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bobdina
08-11-2009, 12:56 PM
The Army is eyeing MultiCam, a camouflage pattern preferred by special operations forces, to replace the pixilated pattern on the combat uniforms soldiers wear in Afghanistan.
The hunt for a new camo design follows a growing groundswell of rank-and-file criticism that the current pattern on the Army Combat Uniform is ineffective in the rugged, Afghan terrain — and elsewhere.
“The general consensus on the ACU pattern among many, many soldiers is that it is ineffective in breaking up a soldier ’s outline in just about every environment except in urban areas and the local gravel pit,” Army Chief Warrant Officer 2 Mark wrote to Army Times. “As an aviator, I can tell you that from the air most other nations’ camouflage masks a soldier better than the ACU does.” Similar complaints made their way to an influential member of Congress, who gave senior Army leaders a Sept. 30 deadline to present a plan that includes the budgetary and logistical details for outfitting roughly 40,000 soldiers serving in Afghanistan with a new camouflage pattern.
The directive to find an alternative to the Universal Camouflage Pattern comes just five years after it was introduced as the one-and only camo design. It replaced both the Desert Camouflage Uniform and the woodland-patterned Battle Dress Uniform. Though the move to streamline soldiers’ clothing bags was generally applauded, many complained the result was a pattern that was not particularly effective in either desert or woodland surroundings.
Complaints about its ineffectiveness have grown as the Army has increased the number of soldiers deployed to Afghanistan.
Program Executive Office Soldier, the command responsible for developing uniforms and equipment, declined to be interviewed for this story.
“PEO Soldier and the Army continually strive to provide the best to our soldiers,” Army spokesman Maj. Jimmie said in an Aug. 6 written statement. “As such, a team led by Training and Doctrine Command is working an effort to determine if a change is required to our Universal Camouflage Pattern in support of soldiers operating in many different environments. It is premature to go into any detail on this effort at this time.” Army officials, however, held a July 23 meeting with Crye Precision LLC, the company that developed MultiCam, to ask detailed questions about the availability of different MultiCam fabrics for making uniforms and soldier equipment, according to a source familiar with the issue who commented on the condition that he not be identified.
This meeting, however, was not the first time Army uniform officials saw the pattern that features seven shades of brown, tan and green. MultiCam, formerly known as “Scorpion,” was a top contender among a dozen experimental patterns when the Army began looking for a new camouflage design in early 2002 to replace the BDU and DCU.
But the Army passed on MultiCam in favor of a new pattern that PEO Soldier created with a digitized version of another contender, the “urban track” pattern. The Army modified that pattern by stripping out the highly visible black shade. The ACU’s mix of green, tan and gray would later become known as the Universal Camuflage Pattern.
In going with a digitized UCP, the Army followed the lead of the Marine Corps, which began fielding its new digitized pattern in 2002. The Army also considered the woodland and desert versions of the popular Marine digital uniform, but rejected the design in favor of a single, multiuse pattern.
Investigating complaints
Rep. John Murtha, D-Pa., launched the congressional camouflage mandate in mid-June, saying that he had heard complaints from “a dozen” Army noncommissioned officers that that ACU’s pattern is ineffective in Afghanistan.
Since then, dozens of soldiers have responded to an Army Times query seeking opinions of the Army’s current camouflage.
“The Army needs a new uniform, period. Not just for Afghanistan,” wrote 2nd Lt. Chris , who is serving in Iraq at Forward Operating Base Future. “The ACU uses ‘universal camouflage,’ meaning it doesn’t blend into anything. Thearticle [‘Get new camo, Congress says,’ June 29] says the ACU works fine in Iraq, but that is a myth. There is no natural setting that I have seen anywhere that blends in with the ACU.” Sgt. Ricky of Fort Carson, Colo., agreed with Cahak that soldiers in Afghanistan aren’t the only ones that need a new camouflage pattern.
“The ACU pattern is horrible,” Hill wrote. “Whatever happened to the MultiCam pattern that was tested a few years ago? I don’t know who came up with this current ACU pattern, but it has failed miserably.” A few soldiers who have written to Army Times defended the ACU pattern’s performance.
Sgt. 1st Class Ryan wrote that the ACU’s performance was “spot on” when he was a platoon sergeant serving in Khost, Afghanistan.
“The ACUs we wore were perfect for the job of mountain warfare and in the towns and roads that we patrolled,” he wrote. “A lot of the time, I would have to use optics to find my squads patrolling in the distance.” Capt. Joe had a different view.
“Being an aviator, I get a top down view of the battlefield, and I can tell you 100 percent that the ACU stands out like a sore thumb in the Afghan environment,” he wrote.
Many Army special operationunits such as Delta Force, the 75th Ranger Regiment and some Special Forces teams apparently feel the UCP is not the best pattern in either war zone as they are wearing the MultiCam pattern in both Iraq and Afghanistan.
Army Special Operations Command has tested MultiCam in different environments worldwide, including Iraq and Afghanistan, and found that it outperformed the ACU’s pattern, a senior Army officer with Special Forces told Army Times. The officer added that MultiCam is being considered as the future pattern of Army SOF.
C said in his letter that he also prefers MultiCam.
“I have worked with units who wore the MultiCam uniforms, and they were camouflaged much more effectively than soldiers wearing the ACU,” he wrote.
Soldiers participating in a Future Force Warrior Assessment in 2006 had the same opinion of MultiCam.
The nine-man squad that participated in the Air Assault Expeditionary Force experiment in fall 2006 at Fort Benning, Ga., wore MultiCam-patterned, Future Force Warrior uniforms in addition to a number of high tech gadgets and gear. The force-on-force exercise was designed to assess how the experimental soldier kit would affect the performance of soldiers going against soldiers with the current-issue kit.
One of the questions in the post-exercise survey read, “Was the camouflage pattern of the FFW uniform not as good, about the same or better than the camo pattern on the ACU?” All nine soldiers indicated that the MultiCam pattern was better than the ACU’s pattern, according to the July 2007 report from the Army Research Laboratory’s “Future Force Warrior: Insights from Air Assault Expeditionary Force Assessment.” Here are the soldiers’ comments as they appeared in the report: ■ “It blends better in the woods than the ACU.”
■ “Got 5 feet from the OpFor and they didn’t see us until after we fired. With the ACUs, you’ll be seen a mile away.”
■ “Numerous amount of times, we snuck within 10 feet of the enemies.”
■ “I even lost my own guys a couple of times it worked so well.”
■ “I’m telling you this uniform is way better in the field than ACUs. In fact, ACUs are nothing but a garrison uniform.”
■ “It’s obvious; just look at it.”
■ “The camouflage pattern is 50x better than the ACU uniform. When stationary or on the move it is hard to pick out in the tree line. The squads behind ours had trouble following us because they would lose sight of us so easily. We always knew where they were.”
■ “We were having trouble seeing our guys when we would stop in the wood line, whereas anyone wearing ACUs was easy to spot. It is a far superior camouflage pattern than the ACU.” Crye Precision began working on camouflage in 2002, two years after Caleb Crye formed the company. The company had already been working with the Army to develop new soldier equipment. Then Crye became interested in designing a camouflage pattern that would allow soldiers to operate in multiple environments.
“We saw guys being deployed to a war in Afghanistan with a combination of camouflage patterns that just wasn’t effective,” Crye said, describing how soldiers at the time wore DCUs with woodland pattern body armor vests.
No one in the small company, including Crye, had military backgrounds, said Crye, who has a fine arts degree. The Crye team traveled extensively, taking pictures of terrain features, rocks and vegetation.
“We didn’t look at camouflage so much; we looked at a lot of environments, and we tried to find a lot of things that were common in as many environments as possible,” he told Army Times.
“If you start looking at pictures of rocks all day, there are just these shapes that show up.” They also paid attention to the way animals use camouflage.
“We knew it was going to be half science, half trial and error,” Crye said. “Before we settled on printing real fabric, we probably had about 12 patterns. The first ones were really different.” Still, MultiCam alone may not be the answer, some soldiers say.
“The Army should have one desert pattern and one woodland pattern, at a minimum,” Sgt. Adam wrote in a letter to Army Times. “Afghanistan varies widely in the amount and type of vegetation, so no one uniform will work for the entire country. … The bottom line is that bad camouflage risks soldiers’ lives, and the decision to force every soldier to wear a pattern that is ineffective has reduced the effectiveness of our force


Army times print edition

bobdina
08-11-2009, 01:03 PM
We asked you, our readers, to weigh in on the camouflage debate, and the response was staggering. The following letters are just a sample: The ACU should never have been authorized. There are much better uniform patterns available, e.g., MultiCam, for service anywhere.
In Europe and in Asia, where there is plenty of green, the ACU is a miserable failure. I was able to identify ACUs long before Battle Dress Uniforms.

Chief Warrant Officer 3 Keith
Wiesbaden, Germany
From its inception to its many flaws, I have never agreed with our leadership’s decision to change from our previous Battle Dress Uniform and Desert Camouflage Uniform to our now Army Combat Uniform.
It is a sad state of affairs when the same leadership who made the decision to go to the ACU, instead of truly going to the soldier in the field, just continues to ignore our pleas for them to right this wrong. It becomes embarrassing for all soldiers to have to watch our senior leaders get scolded by Congress [“Get new camo, Congress says,” June 29] while forcing them to make such changes that were obvious from the beginning.
To have Congress intervene and direct the Army secretary to come up with a new camouflage combat uniform by September of this year is just plain wrong, as it is usually us who goes to them for the funding to approve such changes.
There is a simple solution in that I would suggest that the ACU be replaced by the Marine Pattern combat utility uniforms.
Sgt. 1st Class Robert T.
Selma, Texas
The current ACU is great for urban operations. But I agree that the Army could use a little more flexibility with woodland and desert camouflage patterns. All our vehicles are woodland or desert colors, so why not the uniforms? The Marine Corps patterns would be fine.
Capt. John H.
Camp Casey, Korea
The soldiers in Afghanistan definitely need new uniforms. The current ACU pattern does nothing for camouflage in the varying levels of vegetation, which are found throughout the country, or any other nonurban environment. The former Desert Camouflage Uniform worked best for the lower elevation levels, but in the higher mountains, a woodland camouflage like the old Battle Dress Uniform is better suited.
Capt. Kelly S.
Lebanon, Miss.
I can’t speak for those in Afghanistan, but in Iraq the ACU is not effective camouflage. We need separate patterns for each environment. The Marines know that. Why don’t we?
Sgt. Ian
Fort Knox, Ky.
I am not an ACU hater, at all, but the MultiCam pattern is the best thing out there. What do we do with the surplus of ACUs? Give them to the privates at Basic Training.
MultiCam will actually do what the ACU has failed to do, and that is camouflage soldiers.
Staff Sgt. Jonathan B.
Afghanistan
The ACU camo pattern does not match any terrain I have ever served on in my 26-year Army/National Guard career. I’ve been to Ukraine, Poland, Egypt, Kuwait, Iraq, Afghanistan, Qatar, Oman and Canada. The pattern does not protect our soldiers in any of those countries.
Lt. Col. Bob
Sierra Vista, Ariz.
Any soldier venturing outside the wire needs the MultiCam uniform. Soldiers [in ACUs] involved in combat tracking stood out vividly against the browns and light greens of Fort Huachuca, Ariz. However, if the fight is inside a gravel parking lot, they’ll be hidden and kicking Taliban ass.
Rick (contractor)
Nellis Air Force Base, Nev.
It was a mistake to try to use one pattern to cover all areas. The ACU needs to be replaced with two patterns (woodland and desert), just the way it was before, and how the Marines are doing now. The survivability of our soldiers should be the deciding factor, not the cost.
Maj. G. Dressig (ret.)
Warren, Mich.
As a prior-service Marine, I can definitely say the ACU is the worst uniform of all time. When first considering my transition into the Army, I made a list of pros and cons. At the top of my list of cons? The Army Combat Uniform.
It is just terrible in every way. I much prefer the Marine Pattern.
However, I do not think the Army should adopt MARPAT. That was developed and innovated by the Corps and should remain as another point in their proud traditions. The Army needs a totally different pattern. My choice and the choice of nearly all my peers and subordinates is MultiCam. It is crisp, blends in and would look good in garrison as well. For any further proof that MultiCam is preferred by soldiers, just take a look at any combat unit’s gear while deployed
— the array of MultiCam pouches, packs and hydration systems is astounding. The Army needs MultiCam, and it needs it before 2009 is up.
Sgt. Andrew J.
COP Blackhawk, Afghanistan
We all know the Army wants a camo pattern that blends with everything (it’s cheaper in the long run), and let’s face it — MultiCam is the only way. I feel very strongly the pattern they might choose will be an offshoot of MultiCam.
Pvt. 1st Class Michael
Fort Lewis, Wash.

I removed the last names
From Army times print edition

ghost
08-11-2009, 01:17 PM
I've been wondering why they haven't fucking switched over yet. How long until the movers and shakers stop dicking around, and fix this?

GTFPDQ
08-12-2009, 12:47 AM
Jeez, if all the US military has to worry about is the choice of colours for their Fall Collection, you guys are doing really well.

Stark
08-12-2009, 03:23 AM
http://www.multicampattern.com/gallery.html

hahahah airsoft warrior have it alreayd

http://www.wannabe.uk.com/GRAW%20013.jpg

GTFPDQ
08-12-2009, 03:39 AM
Im wondering.....IS THAT A BRIT....... ????

Face....... meet.......Palm

ghost
08-12-2009, 09:59 AM
Im wondering.....IS THAT A BRIT....... ????

Face....... meet.......Palm


Judging by the background, I'd have to go with yes.

GTFPDQ
08-12-2009, 05:38 PM
I have nothing against airsoft, but man this is too much. Gucci bastard probably has his girl(boy)friend wear that stuff when they play hide the sausage.

Cruelbreed
08-12-2009, 09:43 PM
lol airsoft warriors, good term :P

nastyleg
08-13-2009, 04:03 AM
this is me bleeding to death for biting my tongue so much on this particular issue. The Corp got it right on two sets. WTF Army brass WTF!