about this being a systemic failure. I found lots of articles that talked about being down to one MRE a day when supply lines were being interdicted, or in other exceptional circumstances. That's not unimaginable; one MRE a day is considered sufficient in emergencies. Ranger candidates eat one MRE daily for 58 (I think it's 58) days of extremely arduous training. But I don't see anything saying troops are being issued one MRE a day for any extended period. Ask a troop just back what it was like, and if he received one MRE a day for three days during the fighting, he'll most likely say something like the guy quoted in the article. It's an anecdote designed to give weight to a complaint; not to belittle anyone, but the right to gripe is timeless and inalienable for a soldier.
Water buffalos are company level equipment; they go anywhere the troops do. Yes, the water sometimes tastes like ass. Such is life in the Army. Generations of US soldiers have dealt with it. There is a limited amount of transport available, even to the US Army, and many things have priority over better tasting water. Here's a passage from a "lessons learned" AAR written by a 1SG in Afghanistan:
"We outsmarted ourselves on how much water to carry. We took in over 12 qrts per man on our initial insertion, which greatly increased our weight. In the old days you did a three-day mission with 6 qts of water, and that was on FT Campbell in the summer. Granted we were all heat
exhaustion at the end but it's more than doable.
We didn't even think to take iodine tablets until we decided we were going to do a mission, then there were none to be found.
Once you get hooked on the water buffalos and water bottles you lose water discipline. I think one of the worst things we have done is every time we train we have a water buffalo next to us. We made it very easy to drink as much water as we want. Problem is when the buffalo isn't there; all of a sudden we have a water crisis. I watched young soldiers drink all their water (2-3 qts) in half a day then watched everyone panic because were out of water. "We're not out of water they've got 3 qts in there belly." They were probably better off than the people who still have it in the canteens."
http://www.squad-leader.com/romero.htmI think these issues are just common military problems that arise during circumstances such as these and are coming to light in front of a public with no real mass understanding of what military life entails.