Bureaucrats' "Gross Mismanagement" Blamed For Hundreds Of Marines' Deaths

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RICHARD LARDNER | February 16, 2008 07:28 AM EST | AP

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A Category I mine-resistant ambush-protected (MRAP) vehicle, is driven on a test course during a media demonstration at the Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland in this Aug. 24, 2007 file photo. (AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari, File)

WASHINGTON — Hundreds of U.S. Marines have been killed or injured by roadside bombs in Iraq because Marine Corps bureaucrats refused an urgent request in 2005 from battlefield commanders for blast-resistant vehicles, an internal military study concludes.

The study, written by a civilian Marine Corps official and obtained by The Associated Press, accuses the service of "gross mismanagement" that delayed deliveries of the mine-resistant, ambush-protected trucks for more than two years.

Cost was a driving factor in the decision to turn down the request for the so-called MRAPs, according to the study. Stateside authorities saw the hulking vehicles, which can cost as much as a $1 million each, as a financial threat to programs aimed at developing lighter vehicles that were years from being fielded.

After Defense Secretary Robert Gates declared the MRAP (pronounced M-rap) the Pentagon's No. 1 acquisition priority in May 2007, the trucks began to be shipped to Iraq in large quantities.

The vehicles weigh as much as 40 tons and have been effective at protecting American forces from improvised explosive devices (IEDs), the weapon of choice for Iraqi insurgents. Only four U.S. troops have been killed by such bombs while riding in MRAPs; three of those deaths occurred in older versions of the vehicles.

The study's author, Franz J. Gayl, catalogs what he says were flawed decisions and missteps by midlevel managers in Marine Corps offices that occurred well before Gates replaced Donald Rumsfeld in December 2006.

Among the findings in the Jan. 22 study:

_ Budget and procurement managers failed to recognize the damage being done by IEDs in late 2004 and early 2005 and were convinced the best solution was adding more armor to the less-sturdy Humvees the Marines were using. Humvees, even those with extra layers of steel, proved incapable of blunting the increasingly powerful explosives planted by insurgents.

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_ An urgent February 2005 request for MRAPs got lost in bureaucracy. It was signed by then-Brig. Gen. Dennis Hejlik, who asked for 1,169 of the vehicles. The Marines could not continue to take "serious and grave casualties" caused by IEDs when a solution was commercially available, wrote Hejlik, who was a commander in western Iraq from June 2004 to February 2005.

Gayl cites documents showing Hejlik's request was shuttled to a civilian logistics official at the Marine Corps Combat Development Command in suburban Washington who had little experience with military vehicles. As a result, there was more concern over how the MRAP would upset the Marine Corps' supply and maintenance chains than there was in getting the troops a truck that would keep them alive, the study contends.

_ The Marine Corps' acquisition staff didn't give top leaders correct information. Gen. James Conway, the Marine Corps commandant, was not told of the gravity of Hejlik's MRAP request and the real reasons it was shelved, Gayl writes. That resulted in Conway giving "inaccurate and incomplete" information to Congress about why buying MRAPs was not hotly pursued.

_ The Combat Development Command, which decides what gear to buy, treated the MRAP as an expensive obstacle to long-range plans for equipment that was more mobile and fit into the Marines Corps' vision as a rapid reaction force. Those projects included a Humvee replacement called the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle and a new vehicle for reconnaissance and surveillance missions.

The MRAPs didn't meet this fast-moving standard and so the Combat Development Command didn't want to buy them, according to Gayl. The study calls this approach a "Cold War orientation" that suffocates the ability to react to emergency situations.

_ The Combat Development Command has managers _ some of whom are retired Marines _ who lack adequate technical credentials. They have outdated views of what works on the battlefield and how the defense industry operates, Gayl says. Yet they are in position to ignore or overrule calls from deployed commanders.

An inquiry should be conducted by the Marine Corps inspector general to determine if any military or government employees are culpable for failing to rush critical gear to the troops, recommends Gayl, who prepared the study for the Marine Corps' plans, policies and operations department.

The study was obtained by the AP from a nongovernment source.

"If the mass procurement and fielding of MRAPs had begun in 2005 in response to the known and acknowledged threats at that time, as the (Marine Corps) is doing today, hundreds of deaths and injuries could have been prevented," writes Gayl, the science and technology adviser to Lt. Gen. Richard Natonski, who heads the department. "While the possibility of individual corruption remains undetermined, the existence of corrupted MRAP processes is likely, and worthy of (inspector general) investigation."

Gayl, who has clashed with his superiors in the past and filed for whistle-blower protection last year, uses official Marine Corps documents, e-mails, briefing charts, memos, congressional testimony, and news articles to make his case.

He was not allowed to interview or correspond with any employees connected to the Combat Development Command. The study's cover page says the views in the study are his own.

Maj. Manuel Delarosa, a Marine Corps spokesman, called Gayl's study "predecisional staff work" and said it would be inappropriate to comment on it. Delarosa said, "It would be inaccurate to state that Lt. Gen. Natonski has seen or is even aware of" the study.

Last year, the service defended the decision to not buy MRAPs after receiving the 2005 request. There were too few companies able to make the vehicles, and armored Humvees were adequate, officials said then.

Hejlik, who is now a major general and heads Marine Corps Special Operations Command, has cast his 2005 statement as more of a recommendation than a demand for a specific system.

The term mine-resistant, ambush-protected vehicle "was very generic" and intended to guide a broader discussion of what type of truck would be needed to defend against the changing threats troops in the field faced, Hejlik told reporters in May 2007. "I don't think there was any intent by anybody to do anything but the right thing."

The study does not say precisely how many Marine casualties Gayl thinks occurred due to the lack of MRAPs, which have V-shaped hulls that deflect blasts out and away from the vehicles.

Gayl cites a March 1, 2007, memo from Conway to Gen. Peter Pace, then the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, in which Conway said 150 service members were killed and an additional 1,500 were seriously injured in the prior nine months by IEDs while traveling in vehicles.

The MRAP, Conway told Pace, could reduce IED casualties in vehicles by 80 percent. He told Pace an urgent request for the vehicles was submitted by a Marine commander in May 2006. No mention is made of Hejlik's call more than a year before.

Delivering MRAPs to Marines in Iraq, Conway wrote, was his "number one unfilled warfighting requirement at this time." Overall, he added, the Marine Corps needed 3,700 of the trucks _ more than three times the number requested by Hejlik in 2005.

More than 3,200 U.S. troops, including 824 Marines, have been killed in action in Iraq since the war began in March 2003. An additional 29,000 have been wounded, nearly 8,400 of them Marines. The majority of the deaths and injuries have been caused by explosive devices, according to the Defense Department.

Congress has provided more than $22 billion for 15,000 MRAPs the Defense Department plans to acquire, mostly for the Army. Depending on the size of the vehicle and how it is equipped, the trucks can cost between $450,000 and $1 million.

As of May 2007, roughly 120 MRAPs were being used by troops from all the military services, Pentagon records show. Now, more than 2,150 are in the hands of personnel in Iraq and Afghanistan. The Marines have 900 of those.

One section of Gayl's study analyzes a letter Conway sent in late July 2007 to Sens. Joseph Biden, D-Del., and Kit Bond, R-Mo., two critics of delays in sending equipment to Iraq.

More heavily armored Humvees were determined to be the best response to the 2005 MRAP request, the commandant told the senators. He also said the industrial capacity to build MRAPs in large numbers "did not exist" when the request was submitted. Additionally, although the trucks had been fielded in small numbers, they were not adequately tested and exhibited reliability problems, the letter said.

The letter to the senators is evidence of the "bad advice" senior Marine Corps leaders receive, Gayl contends. The letter, he says, portions of which were probably drafted by the Combat Development Command, omitted that the urgent 2005 request from the Iraq battlefield specifically asked for MRAPs _ and not more heavily armored Humvees. It also ignored the Marines' own findings that armored Humvees wouldn't stop IEDs.

Conway's assertion there was a lack of manufacturing capacity to build MRAPs is "inexplicable," Gayl says. Manufacturers would have hurried production if they knew the Marines wanted them and any reliability issues would have been resolved, he says.

In late November, the Marine Corps announced it would buy 2,300 MRAPs _ 1,400 fewer than planned. Improved security in Iraq, changes in tactics, and decreasing troop levels allowed for the cut. But Marine officials also listed several downsides to the MRAP: The vehicles are too tall and heavy to pursue the enemy down narrow streets, on rough terrain or across many bridges.

If MRAPs arrived to Iraq late, or proved too bulky for certain missions, the Marine Corps should have come up with different and better solutions several years ago when the IED crisis was growing, Gayl contends.

A former Marine officer, Gayl spent nearly six months in Iraq in 2006 and 2007 as an adviser to leaders of the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force.

His stinging indictment of the Marine Corps' system for fielding gear is not a first. He has been an outspoken advocate for non-lethal weapons, such as a beam gun that stings but doesn't kill and "dazzlers" that use a powerful light beam to steer unwelcome vehicles and people from checkpoints and convoys.

The failure to send these alternative weapons to Iraq has led to U.S. casualties and the deaths of Iraqi civilians, Gayl has said.

Gayl filed for whistle-blower protection in May with the U.S. Office of Special Counsel. He said he was threatened with disciplinary action after meeting with congressional staff on Capitol Hill.

Biden and Bond rebuked the Marine Corps in September for "apparent retaliation" against Gayl.

___

Associated Press researcher Monika Mathur contributed to this report from New York.

___

On The Net: http://www.usmc.mil/marinelink/mcn2000.nsf/homepage?readform

WASHINGTON — Hundreds of U.S. Marines have been killed or injured by roadside bombs in Iraq because Marine Corps bureaucrats refused an urgent request in 2005 from battlefield commanders for bla...
WASHINGTON — Hundreds of U.S. Marines have been killed or injured by roadside bombs in Iraq because Marine Corps bureaucrats refused an urgent request in 2005 from battlefield commanders for bla...
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the casualty numbers that republicans are touting as a sign the "surge is working" in reality is the result of finally getting the right equipment to the soldiers. they are so sick, so twisted.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:25 PM on 02/16/2008
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The lower casualty rate can be attributed to 'sectarian clensing' in neighborhoods and the fact that Moqtada Al Sadr called off his militia.

BTW - How's that Iraqi Government working so far? Wasn't that the reason for the Escalation?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:03 PM on 02/16/2008

This gives the now familiar "support or troops" a different meaning. It would be more accurate if they say what the mean "support the military industrial complex." Life of the individual soldier is simply collateral damage to them.

Imagine what they will be saying if we are to continue this war for "a hundred years." oh, never mind...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:16 PM on 02/16/2008
- Libsrule I'm a Fan of Libsrule 21 fans permalink

Thank God our congress is doing the people's work.

Investigating the loss of over 10 billion dollars.

Investigating the lies of Bush.

Investigating the malfeasance of defense department contractors.

Investigating this whole Chimpy McFlightsuit criminal cabal.

Investigating the crimes of the energy commission, (you know, the secret one that the SCOTUS protected so Americans could not see how our futures were about to be bankrupted for the profits of the oil and energy companies?)and finding out about the falsely inflated oil prices by a handful of small oil futures men.

AND.....oh wait a minute....that's the democratic congress in my dreams

THE REAL CONGRESS IS HOLDING HEARINGS ON WHETHER OR NO ROGER CLEMENS TOOK STEROIDS BECAUSE THIS IS OF SUCH NATIONAL IMPORTANCE AND WILL AFFECT THE WAR, THE SOLDIERS, THE WOUNDED AND MAIMED, OUR BUDGET AND THE HEALTH OF OUR NATION!!

Christ someone PLEASE wake me up from this nightmare that is the Chimpy McFlightsuit criminal administration and cowardly democratic congress.

PLEASE!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:08 PM on 02/16/2008
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i feel your pain. paramount frustration.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:58 PM on 02/16/2008
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Bullshit distraction and outright corruption is the name of the game in today's Congress.Arlen specter being paid by Comcast to investigate the Patriots is just another example of the friggin' sewer the Congress has become.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:58 PM on 02/16/2008
- Alvin4NY I'm a Fan of Alvin4NY 24 fans permalink
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Why doesn't Chris Mathews spend a week going over this one?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:14 PM on 02/16/2008
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Coming to soon to a Senate Conference Room near you: The Specter Hearings - Did the NFL destroy evidence and cover-up the New England Patriots Video Cheating scandal.

Coming soon to E! True Beltway Stories -
Elizabeth Dole holding hearings on why the Pony-tail/Mohawk freak lasted so long on American Idol.

James Inhofe investigating male ice skaters for using their sport to promote the homosexual adgenda and as a means for recruiting more men to be gay.

Joe Lieberman investigating Barack Obama's ties to Bootsey Collins.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:30 PM on 02/16/2008
- Irons I'm a Fan of Irons 2 fans permalink

BUSH: AWOL from National Guard during "Nam.

CHENEY: Seven draft deferments during 'Nam

Both were chickenhawks then and now.

Both are war-profiteers.

Both should be impeached for crimes and misdemeanors.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:04 PM on 02/16/2008

BUSH: AWOL from National Guard during "Nam.
CHENEY: Seven draft deferments during 'Nam
Both were chickenhawks then and now.
Both are war-profiteers.
Both should be impeached for crimes and misdemeanors.



it is one thing to choose not to go fight a war but it takes a special kind of coward to avoid the draft like bush and cheney and then send soldiers to die in a useless skirmish.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:15 PM on 02/16/2008
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The obvious problem is that the MRAP manufacturers had not contributed enough to BushCo's campaign. Had they done so, they would have been further up in the gravy line.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:03 PM on 02/16/2008
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That's a really disgusting thing to say, speakingtruth2power. Too bad it's the truth.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:27 PM on 02/16/2008

Just ask Eric Prince . . . NOW that's how you "win" funding . . .

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:30 PM on 02/16/2008
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They were contributors to Bush/Cheney 2000 - when they were still a jet-boat manufacturing company in either Wyo. or Colo, they didn't get into defense contracting until AFTER Bu$h was coronated. Google Force Protection Inc. + Whistleblowers and read all about it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:37 PM on 02/16/2008

Cost was a driving factor in the decision to turn down the request for the $1 million each Mine-Resistant, Ambush-Protected (MRAP) trucks.

"The Decider" is spending $18 MILLION PER HOUR in IRAQ, but CAN’T spare $1 MILLION PER VEHICLE in "PROTECTING" a truckload of OUR SOLDIERS!? PRICELESS!!!

Gayl, a former Marine officer, has been an outspoken advocate for NON-LETHAL weapons, such as a beam gun that stings but doesn't kill and "dazzlers" that use a powerful light beam to steer unwelcome vehicles and people from checkpoints and convoys. The failure to send these alternative weapons to Iraq has led to U.S. casualties and the deaths of Iraqi civilians.

"Right-To-Life" modus operandi: KILL, KILL, KILL!!!

STOP THE INSANITY. SAVE HUMANITY!

BRING OUR TROOPS HOME!

EVICT & CONVICT BUSH, CHENEY and ALL their partners in CRIME & CARNAGE!!!

Stay safe, healthy and happy,
Love, Loretta

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:00 PM on 02/16/2008

Since most of this money has no oversight - it is going into bush, cheney and friends offshore bank accounts. This is how vast financial empires were built in the past and looks like more to come.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:41 PM on 02/16/2008
- gcallaghan I'm a Fan of gcallaghan 52 fans permalink
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Republicans = Military Failure

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:55 AM on 02/16/2008
- TakeSake I'm a Fan of TakeSake 24 fans permalink
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Republicans = Failure

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:12 PM on 02/16/2008

republicans = dog shit

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:15 PM on 02/16/2008

Where are the hearings on this "gross mismanagement" which would most certainly lead to criminal charges against Bush, Cheney and others.

Nowhere in sight.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:41 AM on 02/16/2008

Besides as we mentioned before we had to convert those vehicles to poppy harvesters that were urgently needed for the front lines in Afghanistan where the real mone..oh um er real uh action is.We hope that clarifies our position it certainly clarifies yours.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:32 AM on 02/16/2008

"Oh bombs that kill people! We thought you were talking about the other kind. If you had just been clear we would have told you that you go to war with the expendable under class you are... Excuse me we have an important luncheon date can't be late be sure to call if you have any more problems that we can help you with." "Stay the course! by now."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:26 AM on 02/16/2008
- KOisGod I'm a Fan of KOisGod 343 fans permalink
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The bushcon legacy

Death

Debt

Deceit

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:25 AM on 02/16/2008

Hillary deserves some of the blame too. She should have had some guts and voted against. But, I guess centrist Democrats act like that. Cowards, blowhards, hypocrites.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:14 AM on 02/16/2008
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All Iraqi war supporting RepubliCONS: Cowards ,Blowhards, Hypocrites and PUSSIES!

Save a soldier, kick a RepubliCON's ass!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:00 PM on 02/16/2008
- MrRex I'm a Fan of MrRex 3 fans permalink
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Is anyone surprised? After all this was never a war in the true sense. No sense of sacrifice by the public was ever conveyed (go shopping, I believe was the Commander in Chief's suggestion). Tax cuts during a war? Who ever heard of that? Which military genius chose using the National Guard, thus leaving much of the U.S. without protection in an emergency(think Katrina, Greenburg, Kansas tornado), instead of the regular armed forces? Not sending in enough soldiers to do the job, what kind of losing strategy is that?
This, my friends, was a war of choice, a war to divert the public from true causes of terrorism , and thousands of our young men and women were sacrificed for expediency.
By whom you might ask, by ALL poltiticians who chose to "group think" rather than to question and act independently. They shall carry the burden for this ultimate insult to our nation. And we shall be right beside them; we voted for them. I don't know if we can shoulder this burden!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:14 AM on 02/16/2008
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This is one of the reasons that I have a problem with the Senate democrats continually voting more funds for "our troops"--it's obviously not going to the troops. I'm sick of both parties paying lip service to our troops but doing absolutely nothing to protect them. The only people being protected are the people who seemed to have "lost" billions of dollars. And our troops wind up being sent out with little more than a uniform and explosives, like some suicide bomber (without the promise of 72 virgins). What are our candidates doing about them. I hope Biden and Bond get some support from their collegues so they can do more than rebuke the guilty parties.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:10 AM on 02/16/2008
- JiminNC I'm a Fan of JiminNC 283 fans permalink
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Just a little more of the republican "experience" we keep hearing about along with their supposed ability to keep anything safe other than their offshore bank accounts and tax loopholes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:17 AM on 02/16/2008
- Cautious I'm a Fan of Cautious 15 fans permalink
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Not to mention the obscene lack of medical care for the wounded.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:43 AM on 02/16/2008

"the Senate democrats continually voting more funds for "our troops"--it's obviously not going to the troops."

"Mental Health funding has just been awful, the worst I've ever seen in my 20 years in the military. It's all about MONEY. Every kid that gets kicked out with PTSD is gonna be a lifetime of disability payments for the government. Every kid who gives up and kills himself, NOTHING. It's only THIS Administration that acts like the lives of these soldiers are expendable", says Dr. Katherine Scheirman, Chief of Medical Operations.

"They were fine when they went to Iraq, we broke them, this is what combat did to them, and I think we should feel some responsibility for what happens to them."

It has long been recognized that mental health BREAKDOWN occurs after PROLONGED combat exposure, without a significant break in order to recover from the physical, psychological, and emotional demands of combat...

...soldiers and marines seeing friends liquefied in a tank, being attacked by IEDs, being caught in the open under sniper fire, seeing, smelling, touching dead people...

The Marine Corps efforts to take care of mentally wounded marines have overwhelmingly failed, plagued by denial, machismo, an unrealistic war tempo, and a severe shortage of resources.

Stay safe, healthy and happy,
Love, Loretta

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:45 PM on 02/16/2008
- Driver125 I'm a Fan of Driver125 5 fans permalink

Oh well.... You go to war with the military I gave you, not with the military you wish I had given you.--paraphrase of Uncle Rummy

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:07 AM on 02/16/2008
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