Army Says Dragon Skin Armor Falls Short
By LOLITA C. BALDOR
WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S. Army, in a rare move Monday, released
a barrage of test results showing that a privately-sold flexible
body armor that some families have sought for their soldiers failed
extensive military testing.
Pieces of the hefty Dragon Skin armor, with ragged holes torn
through its yellow inner skin, were propped up on the floor in the
Pentagon, as Army officials systematically detailed the battery of
ammunition and temperature testing the armor failed.
Although the tests were done nearly a year ago, the Army
declined to release details until Monday, after recent NBC News
reports suggested that the Dragon Skin may be better than the
Army-issued Interceptor armor.
As a result of the reports, some members of Congress have asked
for an investigation into the matter, and others have asked the
Army for more information.
``We take this personally,'' said Brig. Gen. Mark Brown,
executive officer for the Army's armor testing program. ``One third
of the general officers in the United States Army have either a son
or daughter either in theater (at war) today or (who) has been to
theater.''
Holding up an armor-piercing bullet, Brown showed video of the
tests, including footage of officials peering into the bullet hole
in the Dragon Skin armor. ``At the end of the day, this one disc
has to stop this round. It didn't. Thirteen times,'' he said.
In response, Murray Neal, president of Pinnacle Armor which
produces Dragon Skin, suggested that the Army lied about some of
the testing, and he questioned why the Army was counting shots that
``were fired into the non-rifle defeating areas.''
The body armor debate has raged almost since the Afghanistan and
Iraq wars began, as the Army struggled at times to get all of the
needed equipment to its soldiers - both active and reserve. At
times, family members around the country were raising money, having
bake sales, and spending thousands of dollars of their own cash to
buy armor and equipment for their loved ones going to war.
In some of those cases, families were considering buying Dragon
Skin armor because they believed it would provide better
protection. The Army Monday said it was releasing the test details
to help prevent families from spending money on body armor that is
not as good as the protection already issued to the soldiers.
Brown described ``catastrophic failures'' by the Dragon Skin
armor, and said that in 13 of 48 shots, lethal armor-piercing
rounds either shattered the discs that make up the armor, or
completely penetrated the vest.
``Zero failures is the correct answer,'' he said. ``One failure
is sudden death and you lose the game.''
Brown added that the armor failed to endure required
temperatures shifts - from minus 20 degrees to 120 above zero -
which weakened the adhesive holding the discs together. And he said
that the Dragon Skin's heavy weight was also a problem for soldiers
who need to carry a lot of gear.
The Dragon Skin, he said, weighs 47.5 pounds, compared to the
Army-issued Interceptor armor, which weighs 28 pounds.
After seeing the latest television reports, Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, D-Mass., sent a letter to Army Chief of Staff Gen. George
Casey asking for more information and saying he's concerned that
the Army may not be providing better body armor to the soldiers as
quickly as possible.
And Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., sent a letter to the
Government Accountability Office, a government watchdog agency,
seeking an investigation to assess the body armor being used by the
military.
Army officials said they would be going to Capitol Hill this
week to talk to lawmakers about the armor issue.
05/21/07 18:54
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