Topic: If you | |
---|---|
Army to keep forcibly re-enlisting soldiers
'Stop loss' program still needed, general says in response to Gates Related Stories | What's this? Pentagon to Alert 8 Guard Units for Duty Gates denies "broken" Army but acknowledges stress Thousands of Hoosier Soldiers Prepare for Deployment Most Popular • Most Viewed • Top Rated • Most E-mailed House fails to override Bush child health veto Judge suspends Britney’s visitation rights ‘King and I’ star Deborah Kerr dies at 86 Maine middle school to offer birth control Funnyman Joey Bishop dies at age 89 Most viewed on MSNBC.com Threats to bumblebees fly under radar A wife's battle Bills’ Everett standing with help of walker Silly String care packages sent to troops in Iraq A boss and soldier's journey to Iraq and back Most viewed on MSNBC.com Maine middle school to offer birth control Meteor shower could exceed expectations Race remarks get Nobel winner in trouble House fails to override Bush child health veto Funnyman Joey Bishop dies at age 89 Most viewed on MSNBC.com Your photos of soldiers who’ve made the ultimate sacrifice in Iraq and Afghanistan. Pictures and messages from U.S. troops overseas and their friends, family at home. Laid to rest at Arlington Reuters Each week in ‘The Daily Nightly,’ NBC's John Rutherford pays tribute to the men and women killed in Iraq and Afghanistan and buried at Arlington National Cemetery. Fact file How big’s a division? What’s a battalion? Updated: 1:29 p.m. ET Oct 18, 2007 WASHINGTON - The U.S. Army will continue to rely on an unpopular program that forces some soldiers to stay on beyond their retirement or re-enlistment dates, despite repeated pressure from Defense Secretary Robert Gates to reduce and eventually eliminate the practice. Lt. Gen. Michael Rochelle, deputy chief of staff for personnel, said Thursday that the number of soldiers kept on duty has actually increased in recent months as a result of President Bush's orders to increase troop levels in Iraq this year to help quell the violence. The number of those being kept on beyond their commitment — through a program known as "stop loss" — is about 9,000 now, compared to about 7,000 before the troop buildup began in late January, he said. Story continues below ↓ -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- advertisement -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "Until there is some reduction in the demand, we're going to have to rely, unfortunately ... on stop loss," Rochelle told reporters. "Until the demand comes down a bit, we can't do it without it." As recently as last month, Gates sent a memo to Army Secretary Pete Geren asking for quarterly progress reports on "reducing and ultimately eliminating the use of stop-loss as soon as feasible." Rochelle added that when the expected withdrawal of troops from Iraq begins, the Army's reliance on the program will eventually decline. In other remarks, Rochelle also suggested that the Army will only be able to increase its numbers by about 4,000 in the next year — a fraction of the 35,000 boost that Pentagon and Army leaders have set as a goal by 2010. He said the Army will rely largely on two relatively new recruitment programs that would reward current active duty soldiers and National Guard soldiers who successfully bring in new people. Other than those new efforts, the basic recruitment and retention goals for 2008 will stay the same as 2007, at 80,000 and 65,000 respectively, he said. That, he said, reflects the "realistic view on how challenging it is at this point in time" to increase the size of the Army. The Guard program, which only just began, has already garnered 25 recruits and there are 100 in the pipeline, Rochelle said, adding that the effort could bring in as many as 3,000 in 2008. He said the Army is likely to continue increasing the financial, educational and other incentives to keep soldiers in the service. He declined to detail the costs of the incentives, or how much that might increase next year. |
|
|
|
Hey Fitness, you should edit your posts a bit after you paste them, I find it very hard to get to the bottom of what you want to really say.
|
|
|