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Pentagon extends tours for US troops in Iraq and Afghanistan
By Joe Kay
13 April 2007
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The Bush administration has announced that all members of the
Army currently deployed in the Middle East, Central Asia and the
Horn of Africa, will have their standard tour of duty extended
from 12 months to 15 months. The decision will also affect all
Army soldiers sent to these regions in the future.
About 100,000 Army soldiers in Iraq, Afghanistan and Kuwait
will be affected. The decision does not apply to members of the
Navy or Marines, who follow different tour schedules.
The purpose of the extension, announced by Defense Secretary
Robert Gates in a press conference on Wednesday, is to allow for
the long-term deployment of additional troops in Iraq, as part
of the administrations surge policy. Gates said
that the new policy of 15-month tours will provide us with
the capacity to sustain the deployed force, while upholding
our commitment to decide when to begin any drawdown of US
forces in Iraq solely based on conditions on the ground.
Gates said the new tour lengths would allow the military to
sustain a level of 160,000 troops in Iraq for at least a
year.
In other words, the change is necessary to implement a policy
of escalating the Iraq war in an attempt to crush opposition to
the US occupation. The consequence of the tour extension will
be to increase the number of casualtiesof Iraqis and of
US soldiers. Already, nearly 3,300 US soldiers have been killed
in Iraq, and tens of thousands have been injured. The number of
Iraqis killed as a result of the invasion is unknown, but estimates
put the figure at about 750,000.
Gatess announcement underscores the fact that escalation
of the Iraq war is continuing without obstruction within the political
establishment, despite the overwhelming opposition of the American
people.
The Pentagon chief cynically sought to portray the decision
to extend the tours as a response to the needs of US soldiers
and their families. Instead of dribbling out these notifications
to these units [in the form of stop-loss orders], what were
trying to do here is provide some long-term predictability for
the soldiers and their families about how long their deployments
will be and how long they will be at home. He said that
all soldiers will have a full year between tours in Iraq and Afghanistan,
and that the schedule would now be fair, predictable and
sustainable.
Zohreh Whitaker, a member of Military Families Speak Out, an
organization of over 3,000 military families opposed to the war,
told the WSWS that she is horrified, disgusted, worried
and stressed by the announcement. Her son has been in Iraq
since July 2006, and the change in the length of the tour means
he will be in Iraq until at least October 2007.
Responding to Gates assertion that the new tour length
would be fair, Whitaker said, The whole thing is not fair.
If the whole war is not justified, if the whole war is illegal
and based on lies, nothing is fair.
For loved ones left behind, nothing is fair, she
said. Every time the doorbell rings, every time there is
a late phone call, it is the sameyou worry about your loved
one.
Whitaker said that she was upset by the indifference of politicians
of both parties, who she said are not listening to the American
people. About the war, she said, It is all about money.
The change in the tour length involves yet another violation
of the Armys own rules for tour lengths and intervals. According
to Army policy, soldiers are supposed to deploy overseas for one
year, followed by two years of rest and retraining. In practice,
many soldiers involved in the Iraq occupation have had their tours
extended repeatedly through stop-loss orders, and most have had
to return with one year or less rest between tours.
Fifteen months would represent the longest official combat
tour length since World War II. There is also no guarantee that,
even with the extension, soldiers will not be kept longer through
the use of additional stop-loss orders.
The change follows an announcement Monday that 13,000 National
Guard troops would be sent to Iraq between 2008 and 2010, in violation
of rules that require National Guard soldiers to have five years
rest between combat operations.
The decision is a further sign of the strains being placed
on the military as a consequence of the occupation of Iraq and
Afghanistan. These strains have generated concern within the ruling
elite itself and sections of the military brass. General Barry
McCafrrey, the former head of US Southern Command, told the National
Journal recently, The truth is, the US 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.
He said, The Army is unraveling, and if we dont 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.
Concern over the deterioration of the US military, which has
made it very difficult for the US to threaten intervention in
other countries, including Iran, has in part motivated the Democrats
criticism of the Bush administrations surge policy in Iraq.
Leading Democrats repeated these concerns in response to Gatess
announcement. Senator Joseph Biden, chairman of the Senate Armed
Services Committee, declared, The decision to extend the
tours of US service members by three months is an urgent warning
that the administrations Iraq policy cannot be sustained
without doing terrible long-term damage to our military.
Representative Ike Skelton, chairman of the House Armed Services
Committee, worried that the decision would have a chilling
effect on recruiting, retention, and readiness.
Republican Senators John Warner and Susan Collins, both on
the Senate Armed Services Committee, said that the increase in
troop rotations underscored the urgent need to increase
the size of the Army and Marine Corps.
Democrats and some Republicans have been pushing for an expansion
of the Army for years. Following the November elections, the Bush
administration agreed to increase regular forces by 65,000 troops
over the next five years, but this increase is only in its initial
stages. The Army has also been lowering recruitment standards
and increasing retention and recruitment bonuses, and the military
has stepped up prosecutions for desertion in an attempt to stem
the outward flow of soldiers.
The position of the Democrats has nothing to do with ending
the war or opposing the attempt by the US military to seize control
of the Middle East. Their concern is that the way the Iraq occupation
has been carried out has done enormous damage to the interests
of American imperialism, including by placing enormous strains
on the military.
Leading Democratic Senators have made clear that they Congress
will pass a bill that will continue to fund the war, including
the recent escalation.
See Also:
Soldiers, families speak
at Walter Reed public hearing
Government indifference, cost-cutting compound ravages of war
for wounded US troops
[15 March 2007]
Walter Reed scandal lifts
lid on neglect of wounded US troops
[10 March 2007]
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