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Army Too Stretched If Iraq Buildup Lasts
Lolita C. Baldor, Associated Press
August 19, 2007
Sapped by nearly six years of war, the Army has nearly exhausted its
fighting force and its options if the Bush administration decides to
extend the Iraq buildup beyond next spring.
The Army's 38 available combat units are deployed,
just returning home or already tapped to go to Iraq, Afghanistan or
elsewhere, leaving no fresh troops to replace five extra brigades that
President Bush sent to Baghdad this year, according to interviews and
military documents reviewed by The Associated Press.
That presents the Pentagon with several painful
choices if the U.S. wants to maintain higher troop levels beyond the
spring of 2008:
Using National Guard units on an accelerated schedule.
Breaking the military's pledge to keep soldiers in Iraq for no longer than 15 months.
Breaching a commitment to give soldiers a full year at home before sending them back to war.
For a war-fatigued nation and a Congress bent on bringing troops home, none of those is desirable.
In Iraq, there are 18 Army brigades, each with about
3,500 soldiers. At least 13 more brigades are scheduled to rotate in.
Two others are in Afghanistan and two additional ones are set to rotate
in there. Also, several other brigades either are set for a future
deployment or are scattered around the globe.
The few units that are not at war, in transformation
or in their 12-months home time already are penciled in for deployments
later in 2008 or into 2009. Shifting them would create problems in the
long-term schedule.
Most Army brigades have completed two or three tours
in Iraq or Afghanistan; some assignments have lasted as long as 15
months. The 2nd Brigade, 10th Mountain Division, has done four tours.
Two Marine regiments - each roughly the same size as
an Army brigade - also in Iraq,_ bringing the total number of brigades
in the country to 20.
When asked what units will fill the void in the
coming spring if any need to be replaced, officials give a grim shake
of the head, shrug of the shoulders or a palms-up, empty-handed gesture.
"The demand for our forces exceeds the sustainable
supply," the Army chief of staff, Gen. George Casey, said last week.
"Right now we have in place deployment and mobilization policies that
allow us to meet the current demands. If the demands don't go down over
time, it will become increasingly difficult for us to provide the
trained and ready forces" for other missions.
Casey said he would not be comfortable extending
troops beyond their 15-month deployments. But other military officials
acknowledge privately that option is on the table.
Pentagon leaders hope there is enough progress in
Iraq to allow them to scale back at least part of the nearly
30,000-strong buildup when soldiers begin leaving Iraq around March and
April.
There are 162,000 U.S. troops in Iraq now, the
highest level since the war began in 2003. That figure is expected to
hit 171,000 this fall as fresh troops rotate in.
Gen. David Petraeus, the top commander in Iraq who
will deliver a much anticipated progress report to Congress in
September, said Wednesday he is considering possible troop cuts and
believes the U.S. will have fewer forces in Iraq by next summer.
Other commanders have said the security situation is
improving, which would allow U.S. troops to be shifted from combat and
lead to an eventual force reduction.
Still, Petraeus and other military leaders have
warned against drawing down too quickly. In fact, an upbeat progress
report in September may solidify arguments that additional troops
should stay longer to ensure that positive changes stick.
"The longer that you keep American forces there, the
longer you give this process to solidify and to make sure that it's not
going to slide back," said Frederick Kagan, an American Enterprise
Institute analyst who recently returned from an eight-day visit to
Iraq. "The sooner you take them out, the more you run the risk that
enemies will come in and try to disrupt."
Kagan, a leading supporter of the current buildup
strategy, said any decision to maintain force levels would have to take
into account the effects on the Army. That would include, he said, the
strains of sending Guard units back to Iraq more rapidly than Pentagon
policy allows or keeping active duty units there longer than 15 months.
"You have the same tradeoff at every moment in this
process, which is the institutional well-being of the Army versus what
is felt is necessary to win the war," Kagan said.
According to military officials, some soldiers in
Iraq are hearing that it may not be wise to pack their bags to come
home when their 15-month tour is up. But to date, Pentagon officials,
including Defense Secretary Robert Gates, have said they have no plans
to extend those tours.
National Guard officials are bracing for a new round
of Guard deployments and a move to decrease their time at home between
tours - despite announced plans to give the citizen soldiers five years
off for every one year served.
One Guard official said this past week that the Army
is pushing to give Guard units four years or less at home in order to
get access to those combat brigades sooner.
Last April the Pentagon notified National Guard
brigades in four states that they should be prepared to deploy to Iraq
later this year. But documents obtained by the AP show that Guard units
in five states - Indiana, Arkansas, Ohio, Oklahoma and Minnesota - are
scheduled to deploy to Iraq before the end of the year. A New York
Guard unit is set to go to Afghanistan.
The shortage of combat units will be remedied over
time. The Pentagon slowly is increasing the size of the active-duty
Army by 65,000 members to 547,000 by 2012. The 38 combat brigades
currently available for war will expand to 48 by 2013.
The Iraqis hold the key to any U.S. withdrawals. The
government in Baghdad has made little progress on political changes the
Pentagon says are critical to restoring stability to the country, thus
allowing U.S. troops to begin leaving.
If progress is not made and the violence does not abate, the Pentagon will turn again to the Army.
"The Army will do what's necessary and will pay a
very high price if necessary," said Kagan. "but I'm hopeful that it
won't come to that and I honestly don't think that it will."
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