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Army Meets its Retention Goal
Associated Press
August 31, 2006
WASHINGTON - Staff Sgt. Michael Obleton has already done two tours in
Iraq, dodging roadside bombs as he drove trucks in Army convoys across
the hostile countryside.
He may even return to the front again - a possibility that never
occurred to him when he first joined the active Army in 1997, long
before the 2003 Iraq invasion and the onset of what has become an
increasingly unpopular war.
Obleton knows about the Bush administration's often-touted long war on
terror, and he's seen the Iraq insurgency up close. But he's determined
to continue the fight. So on Thursday he will stand by the flagpole at
Kentucky's Fort Campbell, raise his right hand, and swear once again to
"support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all
enemies."
As he recites his oath of service, administered by the Army's No. 2
ranking officer, Gen. Richard Cody, Obleton will become the 64,200th
Army Soldier to re-enlist this year - allowing the Army to meet its
retention goal a full month before the fiscal year ends on Sept. 30.
"The Army is a good career, there are a lot of benefits," he said this
week from his post at Fort Campbell. "This is something I signed up
for. It's a job. (The war) doesn't worry me."
While the Army struggled last year to meet recruitment goals, it has
been able to keep Soldiers in the service by using a growing list of
incentives and escalating bonuses to shower troops with money,
schooling and career advancements.
So far this year, the Army has doled out an average bonus of $14,000,
to eligible Soldiers, for a total of $610 million in extra payments.
The re-enlistments come despite the escalating casualties on the Iraq
battlefield - where more than 2,600 troops have lost their lives since
March 2003. And they have enabled the Army to meet its retention goal
every year since 1998.
"The bonuses have a lot to do with it, along with a feeling of
accomplishment that comes with doing their mission," said Army
spokesman Henry Minitrez. He also said that retention rates have even
gone up for some of the military's high-profile units - such as the
82nd Airborne or 101st Airborne divisions - when they return home from
Iraq or Afghanistan.
Both the Army National Guard and the Army Reserve expect to meet their
re-enlistment goals for this fiscal year, which are 34,875 and 17,712,
respectively. Both totals are slightly higher than last year's goals.
The number of expected and confirmed re-enlistments dipped in 2003, the year the war began, but has increased since then.
It was the schooling opportunity, rather than a bonus, that was the attraction for Obleton, 35 and originally from Columbus, Ga.
While much of his unit - the 594th Transportation Company attached to
the 101st Airborne Division - may be heading back to Iraq, he plans to
stay in Kentucky for now and attend school to become an Army career
counselor.
"I've known this was going to be a career for me," said Obleton, whose
wife is also in the Army and intends to stay. "We made this decision
together. We are both doing well and we've advanced in our careers."
Back in 1996 when he joined the Army reserves or a year later when he
moved to the active Army, going to war wasn't an issue. But in January
2003, he was sent to Kuwait and was among those first units traveling
back and forth across the border into Iraq in Army convoys.
He was there for seven months and then went back in June 2004 for a
full year. The second tour, he said, "was more intense. You felt the
threat." But, unlike many units, everyone in his company came back
alive.
And once he finishes school, he would be happy to make a third trip to Iraq.
"These are the things we're trained to take on," he said. "We're still there. Our mission isn't complete."
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