The U.S. Army says it does its best to keep its
hard-pressed vehicles and helicopters running despite these conditions,
but soldiers say Iraq sometimes trumps their best efforts. Now
maintenance is at the heart of the controversy over an Army Reserve
unit that refused to carry fuel along one of Iraq's most dangerous
stretches of road. Last week, the Army announced it was investigating
up to 19 members of a platoon from the 343rd Quartermaster Company,
based in Rock Hill, S.C., after they refused to transport supplies from
Tallil air base near Nasiriyah to Taji north of Baghdad. The unit's
members complained that the fuel trucks they were to drive lacked the
armor needed for the dangerous mission, and were in bad shape. The U.S.
military said Monday no decision had been made on whether to discipline
the reservists. U.S. officers say the refusal to carry out the mission
last week was an isolated incident. Still, it's no secret that convoy
duty is one of the most perilous jobs in Iraq. Across the country, the
brutal conditions can be seen on the Humvees on patrol with smashed or
cracked front windshields or punctured doors and fenders where chunks
of shrapnel have blown through. Worse, dozens of vehicles have been
lost in attacks. Video clips of burning Humvees have become a staple of
Iraqi insurgent propaganda DVDs. [more ]
Pictured above: A U.S. military Humvee burns after a car bomb exploded in al Mansour neighborhood of Baghdad, Iraq Sept. 22, 2004. [more ]