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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Pentagon calls up 10,000 National Guard for combat duty in
Iraq
By James Conachy
4 October 2003
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With its occupation of Iraq becoming a morass, the Bush administration
has been forced into the largest call-up of part-time National
Guard troops for front-line combat operations since the Vietnam
War. On September 26, US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld
authorised the Army to mobilise two 5,000-strong brigades of National
Guard infantrymen for deployment to Iraq.
The North Carolina-based 30th Infantry Brigade (Mechanised),
supplemented by a battalion from New York, was mobilised as of
October 1. The Arkansas-based, 39th Infantry Brigade (Light),
supplemented by a battalion from Oregon, will be mobilised on
October 12.
The guardsmen will be separated from their families and jobs
for at least 18 months, including a 12-month period in Iraq itself.
It is likely they will be deployed between January and April 2004,
after a period of full-time training, to relieve brigades of the
101st Airborne Division in the unstable areas between Baghdad
and Tikrit.
The invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq have seen part-time National
Guard and military reservists called up in large numbers, and
for lengthy periods of time, but the deployment of the 30th and
39th for combat duty marks a new phase.
The National Guard was established as a state-based force and
ostensibly exists for homeland defence and assisting civilian
authorities in times of emergency. Under normal peacetime conditions,
National Guard units are answerable to the governor of their home
state. The website Global Security, for example, provides
the following information about the Arkansas 39th Infantry: The
Brigade takes great pride in the fact that its units have provided
personnel in response to state emergencies by request of the Governor.
The officers and soldiers of the Brigade are prepared to respond
to floods, tornadoes, forest fires, ice storms, and have participated
in searches for missing persons....
In times of war, control of the National Guard constitutionally
reverts to the federal government but generally its troops were
not deployed directly in an overseas combat role. In the 1990s,
however, that began to change. In 1994, the Clinton administration
designated 15 National Guard brigades as enhanced separate
units, to be available for dispatch within 90 days to a war zone.
The Pentagon sent National Guard units as part of NATO forces
in Bosnia.
With the declaration of the war on terror following
September 11, 2001, the Bush administration assumed command over
the National Guard and has deployed it on a massive scalebut
mainly as support troops. Of the 170,000 National Guard and reservists
currently on full-time active duty, most are military policemen,
engineers, drivers, medical personnel, administration and logistic
experts, pilots and skilled technicians. Less than 10,000 are
in Iraq, with another 8,000 in Kuwait.
The wars of the last two years, however, have stretched the
American military to the limit. The Pentagons claim that
only 50,000 US troops would need to remain in Iraq following an
invasion have proven to be just as false as the lies over weapons
of mass destruction. Sixteen combat brigades of armored
and infantry units are still there, as part of a 138,000-strong
US occupation force, and are barely keeping control over the country,
let alone suppressing the resistance. The Bush administration
is being forced to call up the National Guard combat units simply
to relieve the regular brigades that have been in Iraq for nearly
12 months.
Mounting resistance
Events of the past week have highlighted the dangerous conditions
that the National Guard will confront. September 27 saw the first
attack in Baghdads so-called green zone, the
highly defended and allegedly impregnable area the US occupation
authority has sealed off as its headquarters. Three rocket-propelled
grenades were fired into the 14th floor of the Rashid Hotel.
Around the city of Tikrit, the 4th Infantry Division conducted
over two dozen raids on homes and buildings last weekend. A military
spokesman told the press the latest operation resulted in the
detention of 92 people suspected of guerilla activities. It was
intended to break the back of the Fedayeen [resistance fighters]
in the area. A roadside bomb killed an American soldier close
to the main US base in Tikrit on Wednesday, demonstrating the
failure of the latest raidsand the hundreds of earlier raids
and thousands of detentions.
Last Sunday, six paratroopers were wounded in an ambush near
Fallujah. To the west of Baghdad, American forces fought an eight-hour
pitched battle on Monday and were forced to call in air support
after resistance fighters ambushed two US vehicle columns. At
least one US soldier died and two were wounded. Another American
soldier was killed Wednesday during a street patrol in Baghdad.
Over the past seven days, American troops or Iraqi police have
also opened fire on angry crowds demonstrating against unemployment
or repression in Baghdad and the northern cities of Kirkuk and
Mosul.
In a belated admission the US is facing escalating unrest,
Paul Bremer, the head of the US authority in Iraq, told the US
Senate last month: The reality of foreign troops on the
streets is starting to chafe. Some Iraqis are beginning to regard
us as occupiers and not as liberators.
The commander of US forces in Iraq, General Ricardo Sanchez,
told the press on October 2 that American troops were being killed
at the rate of three to six per week, with another 40 per week
being wounded.
Based on the present casualty rate, it can be expected that
between 30 and 50 of the 10,000 National Guardsmen leaving to
occupy Iraq will die over their period of active service. Several
hundred more are likely to be maimed and several hundred others
likely to fall seriously ill.
It is possible, however, that the part-time Guard units will
suffer a higher rate of casualties than the regular Army units
they are replacing.
According to a report in the October 6 edition of the Nation
magazine, a National Guard unit that was called up last December
and has been in Iraq since the war beganthe 3rd battalion
of the 124th Florida-based National Guard Infantryis ill-equipped
compared to regular units and is being treated as cannon-fodder
by Army commanders. Sixty-five percent of some companies of the
124th are college students from poorer areas of the state who
signed up to get tuition at the Florida State University.
According to the Nation, the 124ths rifles are
retooled Vietnam-era M16s and its radios were so inadequate the
guardsmen bought their own walkie-talkies. They have also purchased,
from civilian contractors, their own night-vision equipment, flashlights,
satellite phones and air-conditioners. The soldiers complain of
lack of water and lack of fresh food.
The Nation reports: The third [battalion] of the
124th is now attached to the newly arrived First Armored Division
and when its time to raid suspected resistance cells its
the Guardsmen who have to kick in the doors and clear the apartments.
A sergeant told the magazine: The First AD wants us to catch
bullets for them but wont give us enough water, doesnt
let us wear do-rags [type of bandana] and makes us roll down our
shirt sleeves so we look proper! Can you believe this s**t?
Growing bitterness among part-time soldiers
Such animosity stems from a particularly low level of morale
among the Guardsmen and reservists. Over the past several months,
some have used the letters page of the militarys Stars
& Stripes newspaper to vent their frustration at the Bush
administrations use of part-time soldiers for foreign occupations.
(See: http://www.stripesonline.com/,
Letter section, for an archive of letters since June 2003).
Their letters reveal pervasive bitterness over the length of
time that the part-time soldiers are being forced to spend on
active duty. They show growing anger at the Title 10 executive
order issued on September 14, 2001, which has allowed the Department
of Defense to prevent personnel leaving the military when their
term of service expires.
A California National Guardsmen serving in Kuwait wrote: My
expiration, term of service date was June 28. But since Im
in the Guard I was automatically extended. Apparently no one told
the finance department, because I was kicked out of the system.
So I havent been paid since. It will be two months on Sept.
1 since Ive received any money from the Army. I have a family.
What am I supposed to tell my creditors?... Were all on
Title 10 orders. Ive even been told I have to re-enlist.
Does anyone really think Im going to re-enlist after being
treated like this? If I cant be put back into the system,
then I should be sent home.
In a letter published on September 11, an Army reservist in
Kuwait wrote: Its already hard to focus on being here
for six more months. They told us that they were working on a
window of six months or a little more to get us home. But once
again that turned out to be just another rug pulled out from under
us. So now were stuck here until January 2004 or thereafter.
By then, of course, Ill be unemployed. So how can we keep
up the good work like everyone is telling us?
A National Guard sergeant, who was told her unit was going
home in June only to have the date changed to December, wrote:
The knocks on our morale are devastating. Were physically
able, but mentally and spiritually were dying. If Army National
Guard retention is anything of importance, we need to have faith
in our government and leaders. But we cant see anyone taking
a stand for soldiers... Were slowly becoming frantic. I
hear people say that theyre going to begin hurting themselves
or others if they cant go home. The helplessness our soldiers
are feeling is indescribable...
In response to the complaints, other soldiers, particularly
professional NCOs and officers, are writing in with denunciations
and demands that the soldiers suck it up and drive on.
There is an instinctive concern among those who defend the Bush
administration that such grievances reflect growing doubts within
the broader American population about the legitimacy of the war.
No weapons of mass destruction have been found and
the Iraqi resistance is ongoing. Aggravating popular concerns
about a Vietnam-style quagmire is the Bush administrations
refusal to give a timeline for ending the occupation of Iraq or
reducing the number of troops in the country.
At present, there are 23,000 troops in Iraq from Britain, Poland,
Spain, Italy, the Ukraine and an assortment of smaller states.
If the Bush administration is unable to convince, bribe or browbeat
other countries to send an additional 10,000 to 15,000 troops,
the US military will be compelled to call up more National Guard
brigades to send to Iraq by mid-2004. The only alternative would
be to reduce troop numbers or bring back to Iraq regular brigades
that only recently returned from an overseas deployment.
In a clear signal that more National Guard will soon be Iraq-bound,
the 5,000-strong 81st Infantry Brigade from Washington has been
placed on notice for possible activation later in the year.
See Also:
As Washington readies "reconstruction"
Iraqis riot over unemployment, corruption
[2 October 2003]
US soldier asks: "How
many more must die" in Iraq?
[25 September 2003]
Bush at the UNa war
criminal takes the podium
[24 September 2003]
Escalating attacks on US troops
in Iraq
[22 September 2003]
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