Post by Cactus Jack on Feb 12, 2010 12:24:13 GMT -6
Marine have a new weapon to combat IEDs - the 72-ton, 40-foot long Assault Breacher Vehicles (ABV). Fitted with a plow and nearly 7,000 pounds of explosives, the Breachers, as they are commonly known, are the Marines Corps' answer to the deadliest threat facing NATO troops in Afghanistan: thousands of land mines and roadside bombs, or improvised explosive devices, that litter the Afghan landscape.
The Breachers, metal monsters that look like a tank with a cannon, carry a 15-foot wide plow supported by metallic skis that glide on the dirt, digging a safety lane through the numerous minefields laid by the Taliban. It is a cross between a bulldozer and Abrams tank with a 1,500-horsepower turbine engine, Breachers are so valuable that they only travel outside bases along with a tank retrieval vehicle to drag them to safety if they are damaged.
If there are too many mines, the Breachers can fire rockets carrying high-grade C-4 explosive up to 150 yards (meters) forward, detonating the hidden bombs at a safe distance so that troops and vehicles can pass through safely.
The detonations using over 1,700 pounds of Mine Clearing Line Charges send a sheet fire into the air and shock waves rippling through the desert in all directions.
Reporters watched the "Breacher" in action Wednesday as Marines edged closer to Marjah, a southern Taliban stronghold that NATO commanders plan to attack in the coming days in the largest joint NATO-Afghan operation of the Afghan war. Troops are expected to face a massive threat from mines and roadside bombs as they push into Marjah, 380 miles southwest of Kabul.
"I consider it to be a truly lifesaving weapon," said Gunnery Sgt. Steven Sanchez, 38, leader of a platoon from the 2nd Marines Combat Engineers Battalion. Sanchez's platoon drove Breachers in their first combat operation in December, when Marines reclaimed a section of the heavily mined Now Zad valley farther north in Helmand province. "We made history, and the Breacher did well," says Sanchez, of Palm Desert, Calif.
Developed by the Marines since the 1990s and costing US$3.5 million apiece.
Many on his platoon believe the Breacher has already proven its worth. The Joker's vehicle commander, Cpl. Michael Turner, 21, of Provo, Utah, says his Breacher works even better than he'd thought during training.
"She's surprisingly easy to operate," Turner said. His vehicle can travel at 50 miles per hour. When plowing for bombs, it can still move at 5 to 8 mph, depending on the terrain — all the while digging up the dirt 14 inches deep.
"That's plenty enough to get the IEDs," said Turner, because any explosive buried deeper is unlikely to be triggered by a vehicle driving by.
The Joker's driver, Sgt. Jeremy Kinsey, 23, from Sunny Side, Washington, even triggered a live IED during his Breacher's first combat outing in December. The 60-pound bomb exploded on his plow, powerful enough to rip out a tire or an axle from a normal armored vehicle.
The Breacher barely registered. "It shook slightly," Kinsey said. "I laughed and I drove on."
The Breachers, metal monsters that look like a tank with a cannon, carry a 15-foot wide plow supported by metallic skis that glide on the dirt, digging a safety lane through the numerous minefields laid by the Taliban. It is a cross between a bulldozer and Abrams tank with a 1,500-horsepower turbine engine, Breachers are so valuable that they only travel outside bases along with a tank retrieval vehicle to drag them to safety if they are damaged.
If there are too many mines, the Breachers can fire rockets carrying high-grade C-4 explosive up to 150 yards (meters) forward, detonating the hidden bombs at a safe distance so that troops and vehicles can pass through safely.
The detonations using over 1,700 pounds of Mine Clearing Line Charges send a sheet fire into the air and shock waves rippling through the desert in all directions.
Reporters watched the "Breacher" in action Wednesday as Marines edged closer to Marjah, a southern Taliban stronghold that NATO commanders plan to attack in the coming days in the largest joint NATO-Afghan operation of the Afghan war. Troops are expected to face a massive threat from mines and roadside bombs as they push into Marjah, 380 miles southwest of Kabul.
"I consider it to be a truly lifesaving weapon," said Gunnery Sgt. Steven Sanchez, 38, leader of a platoon from the 2nd Marines Combat Engineers Battalion. Sanchez's platoon drove Breachers in their first combat operation in December, when Marines reclaimed a section of the heavily mined Now Zad valley farther north in Helmand province. "We made history, and the Breacher did well," says Sanchez, of Palm Desert, Calif.
Developed by the Marines since the 1990s and costing US$3.5 million apiece.
Many on his platoon believe the Breacher has already proven its worth. The Joker's vehicle commander, Cpl. Michael Turner, 21, of Provo, Utah, says his Breacher works even better than he'd thought during training.
"She's surprisingly easy to operate," Turner said. His vehicle can travel at 50 miles per hour. When plowing for bombs, it can still move at 5 to 8 mph, depending on the terrain — all the while digging up the dirt 14 inches deep.
"That's plenty enough to get the IEDs," said Turner, because any explosive buried deeper is unlikely to be triggered by a vehicle driving by.
The Joker's driver, Sgt. Jeremy Kinsey, 23, from Sunny Side, Washington, even triggered a live IED during his Breacher's first combat outing in December. The 60-pound bomb exploded on his plow, powerful enough to rip out a tire or an axle from a normal armored vehicle.
The Breacher barely registered. "It shook slightly," Kinsey said. "I laughed and I drove on."