THE CONFLICT IN IRAQ: A NEW APPROACH - In Iraq, a green idea for saving lives of troops
FORWARD OPERATING BASE HAMMER, IRAQ — When a little-known agency of the U.S. Army asked Joe Amadee III to come up with an idea for saving lives in Iraq, it was probing for some kind of a contraption.
After all, the Rapid Equipping Force, a 5-year-old think tank for military innovation, had come up with some pretty high-tech stuff: robots to search caves in Afghanistan, an acoustic sniper finder and a hand-held laser pointer that soldiers use to flag down cars at night.
But, instead of a gadget, Amadee proposed a green solution.
And so, before long, he and a crew led by an Oklahoma roofing contractor were at this desert base east of Baghdad spraying foam onto tents.
Their plan is to turn all of the Army's hulking, heat-absorbing tent barracks into rigid shells of 2-inch insulation.
The way that would improve soldiers' lives may be self-evident. What is less obvious is how it also could save their lives.
The key is fuel: The more of it a base uses, the more soldiers are exposed to deadly roadside bombs on fuel convoys.
During the massive U.S. mobilization in Iraq there wasn't much time to consider that fact. Dan Nolan, chief of the power task force at the Ft. Belvoir, Va.-based Rapid Equipping Force, said it came to him indirectly when a commander in Anbar province asked about hybrid electricity generation.
"What he's really telling you is that the most dangerous thing in Anbar at that time was driving fuel to the Syrian border," Nolan said.
Others in the Army were working on beefing up armor, so Nolan focused on reducing exposure.
The assignment went to Bruce D. Jette, former science advisor to the Army chief of staff, who founded the Rapid Equipping Force, or REF, and has since spun off a private company, Synovision Solutions, that contracts for the agency.
Jette, who has a doctoral degree from MIT, became a legend in Afghanistan when he suggested that the Army use robots instead of soldiers to search caves for Taliban fighters.
When commanders told him it would take months or years to build a robot program, Jette said he could do it in 45 days with off-the-shelf technology, and then did it in fewer.
Thus was born the idea of searching the civilian marketplace for goods that can be quickly adapted to military use.
When the fuel challenge came along, wind, solar, geothermal and trash generation were obvious solutions.
- Military Quietly Poised for Iraq Sep 10, 2002
- Iraq Still Developing Nuclear Arms Arsenal - Weapons: A 'very aggressive' program may turn out a warhead in three to five years, Israeli experts say. Aug 10, 1990
- Stalemate Is Path to Victory - Persian Gulf: Wars are won without a shot being fired. Nov 27, 1990
