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US DoD yard sale: US military aims to unload Afghanistan war material, vehicles

CougarKing

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From Fox news 8/15/2013

Uncle Sam's Yard Sale: Gov't looks to unload Afghanistan war hardware

It could be Uncle Sam’s biggest yard sale.

After 12 years of war in Afghanistan, officials are now pondering what to do with $50 billion in equipment half a world away — including combat vehicles, dining rooms, gyms, clothing and more.

“A lot of this stuff, you're not really concerned about bringing it back,” said Jim Hasik, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council. “I mean if a Coke machine falls into the hands of the Taliban, this is just not a big disaster.”

But eventually, much of the gear will trickle down to the public. With the click of a mouse the spoils of war can be yours on govliquidation.com. Each day, new items appear on the site – as bases around the country release unneeded items – from rafts and trucks, to fire engines and pretzel stands.

But first, the massive effort to bring some of the equipment home. By December 2014, the U.S. military will have transported home some 35,000 vehicles and 95,000 containers at an estimated cost of $6 billion. It is the largest retrograde or pullout in history.

“There are huge problems getting materiel out of Afghanistan,” said Don Olson, top civilian leader of the Sierra Army Depot, America’s largest repository of military equipment.

The biggest problem, since Afghanistan is landlocked, is that the U.S. must fly the equipment out or pay exorbitant customs fees to Afghanistan and Pakistan . The cost of moving the containers alone could reach $237 million, officials estimate.


At some point, actually it becomes more sensible to destroy that equipment in place than to actually bring it back,” said Hasik.

That’s exactly what the Pentagon is doing with some 2,000 of the massive eight-ton troop carriers known as MRAPS. Each MRAP cost taxpayers more than $1 million, but with 24,000 already in the Army inventory, officials decided it was more cost effective to scrap 2,000 of the vehicles in Afghanistan rather than bring them home."

“Did we overbuild, did we overbuy on the MRAP? Almost certainly,”said Hasik, who is also quick to say it was impossible to know just how many of the armored vehicles were necessary. The MRAP is credited with protecting many American lives against roadside bombs.

Many that did come home are parked at the Sierra Army Depot, 35,000 acres of steel and high desert scrub in California. The depot is home to tens of thousands of combat vehicles and more than $1 billion in clothing.

“We provide that catcher’s mitt for the Army, for the nation,” says Olsen. “They send that equipment here. We manage it until the Army can make a decision of what to do with it in the future.”

Most battle tanks remain here, and replenish U.S. stocks. Some personnel carriers are sold to allies. Clothing is recycled and reused.

The base has its own rail yard and airstrip and trucks arrive daily. Some 1,500 employees, all part of the Army Materiel Command, identify, sort and store each item that comes in.

“Where it goes next depends on where it is needed,” said Olson.


Perhaps Turkey may be interested in the surplus MRAPs, if they can foot the bill for shipping them to Ankara?

Turkey To Buy MRAPs, Weapon Carriers

Defense News link

ANKARA — Turkey will buy scores of armored vehicles and weapon carriers under two contracts worth hundreds of millions of dollars, officials said.

In the first deal, Defense Minister Ismet Yilmaz said on July 3 that Turkey would look for a new supplier for the 175 mine-resistant, ambush-protected (MRAP) vehicles a local company failed to deliver.

“In coordination with the armed forces, we will look into a new model that will substitute for the undelivered Kirpis,” Yilmaz said.

Procurement officials said that in addition to the 175 Kirpis for the Army, the police force could order 20 more. Follow-on orders from the Army and the police are also likely, they said.

(...)
 
Easy Peasy....Just truck them straight across Iran and into Turkey...
 
GAP said:
....Just truck them straight across Iran and into Turkey...
...and I doubt if the Turks will need to move them too far in-country, leaving them in the east -- divided between the ethnically-Kurdish areas and lined up facing south along the Syrian border.    :nod:
 
Seems there's no chance they will be used in the Korean peninsula either, since the US 2nd ID doesn't want them...

Military.com newsfeed

MRAP No Good for Korea, 2ID Decides

Aug 16, 2013


SEOUL -- The U.S. Army has decided not to utilize Mine Resistant Ambush Protected vehicles on the Korean peninsula.

Last summer, more than 80 MRAPs -- the iconic vehicle of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan -- were brought to South Korea to see how they might be used by American troops here.

However, it was determined that the vehicles were “not suitable for maneuver battalions to use” in Korea, according to a 2nd Infantry Division statement. “There are no plans to add the MRAP vehicle to our fleet in the foreseeable future,” the statement said.


The vehicles have been returned to the Army fleet management system for use in more suitable regions, 2ID said.

With its V-shaped hull, the MRAP was designed to force the blasts from roadside bombs, or landmines, away from the occupied spaces in the vehicles. With death tolls rising in Iraq in 2007, the Pentagon stepped up production of the vehicles, delivering more than 1,500 of them to soldiers. By 2008, soldiers were driving more than 10,000 MRAPs on patrols in Iraq and Afghanistan.

But with the war winding down in Afghanistan, it’s unclear where the MRAPs could best utilized if not in Korea.

Instead, the Army has added a new mine-resistant vehicle to its Korea fleet -- the Assault Breacher Vehicle.

(...)


The 70-ton ABV, nicknamed “The Shredder,” is designed to clear paths for troops to advance through minefields or areas where improvised explosive devices might be buried.

The ABVs can be equipped with a plow and bulldozer blade to breach obstacles or dig up mines. They can also be equipped with a line charge, packed with C4 explosives that can be launched and detonated from the vehicle.

ABVs first got extensive use in Afghanistan in 2010 when the U.S. Marines brought them in to help deal with the IEDs, a popular weapon of the Taliban there.

(...)
 
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