Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Morale in the Military?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #16
    By Spc. Bill Putnam
    July 23, 2003

    WASHINGTON (Army News Service July 23, 2003) – Gen. Jack Keane said that
    most units deploying to Iraq over the next few months can expect stays
    of up to one year when he announced the unit rotation schedule July 23.
    “What we have done is taken (Gen. John Abizaid’s) requirements and his
    needs, and looked at the forces in Iraq, and devised a plan to meet
    those needs,” said Keane, the acting Army chief of Staff. Abizaid is the
    commander of Central Command.

    Here’s how the rotation schedule for Iraq currently looks:

    · The 82nd Airborne Division will replace the 3rd Infantry Division by
    September. Only one brigade and the division headquarters from the 82nd
    Airborne will deploy to Iraq. Two of the division’s brigades are
    currently deployed, one is in Afghanistan and the one in Iraq will
    re-deploy by January.

    · The 1st Infantry Division will deploy from Germany to replace the 4th
    Infantry Division by April.

    · The 1st Cavalry Division will replace both the 2nd Armored Cavalry
    Regiment and the 1st Armored Division by April.

    · The Army’s first Stryker Brigade Combat Team, the 3rd Brigade, 2nd
    Infantry Division, will replace the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment by
    March 2004.

    · The 173rd Airborne Brigade will re-deploy back to Italy by April.

    · A multinational division will replace the 101st Airborne Division by
    February.

    · Two Army National Guard Enhanced Separate Brigade Teams will deploy
    with the 1st ID and the 1st Cavalry. Keane didn’t name the Guard units
    tapped for deployment, though.

    The one exception to the 12-month deployments are the Guard brigades,
    said Keane. They will be mobilized for one year but will spend six
    months in Iraq.

    Deployments beyond that one-year period are still being looked at, said
    Keane and Maj. Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the vice-director of the Joint
    Chiefs of Staff.

    Keane said it was important to understand the three guidelines that are
    driving the new Iraq rotation policy.

    Abizaid needs a force large enough to defeat the guerilla movements that
    threaten securing Iraq.

    To do that, a predictable number of soldiers on the ground are needed.
    An intended rotation plan of 12 months was the solution to that, Keane
    said.

    Recognizing that most units deploying to Iraq will come from the Army,
    the military wants to use active-duty units from all branches of the
    U.S. military, said Keane. Engineer units from the Air Force or Navy
    might be deployed in place of Army engineer units, he explained.

    The schedule will also allow the use of Reserve volunteers and
    reserve-component units that haven’t been mobilized recently to “balance
    the stress across the board,” Keane said.

    The Army also wanted to have units ready for the war on terrorism and
    other contingencies like North Korea, Keane said.

    Eliminating or reducing participation in exercises and other commitments
    is a part of that, he said.

    “Internationalizing” the force in Iraq is also a goal of the U.S., he
    said. British and Italian army units are already on the ground with more
    nations contributing later.

    Other nations like Poland and the Netherlands are sending troops and
    more nations can be expected to contribute later this year, said Keane
    and McChrystal.

    The new U.S. units sent to Iraq will also assist the Coalition
    Provisional Authority in developing the new Iraqi police force,
    provincial defense force and national army, he said.

    Once those Iraqi units are established, most of the security tasks will
    be handed over to them as quickly as possible, Keane said.

    Contractors will also be used to provide logistical and training support
    and reduce the numbers of troops down as well, Keane said.

    Although he didn’t say specifically what they were, Keane said that
    quality of life and incentive issues to support the year-long rotations
    will be established.

    The plan, as envisioned, “will allow time for the security situation to
    improve” in Iraq, Keane said.

    Keane also announced the rotation schedule for Bosnia, Kosovo, the Sinai
    and Afghanistan. Deployments to those theaters will continue to be six
    months.

    · A brigade from the 10th Mountain Division will replace the one from
    the 82nd Airborne Division in Afghanistan by August.

    · The 34th Infantry Division, from Minnesota, will replace the 35th ID
    in Bosnia by September, and the 28th ID, from Pennsylvania, in Kosovo by
    February.

    · Sister battalions in the 34th ID will replace each other in the Sinai
    by January.

    Unit manning during deployments has always been a challenge throughout
    the Army’s history and subsequent policies have done their best to
    address the theater commander’s needs, said Keane.

    Entire units were deployed for “the duration” of World War II, said
    Keane. The one exception to that were aircraft crews who flew a set
    number of missions before going back to the U.S. for training, Keane
    said.

    A unit rotation schedule was developed for combat units during the
    Korean War depending on that unit’s job. Infantry, tank and artillery
    units spent six months on the front; administrative and support units
    had 12-month deployments. Eventually a complicated point system for
    individual soldiers was worked out, Keane said.

    During Vietnam, a soldier spent one year in country on an individual
    basis. It didn’t matter what job he held, Keane said.

    In 1982, a six-month deployment was used for the Sinai mission.

    A 12-month deployment was used initially in Bosnia but then a six-month
    deployment system was developed in 1996. That system has been used since
    and now is used in Kosovo, he said.

    The six-month unit deployments are in use today in Afghanistan, said
    Keane.

    Currently the Army has 368,000 soldiers deployed to 120 countries around
    the world, Keane said. There are 133,000 soldiers in Iraq with another
    34,000 soldiers in Kuwait supporting them. Keane did not say how many
    were active Army, National Guard or Army Reserve.

    More than 30,000 soldiers are in Korea; 1,000 are in the Phillippines;
    1,500 soldiers are serving in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba; 5,100 soldiers serve
    in the Balkans; and just under 10,000 are in Afghanistan.

    More than 28,000 soldiers, most from the National Guard and Reserve, are
    deployed in the U.S. for homeland security

    Twenty-four of the 33 active Army Brigade Combat Teams, or 73 percent,
    are deployed overseas.

    Fifteen of the National Guard’s 45 Enhanced Separate Battalion Combat
    Teams, or 33 percent are also deployed overseas, Keane said.
    - RES NON VERBA - DE OPRESSO LIBER - VERITAS ET LIBERTAS - O TOLMON NIKA - SINE PARI - VIGLIA PRETIUM LIBERTAS - SI VIS PACEM , PARA BELLUM -
    - LEGIO PATRIA NOSTRA - one shot , one kill - freedom exists only in a book - everything you always wanted to know about special forces - everything you always wanted to know about Israel - what Dabur does in his free time , ... - in french - “Become an anti-Semitic teacher for 5 Euro only.”
    WHY DOES ISRAEL NEED A SECURITY FENCE --- join in an exceptional demo game > join here forum is now open ! - the new civ Conquest screenshots > go see them UPDATED 07.11.2003 ISRAEL > crisis or challenge ?

    Comment


    • #17
      Originally posted by Dissident
      I didn't actually do any fighting. Though I should mention I was under the Clinton administration- and Clinton was nice enough not to start any wars.
      Except for that war with Yugoslavia, and he bombed Iraq quite frequently.
      Christianity: The belief that a cosmic Jewish Zombie who was his own father can make you live forever if you symbolically eat his flesh and telepathically tell him you accept him as your master, so he can remove an evil force from your soul that is present in humanity because a rib-woman was convinced by a talking snake to eat from a magical tree...

      Comment


      • #18
        Originally posted by Dissident

        I didn't actually do any fighting. Though I should mention I was under the Clinton administration- and Clinton was nice enough not to start any wars.
        *Cough* Operation Desert Fox *Cough*
        Today, you are the waves of the Pacific, pushing ever eastward. You are the sequoias rising from the Sierra Nevada, defiant and enduring.

        Comment


        • #19
          Originally posted by Lonestar


          *Cough* Operation Desert Fox *Cough*
          You prefer Nyquil or Dayquil?
          A lot of Republicans are not racist, but a lot of racists are Republican.

          Comment


          • #20
            liqourquil
            Today, you are the waves of the Pacific, pushing ever eastward. You are the sequoias rising from the Sierra Nevada, defiant and enduring.

            Comment


            • #21
              Originally posted by Lonestar
              liqourquil
              A lot of Republicans are not racist, but a lot of racists are Republican.

              Comment


              • #22
                Desert Fox?

                Was that the Monica Lewinsky distracter/

                I did not mention Kosovo. But that was more like a conflict.

                I did do operations in support of all the activity in that region in the 90's. I got some award for that. But I didn't actually do anything except make the ship go through the water as usual.

                Comment


                • #23
                  Yes. The infamous Asprin Factory Bombing was too.
                  Today, you are the waves of the Pacific, pushing ever eastward. You are the sequoias rising from the Sierra Nevada, defiant and enduring.

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Originally posted by panag
                    Fifteen of the National Guard’s 45 Enhanced Separate Battalion Combat

                    Guess who my unit is not waiting on The good old 39th Infantry Brigade out of Arkansas.


                    As for morale. It always sucks when your deployed and have no idea when your comming home. Then again we did sign the contract. I think some of the hard feelings recently have been because some of the units that have been sitting over since the beggining are there while some of the higher officers have rotated out already. In part some of the problems are a result of the military trying to push the at home atmosphere while they are in the states wth their families snuggled up tight. Then when **** hits the fan, hubby or wife are suddenly at war. You have to go back to some of the older folks that were around for Vietnam to get that war time feeling.

                    The national guard is a different story. They push the two days a month, three weeks a year thing and no where do a lot of them expect to be deployed to a war zone. Lots of the Army's logistics and maintence is filled my national guard and reserve. They cut the regular force so much that they had no choice but to send The NG and R to places like Kosovo and Bosnia and Egypt. By next month nearly all of the Arkansas National Guard will be depolyed or have just got off depolyment. Those that come back have been told not to get too used to home. Your next rotation is just around the corner. The day I left for deployment, I was supposed to start a new job. That was in March. Will it be there when I get back? That is still a question that is yet to be answered.
                    Which side are we on? We're on the side of the demons, Chief. We are evil men in the gardens of paradise, sent by the forces of death to spread devastation and destruction wherever we go. I'm surprised you didn't know that. --Saul Tigh

                    Comment

                    Working...
                    X