I would have to agree with you J. Carney, I would also like to see the military go to a more powerful round. I own a .40 pistol and love it, though I don't get to shoot it much. But they made a good point at the end of that article, I imagine that the government has tons of 5.56 rounds sitting in warehouses around the country. Spending the money to buy new ammunition would add a lot to a new weapons program.
Compared to training new soldiers to replace the ones that the jam-prone piece of junk BB gun that we are issued right now lets down on a regular basis?
The M-16 has been the riflf of choice for America since Vietnam because we have only now really begun to use it in a proteacted conflict in truely harsh conditions. Sorry guys, Central America isn't all that harsh... just hot as hell and wet- oil can fix that. Sand is a lot harder to deal with than wet, and the very act of cleaning the gun is what attracts more dirt and grit- it sticks to the oil. We had to clean our -16's EVERY DAY... and might have done it every half-day if we had the chance. By contrast my SAW would fire for days dirty and I won't even count the .50 cal... those things a hardy beyond discription.
It was a bad choice to start with.
The ammo can be sold off to private wholesalers at about the same price that the Gov't paid for it, if not one more benificial to the Gov't. New ammo will be contracted at the same insanely low prices.
Money is not an issue here. Politics is all that keeps the M-16 in style... the fact that it is made in Belgum (FN makes all new M-16's and M-4's) and the Baretta is made in Italy makes us look friendly to a couple of our 'cross the pond' neighbors... and probably makes some congressman a lot of money.
We need to contract Colt to make a new .40 cal internally identical to a double-stack 1911A1 and Barrett to make 6.8mm uppers to replace all the old .223's we have. American companies, American jobs, and good old fashioned American 'bigger is better' thinking.
We need a little more of that these days.