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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
US army extends Iraq tours of Guard and Reserve troops
By Kate Randall
11 September 2003
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In a sign that the United States military is being stretched
to the limit to sustain is open-ended occupation of Iraq, the
US Army last Friday ordered about 20,000 National Guard and Army
Reserve troops in Iraq and surrounding countries to extend their
tours of duty to a year, months longer than most had anticipated.
Since September 11, 2001, military officials have had the authority
to activate Guard and Reserve troops for two years, but most have
been called up for one year of total service, including weeks
or months of training in the US before being shipped to Iraq and
debriefings upon their return. The new directive will extend most
troops original year-long mobilizations by anywhere from
one to six months.
Army officials leaked details of the new deployment order to
the Washington Post late Fridaya time likely to receive
minimal press coverageand have yet to make a formal announcement
of the change. President Bush also made no mention of the directive
in his nationally televised address Sunday evening, despite calling
on Americans to sacrifice and bear the burden of the
continuing military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.
In keeping with the Bush administrations war on
terror, those being asked to sacrifice are working men and
women whose extended military deployment threatens not only the
disruption of their personal and financial situation, but their
very lives.
National Guard and Reserve troops in Iraqwho only learned
of their extended deployment from press reportsresponded
angrily. One soldier interviewed by ABC News said that any comments
he had would have to be bleeped out. A spokesman for
the Army Reserve at Fort McPherson, Ga., told the Post
that most Guard and Reserve forces in Iraq and Kuwait would not
be pleasantly surprised by the news.
The move will place increased hardship on the tens of thousands
of men and women in the Army Reserve and National Guard who are
already deployed overseas. Signing up for service with the expectation
that they would serve on weekends and for annual training, more
than 128,000 have now been assigned to active military duty both
overseas and in the US.
The majority of reservists and guardsmen hold down civilian
jobs and many support families. Their ranks also include students
and retirees. Prolonged tours of duty will not only place strains
on family life, but will threaten the jobs and small businesses
left behind by deployed troops.
The army directive will also undoubtedly result in increased
casualties among this segment of the military. Since the US invaded
Iraq in March, 289 US troops have been killed, including 19 National
Guard troops and 12 Army Reservists. One of these casualties,
21-year-old Darryl T. Dent, was buried at Arlington National Cemetery
in Washington DC on Tuesday. He was killed by a detonated explosive
as he rode with about 20 members of the DC Army Guards 547th
Transportation Company in a convoy providing security for a mail
run in the northern Iraqi city of Al Adsad.
Darryl Dents story is similar to those of many men and
women who signed up for the Guard or Reserves and found themselves
in war-torn Iraq or Afghanistan, facing a population increasingly
hostile to US military occupation. He joined the National Guard
in 1999 and, before being deployed overseas in April, worked as
a security guard in a mall in Arlington, Virginia.
According to Vernon Dent, the young mans father, Darryl
dreamed of attending medical school and had no plans to make a
career out of military service. The senior Dent reacted bitterly
to his sons death and the news that other young men and
women would be kept overseas longer. What they need to do,
he told the Washington Post, is bring them home.
According to National Guard spokesmen, there are presently
about 30,500 National Guard troops stationed in Iraq and Kuwaitor
about 18 percent of the total 166,000 US forces. This is the largest
National Guard battlefield presence since the Korean War. By comparison,
only about 7,000 National Guard troops served in Vietnam.
The US occupation of Iraq relies heavily on Guard and Reserve
troops in such specialized areas as engineering, military police,
civil affairs and psychological operations. A rotation plan announced
by the Army in July to sustain a 120,000-troop force in Iraq through
the end of 2004 includes two National Guard brigades. US military
commanders fear that news of the 12-month deployments will undermine
recruitment and retention of guard troops and reservists, as more
prospective volunteers see economic and personal hardshipas
well as death or maimingas the increasingly likely outcome
of joining up.
The US Armys decision to extend National Guard and Army
Reserve deployments is indicative of the general personnel crisis
currently facing the US military. Almost six months since the
US launched the war on Iraq, about half of the armys combat
forces are still deployed in the country. By early next year,
eight of the 10 active-duty army divisions will have served in
either Iraq or Afghanistan. The thousands of guard and reserve
troops deployed are in addition to these forces.
See Also:
Bush, 9/11 and Iraqa policy founded
on deception
[9 September 2003]
The Iraq quagmire
[21 August 2003]
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