Pentagon abandons Guard, Reserve protections; institutes re-mobilizations up to 24 consecutive months
WASHINGTON, Jan. 11 — The Pentagon announced steps Thursday to make more reservists available for duty in Iraq and Afghanistan by changing the policies that govern how often members of the Army National Guard and Reserve can be mobilized.
The new rules mean that individual Guard members and entire units that have already been deployed in the last five years may be called up again for as long as 24 consecutive months, officials said. In practice, the Pentagon intends to try to limit future mobilizations to no more than a year, once every five years, Gen. Peter Pace, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters.
The policy change was brought on by the prolonged American troop commitments in Iraq and Afghanistan, and military officials said it would have been necessary even if President Bush had not decided to send more than 20,000 additional troops to Iraq.
The change, announced by Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates at a White House news conference, will enable the Bush administration to call up tens of thousands of Guard members who were off limits under the previous rules, without having to issue another politically delicate mobilization order.
The decision to send five active-duty combat brigades to Iraq in the next few months means the Army will need to call up National Guard combat brigades that have already done one-year tours in Iraq, and to do so sooner, officials said.
A senior military official said that by "this time next year," the Pentagon "probably will be calling again on Guard units that have previously done combat tours."
Read the rest at the NY Times
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The new rules mean that individual Guard members and entire units that have already been deployed in the last five years may be called up again for as long as 24 consecutive months, officials said. In practice, the Pentagon intends to try to limit future mobilizations to no more than a year, once every five years, Gen. Peter Pace, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters.
The policy change was brought on by the prolonged American troop commitments in Iraq and Afghanistan, and military officials said it would have been necessary even if President Bush had not decided to send more than 20,000 additional troops to Iraq.
The change, announced by Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates at a White House news conference, will enable the Bush administration to call up tens of thousands of Guard members who were off limits under the previous rules, without having to issue another politically delicate mobilization order.
The decision to send five active-duty combat brigades to Iraq in the next few months means the Army will need to call up National Guard combat brigades that have already done one-year tours in Iraq, and to do so sooner, officials said.
A senior military official said that by "this time next year," the Pentagon "probably will be calling again on Guard units that have previously done combat tours."
Read the rest at the NY Times
Related Link:
Bush: 20,000 more to Iraq; 'expect more casualites'
Related Link:
Analysis: Sending more troops could further strain Army
Related Link:
Pentagon Sources: Surge requires 2nd tours of duty for Reserves, Guard
Related Link:
Odierno: 2 to 3 years needed to reach U.S. goals
Related Link:
Gates: U.S. 'enduring presence' in Mid-East, 'will be here for a long time'
Related Link:
Selective Service to test 'draft machinery'
Related Link:
General Cody: Military needs more troops or increased use of Guard, Reserves
Related Link:
General Schoomaker: Army near breaking point, need thousands more troops plus bigger call up of reserves
Related Link:
Army, Marine Corps to ask for more troops, press hard for 'full access' to Guard, Reserves
Related Link:
Pentagon: 57,000 troops to deploy early next year
Related Link:
New Iraq deployments could stretch Reserve Force
Related Link:
Army seeks to increase rotation through reassignment of specialists to 'high-demand roles'
Related Link:
Secretary of AF: Airmen to remain in Iraq past 2010
Related Link:
Army: Troops to stay in Iraq until 2010
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