Voila, the first installment of a ten-part series on the best technologies in our wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. I've got ten in mind, but if you've got any recommendations, drop me a line at david_axe-at-hotmail.com. And if you want to toss any ideas out for the worst techs, I'll be following up the top ten list with a worst five list at the end of the week. So with no further a-do ... number ten:
Iraq and Afghanistan are dangerous. Real dangerous. Mortars, RPGs, snipers and car bombs, you name it. Imagine you're a soldier in the occupying army. How can you even sleep at night with all those munitions aimed at you? The answer: Hesco barriers. Take a collapsible wire-mesh and canvas screen and fill it with dirt, stack and repeat. For $700 per 5'x4'x3' box, plus some muscle power, you've got yourself an instant castle wall that can absorb all but the biggest blast. Don't believe me? Check out this test video.
An anonymous soldier blogger in Kabul, Afghanistan, recounts this 2006 ambush on an American outpost:
It ain't sexy. It's hardly interesting at all. But it works. And that's what this series is all about.