US Army bans use of privately bought armor

Duty Honor Country

Active member
WASHINGTON (AP) — Soldiers will no longer be allowed to wear body armor other than the protective gear issued by the military, Army officials said Thursday, the latest twist in a running battle over the equipment the Pentagon gives its troops in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Army officials told The Associated Press that the order was prompted by concerns that soldiers or their families were buying inadequate or untested commercial armor from private companies — including the popular Dragon Skin gear made by California-based Pinnacle Armor.


"We're very concerned that people are spending their hard-earned money on something that doesn't provide the level of protection that the Army requires people to wear. So they're, frankly, wasting their money on substandard stuff," said Col. Thomas Spoehr, director of materiel for the Army.


Murray Neal, chief executive officer of Pinnacle, said he hadn't seen the directive and wants to review it.


"We know of no reason the Army may have to justify this action," Neal said. "On the surface this looks to be another of many attempts by the Army to cover up the billions of dollars spent on ineffective body armor systems which they continue to try quick fixes on to no avail.
"
The move was a rare one by the Army. Spoehr said he doesn't recall any similar bans on personal armor or devices. The directives are most often issued when there are problems with aircraft or other large equipment.
Veterans groups immediately denounced the decision.


Nathaniel R. Helms, editor of the Soldiers for the Truth online magazine Defense Watch, said he has already received a number of e-mails from soldiers complaining about the policy.


"Outrageously we've seen that (soldiers) haven't been getting what they need in terms of equipment and body armor," said Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., who wrote legislation to have troops reimbursed for equipment purchases. "That's totally unacceptable, and why this directive by the Pentagon needs to be scrutinized in much greater detail."
But another veterans group backed the move.


"I don't think the Army is wrong by doing this, because the Army has to ensure some level of quality," said Paul Rieckhoff, executive director of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America. "They don't want soldiers relying on equipment that is weak or substandard."


But, Rieckhoff said, the military is partially to blame for the problem because it took too long to get soldiers the armor they needed. "This is the monster they made," he said.


Early in the Iraq war, soldiers and their families were spending hundreds or even thousands of dollars on protective gear that they said the military was not providing.


Then, last October, after months of pressure from families and members of Congress, the military began a reimbursement program for soldiers who purchased their own protective equipment.


In January, an unreleased Pentagon study found that side armor could have saved dozens of U.S. lives in Iraq, prompting the Army and Marine Corps to order thousands of ceramic body armor plates to be shipped to troops there this year.


The Army ban covers all commercial armor. It refers specifically to Pinnacle's armor, saying that while the company advertising implies that Dragon Skin "is superior in performance" to the Interceptor Body Armor the military issues to soldiers, "the Army has been unable to determine the veracity of these claims."


"In its current state of development, Dragon Skin's capabilities do not meet Army requirements," the Army order says, and it "has not been certified to protect against several small arms threats that the military is encountering in Iraq and Afghanistan."


The Marine Corps has not issued a similar directive, but Marines are "encouraged to wear Marine Corps-issued body armor since this armor has been tested to meet fleet standards," spokesman Bruce Scott said.
Military officials have acknowledged that some troops — often National Guard or Reservists — went to war with lesser-quality protective gear than other soldiers were issued.


"We'll be upfront and recognize that at the start of the conflict there were some soldiers that didn't have the levels of protection that we wanted," Spoehr said. Now, he added, "we can categorically say that whatever you're going to buy isn't as good as what you're going to get" from the military.


In interviews Thursday, Army officials said aggressive marketing by body armor manufacturers was fueling public concerns that troops are not getting the protection they need.


Army Lt. Col. Scott Campbell said the Army has asked Pinnacle to provide 30 sets of the full Dragon Skin armor so it can be independently tested. He said Pinnacle has indicated it won't be able to provide that armor until May, and the company said that is still the plan.


Campbell said initial military tests on small sections of the Dragon Skin armor had disappointing results. He said Pinnacle has received $840,000 in research funding to develop improved armor.


Spoehr said he believes the directive will have little impact on soldiers in Iraq or Afghanistan because it's likely that nearly all are wearing the military-issued body armor.


There have been repeated reports of soldiers or families of soldiers buying commercial equipment or trying to raise thousands of dollars to buy it for troops who are preparing to deploy overseas.



USA Today
 
Bullspit they are concerned the troops are buying inferior armour. This is because they are losing face that their troops are having to supply themselves.
 
True Bulldogg, but I can also see it from the point of at least if everyone has a standard issue of armour, they know what they are dealing with, where as otherwise you've got Joe Bloggs with top of the range kit, and and John Doe with armour that does little more than another undershirt would have done.
 
AussieNick said:
True Bulldogg, but I can also see it from the point of at least if everyone has a standard issue of armour, they know what they are dealing with, where as otherwise you've got Joe Bloggs with top of the range kit, and and John Doe with armour that does little more than another undershirt would have done.

Well, any armour is better than no armour
 
USAFAUX2004 said:
Well, any armour is better than no armour

No, not really. If you're wearing the wrong armor, or you've got it outfitted incorrectly, it can be just like not wearing any at all, and if you're wearing the plates, it can actually cause a greater risk.
 
If this was really about protecting the troops rather than protecting their image they (the Pentagon) would generate and circulate a list of armour that meets or exceeds MILSPECS.
 
bulldogg said:
If this was really about protecting the troops rather than protecting their image they (the Pentagon) would generate and circulate a list of armour that meets or exceeds MILSPECS.

exactly, but since they do not have such a list, or enough armour to go around, they should make a list or shut up
 
bulldogg said:
If this was really about protecting the troops rather than protecting their image they (the Pentagon) would generate and circulate a list of armour that meets or exceeds MILSPECS.

They're working on that now, some groups threw a hissy fit about personal armor, so they're testing a few of the brands that seemed to be the most popular. Whether or not this will help the conventional guys, I don't know.

We do need to keep some form of standardization though, esp when you're dealing with a large number of troops and with some that are only 18 or 19 years old. It is important to know exactly what equpitment is being used. Accountability becomes a factor.

We need more R&D in armor development, but we also need to remember that this is the military and you do what you're told. It may not always make sense to the individual, but sometimes when you can see the whole picture it does.

While I think it's good to allow guys a personal choice, or at least platoon level decisions on how much and what parts of the system they're going to wear, I don't think it is a good idea to have family members or even military members with little or no knowledge on armor, how it works or when it's effective buying whatever product is hyped the most.

exactly, but since they do not have such a list, or enough armour to go around, they should make a list or shut up

No, they really shouldn't "shut up," it's their job to make decisions (good or bad), and even when they're being stupid, it's good to keep them talking. There is enough armor to go around, the problem was the type of armor (and it was a big problem with some units, esp. NG units), but a lot of that was hyped by the media.
Like I said, when you aren't wearing the proper armor or you're wearing it wrong, it's just as bad, and sometimes worse than not having any at all.
 
Last edited:
If your armour fails and you get injured would you expect the army to pay you a pension. They might look at it that armour you where wearing had not been tested or could be known as not very good yet you have believed the adverts and had purchased it and worn it in preference to the official one so does the army pick up the bill for any disabilities that you might suffer.
 
LeEnfield said:
If your armour fails and you get injured would you expect the army to pay you a pension. They might look at it that armour you where wearing had not been tested or could be known as not very good yet you have believed the adverts and had purchased it and worn it in preference to the official one so does the army pick up the bill for any disabilities that you might suffer.

I imagine that is part of the point of the directive handed down. Also PJ24 has a very good point. If you get a brand new system of gear and do not know how to use it properly then the chances you will do yourself more harm than good are very good. Heck, the MOLLE gear had a VHS tape that came with it just to figure out how to use it. How many people do you think actually watched it?

Some of the troops may have been shipped without body armor but did they actually go into combat without it? That is not a rhetorical question. I am asking for facts.
 
Marinerhodes said:
Some of the troops may have been shipped without body armor but did they actually go into combat without it? That is not a rhetorical question. I am asking for facts.

I am not aware of anyone being sent into Iraq without some type of protection. Some of the units just had the PASGT/flak vests with no plates, and that was the complaint.

I know of some Marine bns that were issuing just one plate at the kickoff, and keeping the others as backups. Any that I ran into by their second tour had gotten the second plate.

NG units seemed to be about the only ones sporting the PASGT alone and I am unaware of any of those units being sent out for any DA missions with just that. I know some of the truck drivers only had those when they were running convoys. The problem with that though can't just be blamed on the Pentagon, NG units have a bad history of mismanaging their money and not doing the paper work to get the equpitment they need (or would need). So add that to a quick mobilization without much time to prepare, and I think that's why things were as they were.

The PASGT performs at NIJ level IIA, if I remember correctly.
 
Good points about the pension and liability and about proper outfitting. The way the armour issue is being reported leads one to believe that troops are going into combat with little more than their skivvies.
 
Well, given that people are battling an insurgency, combat is likely to find people as they are driving convoys, building power stations, or heck, buying a packet of cigarettes. Everybody on deployment, no matter what their role, needs their own full-spec ballistic protection and personal weapon, and full, current training in their use: they should not have to equip themselves.
 
Kirruth said:
Well, given that people are battling an insurgency, combat is likely to find people as they are driving convoys, building power stations, or heck, buying a packet of cigarettes. Everybody on deployment, no matter what their role, needs their own full-spec ballistic protection and personal weapon, and full, current training in their use: they should not have to equip themselves.

No one had to, no one was sent outside of the wire without protection. I don't care what the media tells you. It just didn't happen.
 
PJ24 said:
No one had to, no one was sent outside of the wire without protection. I don't care what the media tells you. It just didn't happen.

If they were sent outside the wire they were given sets that were held specifically for convoy ops from what I have heard. I was talking to a buddy of mine and he said his Bn CO made a point of having a certain number of sets set aside for convoy ops. They would sign them out and turn them in when they returned.

Like I said. It is not a matter of if they are equipped it is what they are equipped with and how it is equipped. Read all the posts. You will find many things repeated here that have already been said.
 
PJ24 said:
The PASGT performs at NIJ level IIA, if I remember correctly.
Yikes. My personal body armor (that I purchased for riding EMS tours in Harlem, NYC) is rated at IIIA, two levels higher. :eek:
 
AJChenMPH said:
Yikes. My personal body armor (that I purchased for riding EMS tours in Harlem, NYC) is rated at IIIA, two levels higher. :eek:

That's in Harlem though, we're talking about Iraq. It is much safer than Harlem. You should probably have plates, too.
 
Back
Top