WASHINGTON — Roadside bomb attacks and fatalities
in Iraq are down by almost 90% over the last year,
according to Pentagon records and interviews with
military leaders.
In May, 11 U.S. troops were killed by blasts from
improvised explosive devices (IEDs) compared with 92
in May 2007, records show. That's an 88% decrease.
Military leaders cite several factors for the drop
in attacks and deaths. They include:
•New vehicles. Almost 7,000 heavily armored
Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicles have
been rushed to Iraq in the last year. "They've taken
hits, many, many hits that would have killed soldiers
and Marines in uparmored Humvees," Adm. Michael
Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said in
a recent interview.
Defense Secretary Robert Gates made obtaining at
least 15,000 MRAPs his top priority last year.
•Iraqi assistance. Ad hoc local security
forces, known as the Sons of Iraq, have provided
on-the-ground intelligence to U.S. forces looking for
IEDs, said Maj. Gen. Rick Lynch, who commanded a
division in Baghdad from February 2007 until May.
Each member of the security forces earns about $8
per day. Lynch has hired about 36,000 of them to man
checkpoints and provide intelligence on the
insurgency. He said about 60% had been insurgents.
•Improved surveillance. Lynch said troops
used security cameras that could see bomb builders up
to 5 miles away. "If they're out there planting an IED,
we can go whack them before they finish," he said.
Also, Lynch said, the 14-ton MRAPs have forced
insurgents to build bigger bombs to knock out the
vehicles. Those bombs take more time to build and
hide, which gives U.S. forces a better chance of
catching the insurgents in the act and then attacking
them.
Among the new U.S. tactics, paying the Sons of Iraq
is a particularly good investment, said Dakota Wood, a
military analyst at the Center for Strategic and
Budgetary Assessments. Whether the money is viewed as
"buying off" insurgents is less important than the
lull in violence it creates, Wood said. It's almost
impossible to rebuild infrastructure, foster commerce
and set up elections when streets are unsafe, he said.
"Any effort that creates a window of opportunity in
which other stabilization actions can take root is a
good thing."
Iraqi insurgents, however, are changing their
tactics. During a visit to the Marine Corps Air Ground
Combat Center at Twentynine Palms, Calif., Marines
showed Mullen the latest trend in IEDs: fake curbs
fashioned from metal, filled with ball bearings and
explosives. Virtually indistinguishable from concrete
rubble, the new bombs require a trained eye to spot.
Insurgents are also using pressure-detonated IEDs,
including those with 15 pounds of explosives that blow
the tires off an MRAP and allow insurgents to attack
it, Mullen said. "The whole issue of IEDs —
vehicle-borne, suicide, you name it — is going to be
the weapon of choice, and I think it's going to be
around a long, long time," he said.