoke with Congressman Bill Shuster (R-PA, 9th District) this morning who stated that a senior military officer had briefed him and confirmed the search for the three kidnapped US soldiers was delayed by more than nine hours while waiting for a FISA warrant.