Unites States Marines ban an Amphibious Assault Vehicle from Water

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Washington DC
An amphibious assault vehicle (AAV) approaches amphibious dock landing ship USS Carter Hall. Photo: Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Kristin L. Grover/US Navy

The United States Marine Corps has banned the amphibious Assault Vehicle (AAV) fleet from water-borne operations except in emergencies.

The vehicle which was manufactured in the 1970s had been kept out of service till July of last year because nine marines and sailors died in an accident involving the vehicle. The vehicles will be available for ground operations only from 76 percent of its total functioning.

According to a Marines Statement, the vehicle was found “safe and effective” for amphibious operations by the recommendations which were stemmed from multiple investigations that have been tracked by the fatal catastrophe.

INVESTIGATIONS

Marine corps Times, citing the investigations, wrote that “multiple vehicles on the deployment had serious mechanical issues before joining the 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit in addition to failures in training that may have led to the accident.’’

The service, meanwhile, stated that “given the current state of the amphibious vehicle program, the commandant of the Marine Corps has decided the AAV will be no longer serve as part of the regularly scheduled deployments or train in the water during military exercises; AVVs will only return to the operating in the water if needed for the crisis response.’’

AAV’S Replacement Also Grounded

“This decision was made in the interest of the long-term health of the amphibious vehicle programs and future capabilities," the statement said.

“The AAV will continue to operate on land; 76 percent of its Tasks are land-based. In doing so, we reserve the capability to reverse this decision should the need arise.’’

The decision comes as the AAV’S replacement, the Amphibious Combat Vehicle (ACV), which entered full-rate creation late last year. It has also been grounded since September due to a problem with its towing mechanism.

“We expect that issue to be resolved soon and for ACVs to return to the water in the New year,’’ the Marines statement added.

Publish : 2021-12-24 17:12:00

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