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In a recent flight from
Kuwait to the Baghdad Airport, a Georgia Air National
Guard aircrew banked its C-130 hard into a corkscrew
descent that had passengers practically dangling from
their webbed constraints. The roar of the aircraft rose
in pitch as its four turbine engines strained to maintain
lift through the tight maneuver. A continuing threat
from man-portable surface-to-air missiles in Iraq dictated
the stomach-churning approach. Once the C-130 was on
the ground, the crew quickly unloaded their passengers
and cargo and took on a new load. Within an hour, the
C-130 was trundling back down the runway on the next
leg of what amounts to a daily commuter service in support
of Operation Iraqi Freedom.
The flights are only a small
cog in the massive military machine carrying out ongoing
operations
in Iraq and
Afghanistan, but they illustrate the unprecedented
strains the Global War on Terror is put-ting
on National Guard
and Reserve forces.
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| A C-130 belonging
to the Tennessee Air National Guard is silhouetted
against the sky at Baghdad
Airport. Guard and Reserve mobility forces have
played critical support roles in the recent wars
in Afghanistan and Iraq.(USAF photo by SSgt. Cherie
A. Thurlby) |
The Georgia Air Guard wing responsible for the flights
planned for 2,900 flight hours annually in peacetime,
yet had flown 13,000 hours in 2003 largely in support
of operations in Iraq. The high pace of operations
has made it difficult for the unit to meet training
requirements
such as tactical formation flying, thus lowering its
readiness ratings. The Iraq deployment and harsh operating
environment in the Gulf region have also taken a toll
on the units aging C-130 aircraft, evidenced
by the squadrons need to replace 11 turbine
engines and 20 propellers to keep eight aircraft operational
in theater.
The readiness of nondeployed Army and Air National
Guard units for wartime missions has declined because
of the
high pace of operations since Sept. 11 [2001], Janet
A. St. Laurent, the General Accounting Offices
director of defense capabilities and management,
said in testimony before the House Government Reform
Committee. Although
the Air Guard is maintained at a higher level of
readiness overall than the Army Guard, its readiness
has also
declined.
Several Air National Guard unitssuch as those
that conduct combat patrols over US cities, provide
airlift capability, or conduct tanker refueling
operationshave
reported that the pace of operations has led to
training shortfalls. Laurent said, Some state
officials we spoke with were concerned about the Guards
preparedness for homeland security missions as well
as state requirements such as natural disaster response
because of the large numbers of personnel and equipment
that have been alerted or deployed for federal missions.
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| A Tennessee
Air National Guard C-130 lands at Baghdad Airport.
Last year, roughly 10,000 Guardsmen deployed
for more than 220 days in support of combat
operations.(USAF photo by SSgt. Cherie A. Thurlby) |
Those tensions and strains are the inevitable result
of what Lt. Gen. James E. Sherrard III, recently
retired chief of Air Force Reserve Command, called the
longest sustained, large-scale mobilization in the
history of the Air Force.
The sheer numbers are certainly impressive.
The Numbers Grow
Since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorists attacks, the
Air Force has mobilized nearly 65,000 ANG and AFRC
members
in some 100 units and many more individual
reservists, Lt. Gen. Richard E. Brown III, USAF
deputy chief of staff for personnel, told lawmakers
earlier
this year. He said that reservists comprise 20 percent
of USAFs air and space expeditionary force
(AEF) packages supporting operations in Southwest
Asia and
conduct 89 percent of Operation Noble Eagle, maintaining
patrols over American cities.
Last year, roughly 10,000 Air Guard members deployed
for more than
220 days, and 6,400 Air Guard members
have deployed for more than 401 days over the
last two years. Our contributions over the past two years, and
specifically in Operation Iraqi Freedom, have been tremendous, said
Lt. Gen. Daniel James III, ANG director, testifying
recently before a Senate Appropriations subcommittee.
Since 9/11, ANG aircrews and maintainers have
conducted more than 110,000 sorties, accounting for
more than
340,000 flying hours. In Iraqi Freedom, he said,
that translated into the Air Guard supplying one-third
of
all aircraft.
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| Guardsmen
and Reservists are key to the homeland air
defense mission, Operation Noble Eagle. Here,
F-15s from the Oregon ANG and a Reserve KC-135R
soar over the Cascades on a training mission.(USAF
photo by MSgt. Michael Ammons) |
ANG flew 86 percent of the Gulf War II tanker
sorties, initially manning the tanker task force
with volunteers
who were ready within 24 hours, said James. The
task force comprised 18 units, 15 of which were
Air Guard.
During Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan,
ANG conducted 100 percent of the A-10 mission.
For Iraqi
Freedom, A-10s flew more combat missions than
any other aircraft, and the Air Guard supplied
66 percent
of those
sorties, he said. The Guard also flew 45 percent
of the F-16 sorties in Iraq.
Sherrard reported that AFRC, which has only eight
percent of the Air Force conventional bomb crews,
had flown
42 percent of all the B-52 combat missions for
four combat deployments in Afghanistan and Iraq.
AFRC
also supported C-17 sorties in Afghanistan and
Iraq, including
the massive Army airdrop into northern Iraq. In
2003, he said, AFRC had met virtually 100
percent of
both aviation and support commitments, deploying
more than 23,000 personnel, both mobilized and
volunteer.
The Defense Department has estimated that the steady
state over the next three to five years
will likely require the contribution of 100,000
to 150,000 Guardsmen
and Reservists, with activations of a year or
more being the norm. As of May 26, DOD had nearly
166,000 Guard
and Reserve troopsincluding 11,355 ANG and
AFRC membersmobilized.
Recasting the Reserves
Those increased demands, and anticipation that
operations tempo will remain high for years as
the United States
prosecutes the Global War on Terror, have prompted
wholesale reorganization and restructuring within
the Guard and
Reserve.
Much of the work focuses on the Armys reserve
components, which today are still in a strategic
reserve mode that was designed for the Cold War. The
Air Force
began shifting the Air National Guard and Air
Force Reserve to quicker reacting operational reserve
components
more than 20 years ago.
It can take several weeks to months to prepare
an Army National Guard unit to mobilize and deploycompared
to the Air Guard model where units deploy in
a matter of hours or days, Army Lt. Gen. H. Steven
Blum, chief of the National Guard Bureau, told lawmakers.
The Air National Guard is manned, equipped, and
trained to be a ready, relevant, reliable, and
accessible force, said Blum.
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| A C-17, sitting at Balad
AB, Iraq, has both AMC and AFRC shields, evidence
it is
flown by both active
and Reserve crews. (USAF photo by Sgt. Keith Brown) |
The Air National Guard and Air Force Reserve
Command began to integrate their activities
and training
with the active duty Air Force in the 1970s
and 1980s.
Equipment and training that had lagged behind
were improved. By
the early 1990s, when USAF launched its AEF
concept, ANG and AFRC were full partners in
the AEF rotation
schedule.
The expeditionary approach has enabled the Air
Force to spread the burden of operations evenly
across
most of its active and reserve forces. However,
some active
and reserve functions are in greater demand
in the post-9/11 environment.
Pentagon leaders have recognized that the military
has an unbalanced force consisting of high-demand
units
that are in short supply and low-demand units
that are in abundant supply. The consequences
of that
imbalance, they say, are already evident. Within
the reserves,
for instance, fully 92 percent of all military
police units in the National Guard have been
activated since 9/11. Some of those Army Guard
units were
tasked to
support USAF bases, because the Air Force had
to
send most of its security forces, including
ANG and AFRC
troops, overseas.
According to DOD officials, reserve personnel
provide the majority of force protection to
military personnel
and installations worldwide. Within the Air
Guard and Air Force Reserve, security forces
were among
those
critical specialties mobilized for more than
a single year.
Air National Guard security forces were the
first security forces on the ground in Iraq, James
told lawmakers. He noted that 60 percent of ANG security
forces participated in Iraqi Freedom.
Other high-demand fields in the Air Guard include
tanker pilots and flight engineersmore
than 80 percent of each group has deployed at
least once since September
2001. In its review of the Guard, the GAO reported
that about 10,000 Air Guard members were deployed
for more
than 220 days in the past year and about 6,400
of them were deployed for more than 401 days
in the last two
years.
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| Some specialties
have been heavily tasked. Security forces, tanker
pilots, flight engineers, and rescue
aircrews have been in high demand. Pictured, in
Baghdad, is TSgt. Wendell Witt, a Reserve pararescueman.(USAF
photo by SSgt. Cherie A. Thurlby) |
Within AFRC, there are similar critical specialties.
For instance, many E-3 AWACS airborne control,
MC-130 Combat Talon, and HC-130 and HH-60 rescue
aircrews
were activated for a second year.
The Defense Department has concluded that using
more than 17 percent of the personnel in a given
career
field annually indicates an unsustainably high
pace of operations
in that career field. Yet usage rates for personnel
in some reserve career fields have exceeded
50 percent over the last two-and-a-half years.
Through December 2003, about 37 percent of the
Selected Reserve force was mobilized in just over two
years, said
Thomas F. Hall, assistant secretary of defense
for reserve affairs, testifying before a House Armed
Services subcommittee. However, he
added, the usage rate is not consistent
across the force.
Career fields identified as over-stressed
include aircrews, military police, civil affairs,
intelligence,
and force
protection. Underutilized career fields include
medical administration, legal affairs, and
field artillery.
Currently, the highest utilization, said Hall,
is concentrated in about one-quarter of the
career fields.
To address such imbalances, DOD has identified
100,000 billets in the active and reserve
forces for possible
restructuring by 2009. The plan includes movement
within and between the active and reserve
forces. The rebalancing
strategy has already resulted in about 10,000
changes in military billets between the active
and reserve
components to relieve stress on overtaxed
career fields, and an
additional 20,000 more are expected to be
completed by the end of this fiscal year.
The Fiscal 2005
budget supports about 20,000 additional changes
to the career
mix.
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| Lt.
Gen. Daniel James III, ANG director (left),
observes an
aircrew of USAFs new blended 116th Air
Control Wing, Robins AFB, Ga. The wing uses
mixed crews of active duty and ANG airmen on
its E-8 Joint STARS aircraft.(USAF photo by
SMSgt. Tom McKenzie) |
The Air Force portion of the Fiscal 2005 rebalancing
initiative will involve about 4,000 conversions
to relieve stress in security forces, aircrews,
and maintenance
career fields.
Easing or reducing the stress on the force requires
a multifaceted approach by the departmentno
single solution will resolve the challenges
faced by the services, said
Hall. By employing innovative force
management practices, the services can perhaps
achieve the greatest
degree of flexibility in utilizing the Total
Force, while reducing stress on critical
career fields and
the need for involuntary mobilization.
New Missions, New Strains
Hall cautioned that rebalancing will not happen
overnight. He said it would be an iterative
and ongoing process as demands change.
As part of the transformation process, the
National Guard and Reserve have also identified
new missions
and mission concepts that are good fits
for reserve forces. For instance, when a
midcourse
national
missile defense capability is fielded, perhaps
within the
next year, it will be operated by a Guard
unit. The Air Guard
is already operating the ground alert sites
for domestic combat air patrols under the
direction of US Northern
Command.
In a novel approach, the Air Force recently
stood up a new unit to operate and maintain
Predator
unmanned aerial vehicles. The unit draws
on personnel from
the
active Air Force, the California and Nevada
Air National Guard, and Air Force Reserve
Command. It is the first
time ANG members from one state have been
made part of a unit in another state. (See Aerospace
World: ANG Crosses Lines for UAV Unit, May,
p. 18.)
The National Guard, including some ANG troops,
also has activated 32 of an anticipated
55 civil support
teams to assist in emergency response in
the event of an attack using a weapon of
mass
destruction. That threat
and the demands of two wars in as many years
also
prompted the Air National Guard to reconfigure
its medical services
into expeditionary medical support teams.
This expeditionary medical support system
allowed
10 percent of Air
Guard medical personnel to deploy for Iraqi
Freedom, compared
to only three percent during the 1991 Persian
Gulf War.
The EMS system can simultaneously provide
expeditionary combat support for AEF missions,
homeland defense emergency response capabilities to
the states,
and support to Air Guard wings, James told
lawmakers earlier this year.
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| An AFRC A-10
from Whiteman AFB, Mo., heads out from Kirkuk
AB, Iraq. Warthogs, flown primarily by Guard
and Reserve forces, conducted the most combat
missions in the theater.(USAF photo by SSgt.
Lee A. Osberry Jr. ) |
He said ANG is expanding its intelligence
collection and production capability to
fill a growing
Air Force mission. Among several initiatives,
the
Air Guard
is enhancing its F-16 theater airborne reconnaissance
system
and established a new unit to support reconnaissance
aircraft operations at Offutt AFB, Neb.
ANG has converted several units to support
space missions, such as missile warning,
satellite command and control,
and launch range safety.
Air Force Reserve Command is expanding its
associate program, in which Reservists share
aircraft
with active duty airmen. For years, Reservists
have
helped operate
and maintain mobility aircraft. More recently,
AFRC has added space operations and flying
training to
its list of associate programs.
AFRC provides over 1,100 trained space officer,
enlisted, civilian, and contractor personnel at more
than 15 locations, Sherrard
told lawmakers. Currently, AFRC has nine
space associate units, and, because they have
been highly successful, he
said, they will grow in the future.
Sherrard said the Air Force and AFRC were
considering developing associate units
for space control,
launch operations, ICBM communications,
and for Air Force
Space Commands Space Operations
School.
With a host of new missions on the plate
of the Air National Guard and Air Force
Reserve
Command,
and
no end to the global war on terrorism
in sight, some experts
worry that the reserve components are
in danger of overload.
For instance, in its recent review of
the National Guard, the GAO found that
there
has been a steady decline
in the warfighting readiness of nondeployed
units. The
Congressional agency did say that the
greatest negative impact was on the Army
Guard; however, it said, Air
National Guard units have also experienced
difficulty in maintaining their warfighting
readiness while conducting
overseas and homeland defense missions
and reported overall declines in readiness.
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| TSgt. Robert Algeo marshals
a Colorado ANG F-16 as it arrives at Balad AB,
Iraq.(USAF photo by TSgt. Keith Brown) |
In her testimony, Laurent said that USAF
and ANG attributed the Air Guards
readiness decline to the
high pace of operations and problems associated
with aging aircraft.
For example, Laurent reported that the
US combat air patrol missions flown by
ANG
fighter units
in New
Jersey, Oregon, and Texas reduced the
number of aircraft available
for training. That meant the few training
aircraft were flown for more hours than
planned, creating
scheduling and maintenance problems.
James also acknowledged that ANG had to
leave some equipment overseas to support
continuing
operations.
That has
caused a shortage at home for training.
Laurent said GAO found that the Defense Department,
the states, and Congress face significant
near- and long-term challenges in readying and resourcing
National
Guard units for overseas and domestic
missions in the global war on terrorism. She added, In
the longer term, the Guards ability to successfully
organize for its missions in the new strategic
environment will depend on whether adequate resources
are identified
for these efforts and whether DODs
readiness and funding policies are consistent
with the Army Guards
expected high utilization for the foreseeable
future.
The New Reality
Many lawmakers are concerned that the
Guard and Reserve are being overused in
ongoing
operations.
The new reality is that this war demands more
from the reserve components than previous conflicts, said
Rep. John M. McHugh (R-N.Y.), chairman
of the House Armed Services Total Force Subcommittee.
He noted that
during Operation Desert Storm in 1991,
a mobilized reservist served about 156 days, while during
todays operations
the average is about 319 days.
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| Capt. Andy Aspey,
Michigan ANG, goes over his preflight checklist
in Iraq.
Reservists
comprise
20 percent of USAFs expeditionary force.(USAF
photo by MSgt. Glenn Wilkewitz) |
The longer-term planning metric is that each
reserve component member can expect to be mobilized
at least
once every five years, if not more
frequently, for periods of up to a year or longer, said
McHugh. Thats
a far cry from one weekend a month.
Recent surveys have indicated that
as many as 25 percent of Guard personnel
intended
not to
re-enlist
once
their tours were completed. Those
surveys
correspond with
recent data which indicated that active
duty service members leaving the military
are less
likely to
sign up for duty in the reserves.
Traditionally, the Air
Guard and Air Reserve components have
gotten about 25 percent of their members
from former
active
duty troops.
Defense leaders told Congress that
the Air National Guard has fallen
short
of its recruiting
goal.
At a June hearing, Marine Gen. Peter
Pace, vice chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said
ANG recruiting was
off about 23 percent.
However, according to James, the recruiting
number is inversely
proportionate to the Air Guards
retention number. ANG retention is
much higher than officials
predicted. The retention estimate
was about 88 percent, but more than
95 percent of ANG troops have elected
to stay in the force.
Because we have retained more of our people,
our recruiting goals are higher than need be, said
James. We
will retain enough people to make
our end strength.
According to DOD officials, the
reserve components across the board
have not
experienced a significant
exodus
of personnel.
The question for many lawmakers
and defense analysts is: How long
will
that hold?
Blum expressed concern but maintained, The sky
is not falling. He said, The potential for
higher losses in the future is certainly there, but
if we continue to address the concerns were hearing,
I think the youth of this country will stick with us.
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| A California ANG C-130E
tackles a fire in the western US.(USAF photo
by SMSgt. Dennis W. Goff) |
Blum continued: You have to understand that this
is the first real test of the all-volunteer
force in the 30 years of its existence. This is the
acid test.
Were being put through the
crucible of a war with sustained
casualties over an extended period
of time.
And indications are that the all-volunteer
force is reliable and resilient
enough to withstand those pressures,
which are pretty extraordinary.
So far it looks like
a success.
James Kitfield is the defense correspondent for National Journal in Washington, D.C. His most recent article for Air Force Magazine, “The Guard and Reserve Stand Fast,” appeared in the March 2003 issue.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rights reserved.
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