USA TODAY US Edition

The wait remains for vehicle meant to replace Humvees

Production of JLTV still four years away

- Ray Locker

The Joint Light Tactical Vehicle, the Pentagon’s long-awaited replacemen­t for the workhorse Humvee, is still at least four years away from full production, Army records show.

That’s two years later than the date an Army general told USA TODAY in 2012 and six years later than the Army predicted in 2007.

That year, military officials told USA TODAY they preferred to develop the JLTV instead of a larger truck — the Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicle — that reports showed was far safer against the improvised explosive devices killing hundreds of U.S. troops in Iraq than the Humvees most were riding in.

While still on the drawing board, the JLTV was a bigger priority than the MRAP, despite the latter’s proven safety record.

The MRAP couldn’t navigate the narrow streets in Iraq, then-Brig. Gen. Charles Anderson told USA TODAY.

Then-Defense secretary Robert Gates, who made getting more MRAPs his top priority, heard the same story. “The services did not want to spend procuremen­t dollars on a vehicle that was not the planned long-term Army and Marine Corps replacemen­t for the Humvee,” Gates wrote in his memoirs, Duty, published in January.

Despite the military’s resis- tance, Gates pushed ahead. The Pentagon ultimately bought about 20,000 MRAPs for Iraq and another version for the rougher terrain in Afghanista­n. Pentagon estimates showed that the lives of thousands of U.S. troops were saved and thousands of other troops were spared being seriously wounded.

U.S. troops left Iraq at the end of 2011. Most are scheduled to leave Afghanista­n at the end of this year. The JLTV never appeared in either war. It remains in developmen­t and is years away from getting to troops in the field.

Newly released Pentagon budget documents show the earliest the vehicle could be produced in any numbers is 2018.

Three companies are building JLTV prototypes, and the military could pick a main contractor in 2015 and start limited production, the latest Army budget documents show.

That’s if the program continues. The latest Pentagon budget calls for the eliminatio­n of another vehicle — the Ground Combat Vehicle — which has also been under developmen­t.

A recent report from the Congressio­nal Research Service noted that the Pentagon has proposed spending $230 million on the JLTV program in fiscal year 2015, up from $139 million this year.

 ??  ?? MRAPs were used in Iraq.
MRAPs were used in Iraq.

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