Marines Set to Call Up Thousands for Iraq, Afghan Duty
Washington -- The Marine Corps said Tuesday that it would begin calling thousands of Marines back to active-duty service on an involuntary basis to serve in Iraq and Afghanistan -- the latest sign that American armed forces are under strain and a potential signal of the growing unpopularity of the Iraq war among young veterans.
Marine commanders will call up formerly active duty service members now classified as reservists after the Corps failed to find enough volunteers among their emergency reserve pool to fill needed jobs in combat zones. The call-ups will begin in several months, summoning as many as 2,500 reservists at a time to serve for a year or more.
The military has had to scramble to meet the manpower requirements of the Iraq war, which have not abated in the face of a continuing insurgency and growing civil strife. Earlier this year, the military called forward its reserve force stationed in Kuwait, sending one battalion to secure Baghdad and two to Ramadi. Last month, the yearlong deployment of the Alaska-based 172nd Stryker Brigade was extended by four months in order to provide extra troops to roll back escalating sectarian violence in Baghdad.
For much of the conflict, the Army has had to use "stop-loss orders," which keep soldiers in their units even after their active-duty commitment is complete, and involuntarily call-ups of reservists to supplement their forces.
The call-ups and the stop-loss orders have been criticized as a "back-door draft" and are unpopular with service members, many of whom believe they have already done their part.
"You can send Marines back for a third or fourth time, but you have to understand you are destroying their lives," said Paul Rieckhoff, the founder of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America. "It is not what they intended the all-volunteer military to look like."
Marines typically enlist for eight years. Most serve four years on active duty then enter the reserves, either as part of a unit that has a monthly drill or as a part of the "individual ready reserve."
The ready reserve was designed to be a pool of manpower that the Armed Services could draw on in a time of national emergency. But the Iraq war has forced the Army, and now the Marines, to rely on the ready reserve to fill holes in the combat force.
Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., said the call up of the Marine ready reserve was an example of the wear and tear inflicted by Iraq on the armed services, a stress that could hurt the military in the months and years to come.
"The right way to address the issue is to increase the size of the military so you do not have to rely on the call up of the individual ready reserve," Reed said. "We should have raised the strength of the Army and Marine Corps three years ago. . . . It does underscore the strain that is being placed on the land forces, the Army and the Marines. "
Frederick Kagan, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute who has written about what he calls a military manpower crisis, argued the involuntary call ups are the latest sign that a larger ground force is needed. The increasing length of combat tours, the extensive use of National Guard combat units and the stop-loss orders all show the military is scrambling to meet the demands placed on it, he said.
"It is one of an avalanche of symptoms that the ground forces are overstretched by operations in Iraq and Afghanistan," Kagan said. "This administration needs to understand this is not a short-term problem and it really needs a systemic fix in the size of the ground forces."
The announcement by U.S. commanders that they are seeking new sources to meet manpower needs came as British officers told reporters in London that the 7,000-member British force could be cut in half by next year. For months, U.S. commanders also have said they want to shrink the size of their force in Iraq, a move that would reduce the strain on the military and ease the need for involuntary call-ups. But, so far most of U.S. as well as British promises to cut troop sizes have been derailed by the continuing violence in Iraq.
Although the Marines have for the most part avoided forcing reservists to serve in Iraq against their will, as the war has dragged on, volunteers have been harder to come by.
"We have been tracking our volunteer numbers for the last two years, if you tracked it on a timeline or a chart, you would see it going down," said Col. Guy A. Stratton, the head of the Marine Corps' Manpower Mobilization Plans section, who briefed reporters Tuesday on the reserve plans.
There are 138,000 troops now serving in Iraq. There are about 24,100 active duty Marines serving in Iraq, Afghanistan and the Horn of Africa, although the bulk of that force is in Iraq's Anbar Province.
Marine Corps tours in Iraq, most of which are about seven months long, are shorter than the Army's yearlong tours. But Marines return to combat more frequently, with as little as five or six months in the United States between rotations. The grueling schedule means some Marines have already served three tours in Iraq.
The Marines last did an involuntary call up of members of their individual ready reserve before the initial invasion of Iraq. Although 2,658 involuntary orders were issued at the time, far fewer Marines ended up serving in Iraq.
The reservists in the new call-up will be drawn from a pool of 59,000 members of the individual ready reserve. The Corps will exempt Marines who are in the first and last year of their four-year reserve obligation, meaning the first call ups will come from a pool of about 34,000 Marines.
Although it is possible that someone who had served in Iraq a year before could be selected to return, Stratton said that, when deciding who to mobilize, the Corps will select the reservist with fewer combat tours or who has served overseas less recently.
The Marines estimate they are about 1,200 people short of the needed manpower in Iraq and Afghanistan. With training taking six months, and deployments an average of six months more, the Marines need the authority to call up 2,500 people at a time. Marines called from the reserves could serve a maximum of two years, although most tours are expected to last between a year and 18 months. Stratton said the authority to involuntarily call up the ready reserve will last indefinitely.
"What it allows us to do is tap in to that part of the IRR we've not used," Stratton said, "to be able to provide that additional augmentation to our units we have out there for this rotation, the next rotation, for however long the global war on terrorism will go on."
Stratton said the manpower needs were the greatest in the fields of communications, engineering, intelligence and military police. But he also said infantry, truck drivers, aviation mechanics and other specialties will be called up. Reed said it was particularly disturbing that the Marines needed the ready reservists to fill holes in infantry units.
Since Sept. 11, the Army has mobilized 5,000 soldiers from its ready reserves. The bulk of those have been part of involuntary call-ups begun in mid-2004. Currently, the Army has about 2,200 members of the ready reserve serving on active duty; about 1,850 were involuntarily called to duty.
On Tuesday, the Army was not able to provide the number of soldiers serving under the stop-loss order. But during the second half of last year, there were an average of 13,178 soldiers in Iraq whose tours had been extended by the stop-loss order. The Marine Corps does not have a stop-loss order in place.
LaTimes
Can I ask you guys a question. Why do they have to do this, why do they have to call people back that have done their part. Why is it that the President can't take five minuets to go on TV and ask people to volunteer.
Is that to much to ask, and let's just forget why he did not do it three years ago, why not today. If he did it I am sure people would line up. Why is it that we have to do things like this.
This administration if failing the people, the country, and the services.
On a side note, I wish I knew my reader from Alaska.
Marine commanders will call up formerly active duty service members now classified as reservists after the Corps failed to find enough volunteers among their emergency reserve pool to fill needed jobs in combat zones. The call-ups will begin in several months, summoning as many as 2,500 reservists at a time to serve for a year or more.
The military has had to scramble to meet the manpower requirements of the Iraq war, which have not abated in the face of a continuing insurgency and growing civil strife. Earlier this year, the military called forward its reserve force stationed in Kuwait, sending one battalion to secure Baghdad and two to Ramadi. Last month, the yearlong deployment of the Alaska-based 172nd Stryker Brigade was extended by four months in order to provide extra troops to roll back escalating sectarian violence in Baghdad.
For much of the conflict, the Army has had to use "stop-loss orders," which keep soldiers in their units even after their active-duty commitment is complete, and involuntarily call-ups of reservists to supplement their forces.
The call-ups and the stop-loss orders have been criticized as a "back-door draft" and are unpopular with service members, many of whom believe they have already done their part.
"You can send Marines back for a third or fourth time, but you have to understand you are destroying their lives," said Paul Rieckhoff, the founder of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America. "It is not what they intended the all-volunteer military to look like."
Marines typically enlist for eight years. Most serve four years on active duty then enter the reserves, either as part of a unit that has a monthly drill or as a part of the "individual ready reserve."
The ready reserve was designed to be a pool of manpower that the Armed Services could draw on in a time of national emergency. But the Iraq war has forced the Army, and now the Marines, to rely on the ready reserve to fill holes in the combat force.
Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., said the call up of the Marine ready reserve was an example of the wear and tear inflicted by Iraq on the armed services, a stress that could hurt the military in the months and years to come.
"The right way to address the issue is to increase the size of the military so you do not have to rely on the call up of the individual ready reserve," Reed said. "We should have raised the strength of the Army and Marine Corps three years ago. . . . It does underscore the strain that is being placed on the land forces, the Army and the Marines. "
Frederick Kagan, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute who has written about what he calls a military manpower crisis, argued the involuntary call ups are the latest sign that a larger ground force is needed. The increasing length of combat tours, the extensive use of National Guard combat units and the stop-loss orders all show the military is scrambling to meet the demands placed on it, he said.
"It is one of an avalanche of symptoms that the ground forces are overstretched by operations in Iraq and Afghanistan," Kagan said. "This administration needs to understand this is not a short-term problem and it really needs a systemic fix in the size of the ground forces."
The announcement by U.S. commanders that they are seeking new sources to meet manpower needs came as British officers told reporters in London that the 7,000-member British force could be cut in half by next year. For months, U.S. commanders also have said they want to shrink the size of their force in Iraq, a move that would reduce the strain on the military and ease the need for involuntary call-ups. But, so far most of U.S. as well as British promises to cut troop sizes have been derailed by the continuing violence in Iraq.
Although the Marines have for the most part avoided forcing reservists to serve in Iraq against their will, as the war has dragged on, volunteers have been harder to come by.
"We have been tracking our volunteer numbers for the last two years, if you tracked it on a timeline or a chart, you would see it going down," said Col. Guy A. Stratton, the head of the Marine Corps' Manpower Mobilization Plans section, who briefed reporters Tuesday on the reserve plans.
There are 138,000 troops now serving in Iraq. There are about 24,100 active duty Marines serving in Iraq, Afghanistan and the Horn of Africa, although the bulk of that force is in Iraq's Anbar Province.
Marine Corps tours in Iraq, most of which are about seven months long, are shorter than the Army's yearlong tours. But Marines return to combat more frequently, with as little as five or six months in the United States between rotations. The grueling schedule means some Marines have already served three tours in Iraq.
The Marines last did an involuntary call up of members of their individual ready reserve before the initial invasion of Iraq. Although 2,658 involuntary orders were issued at the time, far fewer Marines ended up serving in Iraq.
The reservists in the new call-up will be drawn from a pool of 59,000 members of the individual ready reserve. The Corps will exempt Marines who are in the first and last year of their four-year reserve obligation, meaning the first call ups will come from a pool of about 34,000 Marines.
Although it is possible that someone who had served in Iraq a year before could be selected to return, Stratton said that, when deciding who to mobilize, the Corps will select the reservist with fewer combat tours or who has served overseas less recently.
The Marines estimate they are about 1,200 people short of the needed manpower in Iraq and Afghanistan. With training taking six months, and deployments an average of six months more, the Marines need the authority to call up 2,500 people at a time. Marines called from the reserves could serve a maximum of two years, although most tours are expected to last between a year and 18 months. Stratton said the authority to involuntarily call up the ready reserve will last indefinitely.
"What it allows us to do is tap in to that part of the IRR we've not used," Stratton said, "to be able to provide that additional augmentation to our units we have out there for this rotation, the next rotation, for however long the global war on terrorism will go on."
Stratton said the manpower needs were the greatest in the fields of communications, engineering, intelligence and military police. But he also said infantry, truck drivers, aviation mechanics and other specialties will be called up. Reed said it was particularly disturbing that the Marines needed the ready reservists to fill holes in infantry units.
Since Sept. 11, the Army has mobilized 5,000 soldiers from its ready reserves. The bulk of those have been part of involuntary call-ups begun in mid-2004. Currently, the Army has about 2,200 members of the ready reserve serving on active duty; about 1,850 were involuntarily called to duty.
On Tuesday, the Army was not able to provide the number of soldiers serving under the stop-loss order. But during the second half of last year, there were an average of 13,178 soldiers in Iraq whose tours had been extended by the stop-loss order. The Marine Corps does not have a stop-loss order in place.
LaTimes
Can I ask you guys a question. Why do they have to do this, why do they have to call people back that have done their part. Why is it that the President can't take five minuets to go on TV and ask people to volunteer.
Is that to much to ask, and let's just forget why he did not do it three years ago, why not today. If he did it I am sure people would line up. Why is it that we have to do things like this.
This administration if failing the people, the country, and the services.
On a side note, I wish I knew my reader from Alaska.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home