Warning: Explicit Language |
"I'll never forget it. The bomb was on the right side of the Buffalo," Ryan Tomlinson, a former Marine corporal, told BI.
Tomlinson was on Main Supply Route Michigan, near Ramadi. He'd attached as a photographer to a group of engineers on a route clearance mission, looking for IEDs — a mission which the Buffalo, a Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) was particularly well suited to do.
Reason being: it came with a 16-foot remote controlled arm. Troops called it, "The Claw."
"When the bomb went off, it scared the hell out of me. Three [155 mm shells] wired together. Blew the arm clear off the vehicle. Rear end was mangled. Huge pieces of shrapnel sticking out of the glass," said Tomlinson, who watched this from his MRAP, parked not too far away.
"[Later] all the Marines climbed out. Aside from being shaken up, nothing happened to them."
"Yeah," concluded Tomlinson, "It's kind of like a giant tank."
The Buffalo is used for one main purpose: route clearance — which means "getting rid of bombs buried near the road"
The massive six-wheeled truck weighs 76,000 pounds.
And it's not very inconspicuous: it's 13 feet tall and over 8 feet wide.
See the rest of the story at Business Insider
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