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Gates Announces Longer Tours in Iraq
Pauline Jelinek, Associated Press
April 11, 2007
Washington - Beginning immediately, all active-duty Army soldiers in
Iraq and Afghanistan will serve 15-month tours - three months longer
than the usual standard, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Wednesday.
It was the latest move by the Pentagon to cope with
the strains of fighting two wars simultaneously and maintaining a
higher troop level in Iraq as part of President Bush's revised strategy
for stabilizing Baghdad.
"This policy is a difficult but necessary interim
step," Gates told a Pentagon news conference, adding that the goal is
to eventually return to 12 months as the standard length of tour in
Iraq and Afghanistan.
He said the new policy does not affect the other
main components of the U.S. ground force in Iraq: the Marines, whose
standard tour is seven months, or the Army National Guard or Army
Reserve, which will continue to serve 12-month tours.
Gates acknowledged that the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are making life difficult for many in the military.
"Our forces are stretched, there's no question about that," Gates said.
He said the new policy also seeks to ensure that all
active-duty Army units get at least 12 months at home between
deployments. He said it would allow the Pentagon to maintain the
current level of troops in Iraq for another year, although he added
that there has been no decision on future troop levels.
Without changing the standard tour length to 15
months, the Army would have been forced to send five brigades to Iraq
before they completed 12 months at home, Gates said.
Some units' tours in Iraq had already been extended
beyond 12 months by varying amounts. The new policy will make
deployments more equitable and more predictable for soldiers and for
their families, Gates said.
"I think it is fair to all soldiers that all share the burden equally," he said.
There are currently 145,000 U.S. troops in Iraq, and
when the buildup is completed by June, there would be more than
160,000, officials are calculating.
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