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"The manufacturers should put more thought into means of escape in case of an accident," said Bishop, who lives in northern Michigan. A month after the accident, the Army's Combat Readiness and Safety Center issued an internal "MRAP Safety Alert" detailing the tragedy. The alert, obtained by the AP, recommended practicing what to do should the vehicle roll over and ensuring everyone on board knows when canals and other waterways are close by. It also emphasized the importance of wearing seat belts. While many of the injuries have been minor, such as broken fingers, others have been serious, according to a dozen MRAP accident reports released through FOIA. On the morning of Jan. 29, a convoy of three MRAPs from the 2nd Stryker Calvary Regiment was heading to Fira Shia, a village northwest of Baghdad, where a car explosion had been reported. As the third MRAP in the patrol crossed over a bridge, the span collapsed, sending the vehicle into the canal below.
One soldier, upside down in the vehicle, was caught in his seat belt. He swallowed water and nearly drowned before being freed by another soldier. The MRAP involved in this accident was a 20-ton MaxxPro made by Navistar International in Warrenville, Ill. On April 23, just hours before the deaths of Bishop and Cunningham, a MaxxPro assigned to the 25th Infantry Division in Iraq was heading north on Main Supply Route Tampa. Seeing a deep rut in the road, which runs from Kuwait to Baghdad, the driver steered to avoid it. The vehicle struck a concrete wall and rolled over, injuring at least one soldier. Although bigger may not always be better, it does come in handy. Troops from the 10th Mountain Division were leaving a U.S. base outside Baghdad in an MRAP on the afternoon of Jan. 21; the vehicle's make and model are not listed in the report. As the lead vehicle in the patrol, the MRAP, sirens blaring, slowed to a stop at an intersection so civilian traffic on either side could halt and the rest of the U.S. convoy could move through. Traffic stopped, except for a Chevy Suburban that was swerving past the waiting cars at more than 60 mph. Not seeing the large SUV, the MRAP began moving through the intersection, according to the report. The driver of the Suburban suddenly realized why everyone else was waiting. The driver hit the brakes, but the SUV was traveling too fast for the MRAP driver to react. After skidding about 30 feet, the Suburban slammed into the left side of the MRAP. The force of the crash barely moved the MRAP and there were no U.S. casualties. The Suburban didn't fare as well. Eight Iraqis were injured; four of them seriously enough to be evacuated to a nearby military hospital, the report said. "If I was going from point A to point B, put me in an MRAP," said Dakota Wood, a retired Marine Corps officer and a military analyst at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments in Washington. "Everybody you talk to who has been in a convoy and hit by a blast doesn't want to be in a Humvee because of the impact," he said. ___ On the Net: Defense Department: http://www.defenselink.mil/
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