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Key US Army ranks begin to thin
Gordon Lubold, The Christian Science Monitor
May 02, 2007
The
reenlistment rate for mid-grade enlisted soldiers dropped from 96
percent in 2005 to 84 percent in the first quarter of this year.
Thousands more mid-level enlisted soldiers are leaving the Army than in
each of the past two years, forcing the service to increase its use of
pay-to-stay programs and find other ways to keep GIs in the fold.
Four years into the fight in Iraq, the Army continues to be successful
in retaining enough soldiers overall – "a miracle"
to some observers, because the war has lasted so long. But that success
masks a growing problem within the ranks: Fewer mid-grade sergeants are
opting to stay in the Army as many face yet another deployment to Iraq
– and, more important, Army officials say, less time
at home.
While a reenlistment shortfall in any Army group is cause for concern,
many consider the declining rate among mid-grade sergeants to be a sign
of potential bigger reenlistment problems for the Army down the line.
In addition, the fact that more mid-level soldiers are leaving could
have a long-term impact on the Army's ability to grow future leaders.
The Army has seen the reenlistment rate of mid-grade enlisted soldiers
drop 12 percentage points, from 96 percent during the first quarter of
2005 to a low of 84 percent for the first quarter of 2007, according to
Pentagon data. As of March, the Army is as much as 10 percentage points
behind where it was in retaining mid-grade soldiers at that time in
2005 and 2006. (The overall retention goal for mid-grade soldiers in
fiscal year 2006 was about 25,000.)
Although Army officials say they will make their overall retention
goals by the end of the fiscal year – in September
– the decline means this will be the hardest year so
far when it comes to keeping soldiers in uniform since the war in Iraq
began.
How bad the problem is depends on whom you ask. To some, the trend is
further proof that the war in Iraq has broken the back of the Army.
Others believe it remains only an ominous warning light on the Army's
collective dashboard but does not mean there is a crisis.
Either way, if mid-grade soldiers do not "re-up" in enough numbers, the
Army will have a problem that will only worsen if not corrected soon.
"I am not alarmed to the point that we are breaking the Army, but [the
numbers] are creeping up," says Army Lt. Gen. David McKiernan, who
commands Army forces in Europe. "We can't lose the leadership of the US
Army, or we will be broken."
Uniformed and civilian officials, both in and outside the Pentagon,
have also expressed worry about the commissioned officer corps. The
"loss rate" among lieutenants and captains has climbed since the war
began, from 6 percent in 2003 to 8 percent in 2006.
Army officials have expanded incentive programs to keep soldiers in,
raising the ceilings on reenlistment bonuses for soldiers in specific
jobs from $15,000 to $20,000. It's also paying as much as $150,000 to
retain soldiers in special-forces jobs.
In addition, the service has created an extra bonus of $7,500 for those
who reenlist during fiscal year 2007. Many of these bonuses are
tax-free if the reenlistment occurs in a war zone.
A recent Associated Press review of bonus programs shows that the Army
and Marine Corps will spend more than $1 billion on reenlistment
bonuses during fiscal 2007, up from $174 million in 2003.
The service has also tried to reassign soldiers who have deployed
multiple times to nondeploying jobs within the Army, says Army Sgt.
Maj. Scott Kuhar, a senior Army career counselor in the Pentagon.
All this raises both short- and long-term concerns about the health of
the Army, says Larry Korb, a senior fellow at the Center for American
Progress, a liberal think tank in Washington.
"The Army has got a tough job," says Mr. Korb, a personnel chief at the
Pentagon in the 1980s. "They didn't start this war and they probably
didn't want to have it, but now they have to deal with the consequences
of it."
Korb worries that various pay-to-stay programs that the Army is
employing may have a long-term effect by retaining soldiers who might
otherwise have gotten out. "You want the people who love the Army and
want to stay in," he says. While the money keeps them in for now, Korb
adds, they won't stay when the reenlistment cash disappears.
Army officials counter that the average bonus paid to reenlist a
soldier – about $11,000 – is not
enough to fundamentally change the nature of the Army's soldier
population and is only helping get the service through this rough
period.
Others are not sounding the alarm, at least not yet. One who does not
see a crisis is Bernard Rostker, who left as head of the Pentagon's
personnel department in 2000. "There is going to be burnout, and this
war is burnout No. 1," says Mr. Rostker, a senior fellow at the RAND
Corp. "The miracle is that the force is still with us, not that we're
down from 96 to 84 percent. To me, that's a good news story."
Army officials have found one interesting trend among soldiers who've
been polled informally on what is driving them away: While many joined
the service to go to combat in a war zone, it's the lack of time at
home, or "dwell time," that hurts, Sergeant Major Kuhar says.
Under a new policy, units will not deploy with less than 12 months of
time at home. But the larger goal is to give them two years between
deployments – a goal the military won't reach
anytime soon.
"The No. 1 thing was dwell time," Kuhar says. "It came back loud and
clear to us that they just want more time with their families or with
their friends before they deploy."
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