richardm said:
[*]They are not British made.
This article says they are:
http://www.canoe.ca/NewsStand/LondonFreePress/Business/2004/04/29/440272.html
[*]The new ones being shipped out have been "outfitted with a "cage" of slat armour, which encircles the vehicle about 18in from the main body, as protection against rocket-propelled grenades (RPGs)."
Then why aren't these bolt-on contraptions stopping the RPGs that are destroying Strykers in Iraq right now?
[*]According to at least one commentator, the Bradley is known as
The Exploding Coffin, it is so lightly armoured.
Very few Bradleys have been lost. On the other hand, Bradleys were used to mop the floor with Saddam's most elite RG TANK units. They can hold their own. I don't think anyone is questioning the fact that a Bradley has stronger armor than one of these Strykers, with the tradeoff being that the Bradleys are heavier.
[*]The Stryker is small enough to be carried by a C130, unlike the Bradley.
So if the US is in a huge hurry to get somewhere, we can send some of these Strykers. That was not the case in this most recent Iraq war. We had plenty of time. Better to send the big guns. Trust me, if it was your
your life on the line, you would choose the thicker armor.
[*]The Stryker's weapons are remote-controlled, so you don't need to stick your head out to shoot back.
In a tank or Bradley, you have your choice to close the hatch or stick your head out of it to get a beter picture of what is really going on. So, in fact, the Stryker really gives you less options in battle, hardly a plus.
Anyway, this thread was not Bradley vs Stryker. Nor was the objective to say that Strykers will be terrible APCs. They will be fine. But what the army really needs is a smaller, lower-profile, more easily transported and more lethal alternatives to the M1. This Stryker is just a glorified minivan.