Casey: Army 'consumed with meeting the current demands' at expense of readiness, soldier well being
Above: Soldiers with the 23rd Infantry Regiment, prepare to enter and clear a house in search of insurgents in Baghdad last Thursday.
The Army's top general said Tuesday that lengthening U.S. tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan beyond the current 15 months would be too stressful and risky for troops. Gen. George Casey, the Army's chief of staff, also said he didn't know when officials would be able to cut the length of soldiers' tours back to 12 months...
In an often blunt assessment of the state of the Army, Casey acknowledged that the long and repeated battlefield tours have knocked the Army out of balance, so it can no longer provide ready forces as quickly as it should for other missions.
"We're consumed with meeting the current demands and we're unable to provide ready forces as rapidly as we would like for other contingencies, nor are we able to provide an acceptable tempo of deployments to sustain our soldiers and families for the long haul," said Casey. Before taking over as chief of the Army earlier this year, Casey was the top U.S. commander in Iraq.
Read the rest at the LA Times
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The Army's top general said Tuesday that lengthening U.S. tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan beyond the current 15 months would be too stressful and risky for troops. Gen. George Casey, the Army's chief of staff, also said he didn't know when officials would be able to cut the length of soldiers' tours back to 12 months...
In an often blunt assessment of the state of the Army, Casey acknowledged that the long and repeated battlefield tours have knocked the Army out of balance, so it can no longer provide ready forces as quickly as it should for other missions.
"We're consumed with meeting the current demands and we're unable to provide ready forces as rapidly as we would like for other contingencies, nor are we able to provide an acceptable tempo of deployments to sustain our soldiers and families for the long haul," said Casey. Before taking over as chief of the Army earlier this year, Casey was the top U.S. commander in Iraq.
Read the rest at the LA Times
Related Link:
General Cody: 15-month tours to apply to deployments through Summer, 2008
Related Link:
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Related Link:
Report: Petraeus tells Congressional delegation the U.S. 'will be in Iraq in some way for 9 or 10 years'
Related Link:
General Lute: 'It makes sense to... consider' reinstating draft; Says it 'has always been an option on the table'
Related Link:
U.S.: At least 8 months before Iraqis can begin to take over security in Ramadi
Related Link:
Commanders: Lack of equipment, air power hinder Iraqi takeover of security in Mosul
Related Link:
Joint Chiefs Nominee Mullen: 'I do think we will be there for years, not months'
Related Link:
Cheney: Petraeus' September report will announce 'significant progress'
Related Link:
Rice, Gates promise Arab leaders no 'precipitous' withdrawal from Iraq
Related Link:
Odierno: 'We need forces here for a few more years'
Related Link:
Petraeus: Substantial U.S. troop presence needed through mid-2009
Related Link:
Sources: U.S. increasing funding, support of armed civilian militias
Related Link:
General Dubik: Iraqi forces lacking experienced officers; Sectarianism still prevalent, but fighting is priority
Related Link:
Petraeus: September report to recommend continuing 'surge' through Summer 2008
Related Link:
Gaskin: Iraqi Army lacks logistics to remain battle ready
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Iraqi Ambassador: U.S. dragging feet on equipping security forces
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Reports: Petraeus-Crocker classified plan seeks 'sustainable security by the summer of 2009'
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General Pittard: Handing over security control 'not a main priority'; At least 2 more years needed
Related Link:
Iraq National Security Advisor: Iraqi takeover of security won't meet goal
Related Link:
Quarterly Report: Iraq security effort lagging
Related Link:
General Lynch: Surge must last into summer of next year
Related Link:
General Gaskin: 2 more years needed to support Iraqi security forces
Related Link:
Odierno: Any quick change risks troop lives; says September report only preliminary; 'In order to do a good assessment I need at least until November'
Related Link:
Chairman of Joint Chiefs Pace: 'What I'm hearing now is a sea change' in Iraq security; Says Pentagon will present own recommendations in September
Related Link:
Chairman of Joint Chiefs Pace: Bigger troop buildup an option
Related Link:
Report: Internal White House debates raging over 'post-surge redeployment'; Gates pressing for pullback from Baghdad in 2008
Related Link:
Gates, Mixon: Withdrawal logistics could take years
Related Link:
Lynch: 'Surge' needs to last through Spring, 2008
Related Link:
Lynch: Not enough troops to maintain security
Related Link:
Chairman of Joint Chiefs Pace: Number of Iraqi battalions declines from 10 to 6, calls it a 'minor variation'
Related Link:
Marine Commandant Conway: Marine Corps resisting pressure to extend combat deployments
Related Link:
Army Chief of Staff Casey: Deployments may extend past 15 months
Related Link:
Petraeus: Expect insurgent 'sensational attacks' to 'grab the headlines to create a mini-Tet'; Says Sept. report will give 'implications' of 'options'
Related Link:
Lynch: Withdrawal of surge forces will escalate violence; 'It would be a mess'
Related Link:
Report: Gates seeks deal for 'long-term presence' in exchange for troop drawdown by 2009
Related Link:
Report: U.S. military has serious doubt in Iraq troops
Related Link:
Pittard: 'A couple of years' before Iraqis can provide full security
Related Link:
Petraeus: No foreseeable drawdown of troops; 'We have a lot of heavy lifting to do'
Related Link:
Troops denied month break
Related Link:
Report: Iraqi soldiers face Baghdad rotations of only 3 months
Related Link:
Congress, DoD spar over soldier testimony on Iraqi forces training
Related Link:
Bush signs Democrat-controlled Congress' $95 billion bill to fund the war with no restrictions through September
Related Link:
General Dempsey: U.S., Iraq to spend $14 billion for 40,000 new Iraqi soldiers
Related Link:
Pentagon extends tours to 15 months for all active-duty army troops in Iraq, Afghanistan; Guard, Reserve, Marines excepted
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