January 10, 2006
Hillary Wraps Herself In Armor
By
Michelle Malkin
Move over, Joan Rivers. Sen.
Hillary Rodham Clinton is vying for the title of
undisputed queen of the cosmetic makeover. Having
undergone a cultural warrior collagen injection with her
recent crusades against
violent video games and
flag-burning, Hillary has traded in her ratty black
pantsuit for a new politicized accessory to enhance her
electoral figure:
Body armor.
Last week, a group called
Soldiers for the Truth leaked results of an
unpublished Pentagon study that reportedly found that as
many as 80 percent of a random sample of Marines killed
in Iraq from wounds to the upper body could have
survived if they had had extra body armor. On Friday,
the New York Times seized on the study. [Extra Armor Could Have Saved Many Lives, Study Shows,
By Michael Moss, January 6, 2006]
Faster than you can say "quagmire,"
Hillary landed on ABC's
"Good Morning America"
to lambaste the Bush administration as
"incompetent" and its failure to provide more armor
"unforgivable."
"We perhaps could have avoided
so many of these fatalities with the right body armor,"
concluded Brig. Gen. Clinton, who immediately dashed off
letters to Sen. John Warner, R-Va., chairman of the
Armed Services Committee; Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., the
ranking Democrat on the Armed Services Committee; and
Francis J. Harvey, Secretary of the Army.
Smarter-than-thou Clinton is, of course, demanding an
investigation (highly recommended by image consultants
to boost one's pro-military posturing).
Hillary bashed President Bush and
Vice President Cheney for callously letting troops die
and said she was "just bewildered as to how this
president and this vice president continue to isolate
themselves from different points of view."
Well, I am bewildered, too.
Bewildered at how such a supposedly brilliant and savvy
woman—who is supposedly in tune with American troops—can
so blithely ignore the grave trade-offs involved in this
matter.
You want different points of view?
Listen to soldiers from the
101st Airborne Division's 3rd Brigade, who must don
some 40 pounds of protection and gear while fighting in
the desert heat. Capt. Jamey Turner, 35, of Baton Rouge,
La., a commander in the 1st Squadron, 33rd Cavalry
Regiment
bluntly reminded the Associated Press: "You've
got to sacrifice some protection for mobility. If you
cover your entire body in ceramic plates, you're just
not going to be able to move."
Second Lt. Josh Suthoff, 23, of
Jefferson City, Mo., said: "I'd go out with less body
armor if I could."
There is a legitimate debate to be
had about the Army's supply system, military
procurement, and contracting squabbles over body armor.
However, challenging the leaked study's premises, Spc.
Robert Reid, 21, of Atlanta, commented: "It's the
Army's responsibility to get soldiers the armor they
need. But that doesn't mean those deaths could have been
prevented."
A military blogger at
Baghdad Guy who serves in the U.S. Army,
101st Airborne Division, 506th Infantry, sums it up:
"Body
armor has saved numerous lives in Iraq and Afghanistan
and it will continue to do so, especially as it is
modified to better meet the threat we face. However,
there are limitations as to how much armor you can add
onto an individual and maintain his effectiveness as a
soldier: when I step out the gate I am wearing on my
person body armor, a kevlar helmet, my M4 rifle with a
few hundred rounds of ammunition, my
M9 sidearm with another hundred rounds of
ammunition, 2-3 quarts of water, a portable radio, night
vision equipment, and numerous other odds and ends ...
" ...
Too much weight means a soldier moves slower, tires more
easily, [maneuvers] less stealthily and spends more time
feeling sorry for himself instead of focusing on the
mission. And then there's the bulkiness that becomes an
issue as you move through tight space and wedge into the
seats of military vehicles that were not designed with
comfort and/or legroom in mind. All these tradeoffs must
be addressed before you make the decision to add armor,
it must be determined that the armor will be effective,
and then it must be designed in a way that minimizes
impact on our ability to do our job." [Body
Armor]
Alas, fund-raising,
spotlight-grabbing, 2008-planning Hillary isn't
interested in sober analysis of trade-offs on the
battlefield.
She is too busy playing dress-up to
listen to the troops she says she cares so much about
now.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
Michelle Malkin's latest book is "Unhinged:
Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."
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