In this June 22, 2003, file photo, a U.S. Apache attack helicopter provides cover to a U.S. military convoy as they travel along the highway at Hit, Iraq, 90 miles northwest of Baghdad. The military is shipping battlefield equipment through Jordan and Kuwait, testing possible exit routes in advance of a U.S. withdrawal in Iraq, military officials said. The convoys -- carrying armored vehicles, weapons and other items -- mark the Pentagon's first steps in confronting the complex logistics of transporting the huge arsenal stockpiled in Iraq over nearly six years.Military testing exit routes out of IraqBy Chelsea J. Carter - The Associated Press
Posted : Saturday Feb 21, 2009 14:24:30 EST
BAGHDAD — The American military is shipping battlefield equipment through Jordan and Kuwait, testing possible exit routes in advance of a U.S. withdrawal in Iraq, military officials said.
The convoys — carrying armored vehicles, weapons and other items — mark the Pentagon’s first steps in confronting the complex logistics of transporting the huge arsenal stockpiled in Iraq over nearly six years.
It’s also part of a wider assessment, ordered by U.S. Central Command, to decide what items the military can transfer, donate, sell or toss away once a full-scale withdrawal is under way, Marine Corps and Army officials told The Associated Press.
“Because they are starting to see a potential reduction of forces, they are looking to get more stuff out,” Terry Moores, the deputy assistant chief of staff for logistics for Marine Corps Central Command, said Saturday.
“We started slow,” Moores said, but added “it’s picked up speed” in recent months.
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