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MRAPs Left To Rot
   Next Article → WARPLANES: The Hero Of The Revolution Gets A Refurb
March 21, 2012: In the last decade the U.S. military (mainly the army and marines) bought some 20,000 MRAP (Mine Resistant Ambush Protected) vehicles. Once American troops were out of Iraq many of these vehicles were found unsuitable for Afghanistan, where there are fewer roads and a special new MRAP design was found more suitable. Eventually, most of these armored trucks will be out of work. Some will go into storage, but many will be put up for sale, cheap. The trouble is, there doesn't seem to be many buyers.

At first it was thought peacekeeping operations might provide a market. Security is often a problem in disaster or disorderly areas and MRAPs were seen as a potential solution for the many NGOs and nations that have problems with security. In reality, peacekeepers rarely go into areas where there is a lot of combat. That is considered peacemaking and it is far less popular, and frequent, than peacekeeping. In other words, any crises zone that needs MRAPs is an area peacekeepers and aid groups will tend to stay away from.

Another downside of MRAPs is that they are expensive (over $10,000 a year) to operate. This is another disincentive for those who participate in peacekeeping operations. While MRAPs are ideal for areas where bandits or terrorists are a threat (via mines and roadside bombs), such places are in need of combat forces, ready to fight, not peacekeepers or relief workers.

American combat troops like MRAPs as long as they are fighting a foe that does not require U.S. combat vehicles to travel cross country a lot. MRAPs do roads but their high center of gravity makes them too unwieldy for off-road operations.

Since the U.S. has sworn off wars like Iraq and Afghanistan for the moment, U.S. troops are now back to training for more conventional combat, meaning lots of vehicles moving off roads. That leaves most of those 20,000 MRAPs without a job and few potential buyers. Most will end up in storage, which costs a few hundred dollars a year per vehicle. But after a decade or so of that, many MRAP components deteriorate, making the cost of getting them ready for action very expensive. Their unique design (the V shaped underside) makes them expensive to convert to commercial use (by removing the armor and remaining military components). So it looks like MRAPs will be left to slowly rot for a while and then scrapped. Nearly a third of the million dollar value of your average MRAP consists of military equipment that can be removed and used in other vehicles. But for the most part, the MRAPs will end up being a $10 billion wartime expense that, like many wartime vehicles, could find no purpose once the fighting was over.

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bikebrains       3/21/2012 9:31:50 AM
Put them in storage in Arizona as is done with aircraft.    We will need them again within 20 years.
 
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Skylark       3/23/2012 9:04:41 PM
It seems short-sighted to dump a military vehicle as valuable as the MRAP was, simply because it doesn't have a mission right this minute.  If they want to stash them somewhere close by, why not make a deal with Israel to store and preserve the bulk of the MRAP fleet while allowing the Israeli's to take a few of them into their armed forces and police as a fee.  The MRAP would be invaluable as a border patrol vehicle and in the West Bank, and we can count on a ready source of  mine resistant vehicles within a few hours flight time from any hotspots that will inevitably crop up in that neighborhood sooner or later anyway.
 
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Skylark       3/24/2012 12:10:47 AM
It seems short-sighted to dump a military vehicle as valuable as the MRAP was, simply because it doesn't have a mission right this minute.  If they want to stash them somewhere close by, why not make a deal with Israel to store and preserve the bulk of the MRAP fleet while allowing the Israeli's to take a few of them into their armed forces and police as a fee.  The MRAP would be invaluable as a border patrol vehicle and in the West Bank, and we can count on a ready source of  mine resistant vehicles within a few hours flight time from any hotspots that will inevitably crop up in that neighborhood sooner or later anyway.
 
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SAE    So Which It?   3/24/2012 10:18:41 PM
The M-2 Bradley is being faded out because it is vulnerable to roadside bombs and the MRAPs are being abandoned because they have poor off-road capability. So, what vehicle is the army going to use? Because at this rate they are going to have nothing. And if the M-2s are so vulnerable to roadside bombs why are the Iraqis buying M-113s? Don't they have less protection against mines than a M-2 Bradley has? Amazing! I agree with the previous writers. Maybe the Army should put all these vehicles into storage until someone figures out what vehicles the Army is going to need instead the Army spending a whole lot of money reinventing the wheel 10 to 20 years from now.
 
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wastral    MRAP selling   3/25/2012 5:06:29 AM
Essentially Bradly vehicles with its steel walls has no "armor" against modern bullets let alone road side mines.  They have been working in very limited fashion on updated version.  MRAP's aren't exactly garbage off road.  Just not ideal.  I wouldn't be surprised if they could switch out wheels/tires for more flotation off road and "fix" the "problem".  From what I have seen, this article is WAY off base and simply stirring the pot.  Hey, if you can sell some do so and recoup some of their investment that is now just sitting collecting dust.  As the DoD rightly is justified in believing and as was demonstrated that they can outfit vehicles to MRAP status very quickly.   No sense holding 10's of thousands of these vehicles when for a conventional war they are not needed at the begining, but rather to keep a boisterous population from blowing up your patrols.  In either case refitting vehicles to MRAP status one will have plenty of time beforehand to add the armor.  Its not like these wars brew up overnight. 
 
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