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Army uniforms get first redesign in 2 decades
Urban combat colors among the changes being made.
Associated Press
Feb. 8, 2005 12:10 PM
FORT STEWART, Ga. - Army soldiers are being issued new fatigues with
easy-to-use Velcro openings and a redesigned camouflage pattern that can help
conceal them as they move rapidly from desert to forest to city in places like
Baghdad.
"It might give you the extra second you need, save your life maybe," Sgt.
Marcio Soares said Tuesday after trying on the new all-in-one camouflage
uniform that is the first major redesign in Army fatigues since 1983.
Soares' unit, the Georgia National Guard's 48th Infantry Brigade, is the first
to be issued the new fatigues as part of a $3.4 billion Army-wide makeover
being phased in over the next three years.
The uniform will replace the standard forest camouflage - green, brown and
black - and the desert camouflage - tan, brown and grey - now used by U.S.
troops in Iraq.
[Photo of
troops in their 'here i am' desert green.]
Twenty-two changes were made to the uniforms, most
notably the new camouflage pattern.
Instead of bold jigsaw swatches of colors, the new camouflage pattern uses
muted shades of desert brown, urban gray and foliage green broken into one-centimeter
segments. Black was eliminated completely because it catches the eye too
easily.
The resulting camouflage - similar to a pattern the Marines adopted two years
ago - conceals soldiers in forest, desert or urban battlegrounds, said Sgt.
1st Class Jeff Myhre, the uniform's lead designer.
"In Baghdad, you can go from the desert to vegetation to the city in 10
minutes," Myhre said. "What we realized very quickly is there's no camouflage
that's the 100 percent solution for any environment."
Other changes were prompted by complaints from soldiers in the field. Jacket
and pocket buttons, which can snag on nets and other gear, have been replaced
with zippers and Velcro.
Pockets at the jacket's waistline were moved to the shoulders, where soldiers
can reach them while wearing body armor. And the uniforms have a looser fit,
with more room to wear layers underneath.
Rank, unit and name patches attach with Velcro rather than being sewn on.
Infrared-reflecting squares on the shoulders make friendly troops easier to
identify while using night-vision goggles.
"The only problem I have with the uniform is, once the soldiers put it on,
they don't want to take it off," said Brig. Gen. Stewart Rodeheaver, commander
of the 48th Infantry Brigade, which has 4,000 reservists training at Fort
Stewart to go off to Iraq in May.
The Army started developing the uniform two years ago and field-tested
prototypes in Iraq. The final version was rolled out June 24 - the Army's
229th birthday.
Col. John Norwood, the Army's project manager for soldier equipment, said the
new uniforms will be issued in coming months to units being sent to Iraq. New
soldiers entering basic training will be issued them by October, and all Army
troops will be required to wear them by April 2008.
The new uniforms cost a little more - $85 each, compared with $60 for the old
ones. But Norwood said the Army will save money by having to produce only one
combat uniform rather than three - standard greens, desert camouflage and
cold-weather fatigues.
And they should make soldiers' lives easier, too. The fabric is wrinkle-free
and machine-washable, and the new suede boots do not require polishing like
the old black boots.
"If you have a choice whether you teach them to polish boots or teach them how
to survive in battle, we'd rather teach them to survive in battle," Rodeheaver
said.
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