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U.S. troops in Iraq are firing .50-caliber machine guns at such a high
rate, the Army is scrambling to resupply them with ammunition - in some cases
dusting off crates of World War II machine gun rounds and shipping them off
to combat units.
In the conflict that has intensified in Iraq since the U.S. invasion in March
2003, the gun that grunts call the "fiddy-cal" or "Ma Deuce,"
after its official designation, M-2, has become a ubiquitous sight mounted on
armored Humvees and other heavy vehicles.
Above the staccato crackle and squeak of small arms fire, the fiddy-cal's distinctive
"THUMP THUMP THUMP" indicates that its 1.6-ounce bullets, exactly
the weight of eight quarters, are going downrange at 2,000 mph. The bullets
are said to be able to stop an onrushing car packed with deadly explosives dead
in its tracks from a mile away. A .50-cal round can travel four miles, generally
not with great accuracy.
At closer ranges, it is so powerful that a round will obliterate a person, penetrate
a concrete wall behind him and several houses beyond that, gunners in Iraq have
said.
"You can stop a car, definitely penetrate the vehicle to take out the
engine - and the driver," said Army Maj. Gen. Charles Swannack Jr., who
recently retired after commanding the 82nd Airborne Division in Iraq.
In the 1990s, fiddy-cals and crates of .50-caliber ammunition gathered dust
as the Army struggled to shed its heavy image and become lighter, quicker and
more high-tech.
Fiddy-cals are early Industrial Age artifacts, invented by John Browning during
World War I.
The gun alone weighs 84 pounds, not including its 40-pound tripod and heavy
brass-jacketed ammunition.
Swivel-mounted in the turret of a Humvee, the gun can lay down a heavy steel
blizzard, 40 rounds a minute, on grouped insurgents or vehicles, and is often
used in convoys or at checkpoints as a last resort to stop suicide car bombers.
Small wonder, then, that the steady increase in .50-cal use began to drain
ammo stockpiles rapidly. At the Blue Grass Army Depot in Richmond, Ky., ammunition
left over from Desert Storm, Vietnam, Korea and even World War II had been stored
in massive concrete bunkers, including some 12 million rounds of .50-cal.