Retired Generals: Bush is 'Breaking the Army'
WASHINGTON - President George W. Bush's ongoing "surge" of some 35,000 troops to add to the 140,000 already deployed in Iraq is highlighting growing concern, particularly among the military brass, that the U.S. army is overstretched and fast becoming "broken".An increasing number of senior retired officers, some of whom had previously expressed optimism that the active-duty force of some 500,000 soldiers could handle U.S. commitments in the "global war on terror", now say the current situation today reminds them of 1980, when the service's top officer, Gen. Edward Meyer, publicly declared that the country had a "hollow Army".
"The active army is about broken," former Secretary of State Colin Powell, who also served as chairman of the Armed Forces Joint Chiefs of Staff under President George H.W. Bush 15 years ago, told Time magazine this week, while another highly decorated retired general who just returned from Iraq and Afghanistan described the situation in even more dire terms.
"The truth is, the U.S. Army is in serious trouble and any recovery will be years in the making and, as a result, the country is in a position of strategic peril," ret. Gen. Barry McCaffrey, former head of the U.S. Southern Command, told the National Journal, elaborating on a much-cited memo he had written for his colleagues at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point.
"My bottom line is that the Army is unraveling, and if we don't expend significant national energy to reverse that trend, sometime in the next two years we will break the Army just like we did during Vietnam," he added.
In an indication of the growing concern, both Time and the more elite-oriented Journal ran cover stories this week. They both concluded that the Army was rapidly approaching or had already reached "the breaking point".
"Pressed by the demands of two wars, plus mandates to expand, reorganise, and modernise, the Army is nearing its breaking point," according to the Journal, which also ran a companion article on how much the service has been forced to lower its mental, physical and moral standards to meet recruitment targets.
Some 15 percent of Army recruits last year were granted "waivers" from the Army's minimum standards -- about half of those were "moral waivers"; that is, they were permitted to enter the service despite prior criminal records. Only 82 percent of recruits had a high school diploma or its equivalent, below the Army's benchmark of 90 percent and the lowest rate since 1981, according to the Centre for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments.
From just over 1.6 million soldiers at the height of the Vietnam War, the Army's active-duty force fell to a half million troops by the mid-1990s, following the end of the Cold War. Counting reserve and National Guard forces, the Army's total strength stands at about one million soldiers, of whom less than 400,000 are trained for combat.
While that was considered adequate for conventional conflicts with clear military and political objectives like the first Gulf War, in which the U.S. used overwhelming force to quickly prevail, it has proven far less suitable for the kind of prolonged occupation and unconventional war in which Washington now finds itself engaged in Iraq.
While some in the military brass, like then-Army Chief of Staff Gen. Eric Shinseki, warned the Bush administration even before the 2003 Iraq war that several hundred thousand troops would be required to stabilise the country, Bush's defence secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, was determined to show that a "transformed" military -- one that used advanced technology to make up for numbers -- was the wave of the future, repeatedly rejecting appeals by his commanders, Congress and some of his neo-conservative allies to expand the army's size.
It was not until Rumsfeld was ousted after last November's elections, nearly four years into the U.S. occupation, that Bush finally agreed. In January, his new defence secretary, Robert Gates, called for an increase in army ranks to nearly 550,000 and in the Marines, from 175,000 to 202,000.
These increases, however, will be phased in over five years, offering little relief to stresses in the existing force, according to defence experts.
In addition to lowered standards for recruitment, the biggest concerns at the moment have to do with readiness and training. As more troops are rotated into Iraq for the "surge", the amount of time devoted to training has been substantially reduced.
"Given the new policy of having (U.S.) troops (interact more) among the Iraqis," Lawrence Korb, the Pentagon's top personnel officer under President Ronald Reagan, told Time, "they should be giving our young soldiers more training, not less."
Adding to the readiness problem are shortages of equipment, such as tanks and Humvees, on U.S. bases where training takes place. Instead, as units are rotated out of Iraq, they leave their equipment behind for their replacements to use.
"On the equipment side of the equation, the Army is pretty much broken," Tom McNaugher, an expert at the RAND Corporation, told the Journal.
Just as the Army has been forced to relax its recruitment standards, it has also been forced to shorten intervals between deployments. While the Army's recommended standard is a two-year interval between deployments that can last up to one year, the average current interval is substantially less; in some cases, as little as seven months.
Those stresses are particularly difficult to manage for mid-level officers, most of whom have families back at home and have already served as many as three and even four tours of duty in Iraq or Afghanistan.
While retention rates for these ranks remain strong, according to the Pentagon, some experts believe its statistics, which lag by several months, do not reflect what is actually taking place.
"Today, anecdotal evidence of collapse is all around," according to ret. Maj. Gen. Robert Scales, a former Rumsfeld adviser and a regular commentator on CNN, who previously was optimistic about the war and its impact on the Army.
"The Army's collapse after Vietnam was presaged by a desertion of mid-grade officers (captains) and non-commissioned officers... Most left because they and their families were tired and didn't want to serve in units unprepared for war."
"If we lose our sergeants and captains, the Army breaks again. It's just that simple. That's why these soldiers are the canaries in the readiness coal mine," he told the Washington Times last week. "And... if you look closely, you will see that these canaries are fleeing their cages in frightening numbers."
Indeed, the Army is currently short about 3,000 mid-career officers, a number that will be impossible to make up as the army expands over the next five years -- a situation that Scales called "pretty much irreversible".
According to a report in the Boston Globe Wednesday, graduates from the military's officer training academy at West Point are choosing to leave active duty at the highest rate in more than three decades -- "a sign to many specialists," the Globe said, "that repeated tours in Iraq are prematurely driving out some of the Army's top young officers."
Of the 903 officers commissioned on graduating from West Point in 2001, 54 percent had left the service by January of this year.
Meyer, the general who pronounced the army "hollow" in 1980, agrees that the army appears headed down the same path as after Vietnam.
"I absolutely see similar challenges confronting the Army today as we faced then in terms of stresses being placed on the force," he told Journal. "I think the Army is stressed at this point more than in all the time I've watched it since at least the end of the Cold War."
Copyright © 2007 IPS-Inter Press Service.
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24 Comments so far
Show AllA draft under current conditions would result in protests in the streets like there were against the Vietnam War.
In the meantime we are running out of volunteers, even in places like Utah and Mississippi. Potential recruits are seeing Bush extend combat cycles while reducing the at home cycle and eliminating training. The loud and clear impression is that they would be working for a liar boss.
Then Bush's method of cheating has been bankrupting the national guard. Someone needs to challenge the use of the national guard to get a strict constitutional interpretation of what is legal. Under that scrutiny by SCOTUS process or in the courts, use of the national guard could be ruled illegal. All we need is another Hurricane Katrina or huge wildfire season in the west and the states will be screaming "Where are our national guard?!"
We should be ready to tell the Iraqis they have proven they can't live with each other under one centralized government and assist them in following through on the constitution they wrote to creat semi autonomous provinces. If it is a DEMOCRACY we need to follow through on what they want and leave.
So...this may be how the empire ends.
"Ever think "Breaking the Army" (and the country in the process) was the real design all along?" Thank you Truth Fraeire for saying that so clearly.
That is the underlying intention of this administration and the neo-con movement, to dismantal the social, economic and government structures that have built the United Stated. "No Child Left Behind" is designed to close down the public school system. "Faith Based Initiative" is designed to close down the public social well-fare net. The home-mortgage-in-cereal box coupled with the new bankruptcy laws is designed to devastate the economic standing of the middle class. As pointed out by another comment above the material infrastructure (bridges, roads, water systems etc) is significantly under maintained. Our health care has reached crisis propotions (our injured veterans' health care is a shocking windo on that situation). In short, when we wake up from this nightmare we will see that our own country has been destroyed too, along with Iraq, Afghanistan and, possibly, Iran.
Truth Faerie: yes, I thought from the start that one of the purposes of the war was a way to bankrupt and trivialize all of the other institutuions of our government. I believe Rove keeps a picture Hitler in his wallet.
PMCG: and how will all these dissaffected and demoralized vets feel about us and our government if it finally ends? I can envsion an armed rebellion fought between our legitimate soldier vets and the Blackwater gestapo. At least the mercenaries don't suffer from catastrophic cognitive dissonance.
How curious! The peace movement has attempted to non-violently bring our toops home with one of its strategies being to resist military recruitment (particularly countering the lies that are told young men and women to con them into signing up). Their contention is that wars never solve anything, but just end up costing a lot in lives and money on both sides of any conflict.
But here comes another way of putting the war establishment out of business conducted by, guess who, the commander-in-chief himself.
This country is not a priority to our leaders. Globalization is.
Our politicans are closing the bases in the USA and building more bases overseas.
No one really wants to take over this country-if they did they would have an easy time.
We have no military,factories or bases.
I guess if we want we can hire security gaurds.
Americans are only needed to keep the world economy afloat by consumerism. When it becomes unaffordable for people to buy they will be of no need to the country.
Eliminating jobs, cutting hours, cutting wages and forcing onto credit.
Shame America! Shame. Even your own people will not defend you.
How can anyone defend serfism and slavism? Aren't these hate crimes?
Well, maybe breaking the army is the best thing that can happen for the planet. Our military industrial complex has been becoming more and more bloated with every passing year, and the damage they do on a planet-wide basis is clear. If peace is ever to be a reality, this may be exactly what has to happen. Maybe crazy Geoge is really in a twisted way. doing the world a favor.
Long before any talk of civil war, the politicians will have to deal with hundreds of thousands of people that refuse to pay their taxes, ignore the lenders, squat in a growing number of boarded up homes "for sale" at exorbitant prices, etc. Or people in whatever rank of life, who simply ignore their bosses, rules, regulations, etc.
The government can easily deal with hundreds or perhaps even thousands, but tens or hundreds of thousands is indicative of a broader break down. The other problem they'll have is if cops and soldiers find more in common with the civil disobedients than with the politicians. The politicians, perhaps of both parties, are losing the Republic -- and cannot even see it for themselves.
Perhaps it's not such a bad thing? Most people think of America as a democracy (it is not -- we're a constitutional Republic). It may be a chance to get it right now.
My own two-bits: unicameral population proportional legislature (no need senate), no electoral college, the Range Vote, open source and paper-verifiable voting machinery.
If we can just get that right, we'll be on the right path with whatever follows.
I think I (ahem) implied something of that sort earlier.
Time for some 'organized militia' to go along with that right to arm yourselves that 'shall not be infringed'.
Waging a civil war on your own ruling government is a foreboding thought, but i would suggest that the future of the US of A is looking much less than rosy already.
(hint: you've probably already had the last election you'll ever get.)
Ever think "Breaking the Army" (and the country in the process) was the real design all along?
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kathyodat April 12th, 2007 1:31 pm
"Bush is out there doing the one thing he's good at - squandering resources while playing his favorite game of Risk. So he's destroyed our military, turned Iraq into a terrorist heaven, wasted Homeland security money while first responders still can't talk to each other, do we feel safer now?
If enough people had looked at his resume in the first place, he wouldn't have been able to steal any elections."
Heck if enough people had listened to him on the campaign trail he wouldn't have been able to steal any elections either, or if the press were doing their jobs and had reported on his inconsistencies he wouldn't be pRESIDENT.
But it is what it is and now he needs to be impeached before he can do any more damage.
Lobo Gris
Withdraw! Impeach! Jail the guilty for war crimes and Profiteering! Then, vote for Kucinich in the primaries!
I agree with Jaded Prole. If the military is "broken" in Iraq and can't be rebuilt for years to come, MAYBE we won't be "tempted" into another occupation of a sovereign nation for a while. MAYBE, this government will have time to figure out that we the people don't WANT a military that is big enough to take on such adventures of greed paid for in blood and treasure. MAYBE we might even be lucky enough to have a breather from war long enough that our government will figure out that promoting PEACE not WAR is the best thing to do for the American people and this nation. Peace and prosperity have never come out of the barrel of a gun, and never will.
When Ralph Nader decided to run in 2000 because he argued that both parties feed from the same corporate trough, he and the keen minds at Public Citizen inventoried the state of US bridges, schools, nuclear power plants, etc. MUCH money is needed to restore this nation's infrastructure. The obscene waste of this war on so many levels, also means we are indebted to foreign nations who are using the loan money (and interest) to finance the higher education of students who will put their heads together to come up with alternative energies and stem cell research initiatives, to name 2 areas neglected here on the home front. Plausibly, the giant global corporations who profit from war (and are sending their corporate headquarters overseas) could care less about this nation's state; for if war is what they profit from, so long as one land fights another, they are in "business." It has come down to blood profit, but isn't this exactly what IKE warned against? And why Hilary is as pro war as the republican candidates? Our representative democracy is NOT working, although there are a few decent politicians doing heroic jobs to try to work with the rot they've got. Our country is as split as during the Civil War, more economic hard times, loss of oil, broken military, weird weather and interrupted harvest cycles, etc. I think we may have to re=invent ourselves as a nation, and quite likely a not so painless necessity will be the Mother of that invention process.
The decimation of the middle and junior level officer corps (the shortfall of about 3,000 mid-career officers; almost half leaving shortly after graduating West Point) is impossible to remedy and means a much less effective army for at least the next 5 to 10 years. Hooray!
Bush has done such a wonderful job of weakening the American Empire. US reputation around the world is shot. US "credibility" (the ability to project strength through credible threat of US military intervention) is shot due to US inability to occupy and stabilize a country the size of Iraq. Many more people in the US (still a minority) now accurately understand the hegemonic role the US has played in the world. Bush did what the Left in the US could not do through decades of education and organizing. If they read some US history (e.g. Vietnam, Panama invasion, Central American wars and death squads of the 1980s, terrorism against Cuba, etc.)and cut through the official platitudes, they might even come to understand that Iraq is not an aberration.
I am a former mid-Grade US Army officer. I am proud of my service to a country that has been good to me and my family. I can not imagine a worse way to honor the sacrifices of those generations before us than the lives being squandered in Iraq.
We are not an empire. We are are not an "economic system". We do not export revolutions. We are a free people who welcome the peoples of the world to come to our county and live in peace and freedom.
Our Army is broke because they know, KNOW, that this will have all been in vain. They know that the world and a good portion of this country does not support this war. They have been condemned to a tour in hell by a leadership of hard hearted, hypocritical zealots.
We need to withdraw the troops now to save not only their lives, but the lives of countless others.
The dickn'bush gang commands the world's most powerful military. But, being chickenhawks in fact and heart, they've made a miserable job of it.
That accounts for the fact that a small, impoverished nation of disorganized Arabs that has no army, no navy, no air force and NO WMD has mananged for four years to make an absolute fool of the self-proclaimed "War President".
Dickn'bush opted out of Viet Nam so, having missed that instructive bit of history, they launched Iraq-Nam. Same crap, different map.
So now our military has problems with recruiting, retention and morale? Duh...
These past six years amount to nothing more than a pricey lot of on-the-job-training for a class of determined dullards. And each new morning holds the promise of yet another bad day in the eighth grade where the loudest juvenile delinquent gets all the attention.
Impeach? Indeed. Forthwith.
Consider that the real reason every last soldier, marine, guardsman & reservist is being pushed overseas is so there isn't going to be any coordinated opposition when Blackwater is patrolling your streets under a martial law order 'for your own good'.
What do you honestly think the Haliburton/KBR prisons are for?
And the suspension of posse comitatus law?
(means a military force can now be deployed on the streets of America under the control of the federal government. FYI)
You the people are allowed to bear arms. I'm honestly surprised you weren't marching in the hundreds of thousands to depose this government by force after they stole their second election back in 2004.
If you don't get organized and bodily rip these monsters from their places of power then you deserve what you get.
Goodbye. Sorry you let this happen to yourselves.
what are we shooting and bombing and occupying Iraq for?
It's not the oil, don't say it's the oil.
Global Warming.
Nothing a little more Bush can't fix. Let's draft Jenna and Barbara. Give 'em six weeks training and send them into combat. Yowsah! What's good for the lower classes is certainly good for the upper stupid class in Washington.
There, now don't we all feel better?
Bush is out there doing the one thing he's good at - squandering resources while playing his favorite game of Risk. So he's destroyed our military, turned Iraq into a terrorist heaven, wasted Homeland security money while first responders still can't talk to each other, do we feel safer now?
If enough people had looked at his resume in the first place, he wouldn't have been able to steal any elections.
It is not just that the army is physically exhausted by the tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan, the burden of not having a just cause to fight for is truly significant. The so-called "home court advantage" also applies to military endeavors. Sending troops away on illegal wars of aggression is morally and psychologically draining for the troops, whereas defending one's own home and family releases a flood of righteous indignation plus physical and psychological energy.
That was why the U.S. lost the Vietnam war and it's why the Iraqis can be so effective fighting against the U.S. occupation.
If we had a moral Commander-in-chief instead of the current war criminal, or, alternatively, if we had a Congress made up of members of the phylum chordata (species with spines), then the Army wouldn't be sent on fool's errands like Iraq and Afghanistan and the military could still recruit good people relatively easily.
Impeach. Impeach. Impeach. Impeach. Impeach!
A Broken Army is not in itself a bad thing. Having a larger military than the rest of the world combined has been a disaster for the rest of the world. We should have demiliterized and enjoyed a peace dividend at the end of the cold war. Instead Iraqis have paid a terrible price. Rather than rebuild a military of overwhelming force, we need to reconsider our priorities.
High schoolers, college students and parents should get ready for a new military draft.
Officials may keep denying it is coming ... until one day it is suddenly announced.
Be advised:
"Another view of military waivers: Flexible recruiting avoids draft"
PopulistAmerica.com
February 17, 2007
http://www.populistamerica.com/another_view_of_military_waivers
- - -
"Revisiting the Vietnam War era: The draft, casualties and the Kent State shootings"
PopulistAmerica.com
November 19, 2006
http://www.populistamerica.com/revisiting_the_vietnam_war_era