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| An F-16A (right in photo) from
the 148th Fighter Wing, Minnesota ANG, escorts
home one of many F-16C models the wing will receive.
Seven of the Air Forces 20 fighter wing
equivalents are in the Air National Guard and
AIr Force Reserve Command. |
As the United States military prepared late last year
for the confrontation with Iraq, thousands of members
of the National Guard and Reserve began a holiday season
routine that had grown familiar with repetition.
Activation orders rippled through the force of 1.3
million reservists in the largest call-up since the
Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Around the nation, reservists
rushed to get married, informed employers of long absences
to come, struggled to shape up finances and paperwork,
and bid tearful good-byes to worried family members
and friends.
More than 10,000 Guardsmen and Reservists were activated
during the call-up in December, joining another 53,000
already on active duty.
More activations took place in January and February,
when the number activated hit more than 100,000. The
number could top 200,000, depending on how the face-off
with Iraq plays out. That would rival the Gulf War
buildup of 263,000 reservists 12 years ago.
In spite of the obvious hardships, there were no protests
from reservists whose lives were, again, disrupted.
There was no outcry from employers left shorthanded
again as employees put on the uniform and left for
deployments. There were no commanders grumbling about
being shackled with weekend warriors.
The primary motivator [of the reservists] is
to answer the call when the nation needs them, said
retired Maj. Gen. Richard C. Alexander, president of
the National Guard Association of the United States. Its
why they want to be in uniform in the first place,
and their families support them because they feel the
same way.
Its getting harder, though, continued Alexander.
Whats changed, he said, is
that the US military can no longer predict where it
will be fighting next or what kind of host nation support
it might receive. That has put increased pressure on
the Guard and Reserve to step up and respond more rapidly
to these unanticipated crises.
The burden placed on the reserve components has grown
dramatically in the past decade, and it spiked even
higher after the 9/11 attacks. During the Cold Wars
four decades, Presidents rarely needed to approve major
activations of the Guard and Reserve. Within the past
12 years, the reserves have been activated for six
major contingencies:
- Desert Storm in Iraq and Kuwait, 199091.
- Northern Watch over Iraq, 1991 to the present.
- Southern Watch over Iraq, 1992 to the present.
- Deliberate Force in Bosnia, 1995.
- Allied Force over Serbia, 1999.
- Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan, 2001 to the present.
It is not unusual to find reservists who have been
called up four or even five times in the past decade.
The contribution of Guard and Reserve forces to ongoing
contingency operations has grown from an average of
roughly one million man-days of duty per year in the
1980s to 13 million man-days at present.
As a result, the Guard and Reserve have undergone
a dramatic transformation from organizations designed
for mass mobilization in the unlikely event of a major
war to active members of a Total Force engaged in constant
peacekeeping, peace enforcement, and combat operations
around the world.
| Majs. Mike Lankford and Brian
Borg, AFRC A-10 Thunderbolt II pilots, go over
flight plans. They were preparing for a close
air support mission from Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan,
in support of Operation Enduring Freedom. |
Handle With Care
Craig W. Duehring, principal deputy assistant secretary
of defense for reserve affairs, said expanded reliance
on the reserve components should be handled with utmost
care.
Everyone realizes we are no longer using the
Guard and Reserves as we did during the Cold War, said
Duehring. However, while the Guard and Reserves
have proven conclusively that we can count on them
in places like Bosnia, Kosovo, Afghanistan, and the
Middle Eastand the active component is much more
willing to count on them now that they know what to
expect from the Guard and Reservewe cant
abuse them. These are people who have outside jobs
and careers, and we may be approaching a limit, in
terms of how much we ask of them.
In recruiting and retention, officials had expected
problems. However, the Guard and Reserve have met or
exceeded their goals during the last hectic year of
operations.
Nor have officials encountered the expected spike
in complaints from hard-pressed employers upset at
losing their most valued employees. Ive
been holding my breath and watching closely for warning
signs that weve reached some kind of saturation
point in use of the Guard and Reserve, said Duehring. So
far I havent seen any.
Bob G. Hollingsworth is executive director of the
Pentagons National Committee for Employer Support
of the Guard and Reserve. He attributes the national
outpouring of support to the shock and anger caused
by the first direct attack on the United States since
Pearl Harbor in 1941.
I havent seen this galvanization of support
from employers in my lifetime, he said. The
great preponderance of calls I have received from employers
after 9/11 have not concerned what they had to do by
law but rather what employers could do extra for their
employees who were reservists.
Hollingsworth cites the example of a Virginia reservist
who was mobilized for duty in Bosnia. He had a wife
and two children and stood to lose about half of his
annual $50,000 income, which he earned driving trucks
for the Serta Mattress Co.
The financial burden eventually became such
a problem, said Hollingsworth, that he
called us, and we made a visit to Serta to explain
the situation. The company not only made up the salary
differential while he was on active duty but also extended
his health insurance.
Hollingsworth added that there are hundreds of
companies doing the same thing.
| Above, a Commando Solo aircraft
on the ramp. The 193rd SOW has a particularly
high deployment rate. |
Sense of Honor
The same sense of patriotism is evident in the reservists
who call the National Committee for Employer Support
of the Guard and Reserve. Many from infrequently activated
units inquired how to volunteer for active duty. Hollingsworth
cites the case of Sgt. Layne Morris, a member of a
Special Forces unit in the Army National Guard from
Salt Lake City. Morris was wounded in a firefight in
Afghanistan, losing an eye. Moreover, one of his friends
was killed. Now, said Hollingsworth, Morris wants to
go back to Afghanistan to complete unfinished
business there.
Hollingsworth says he is ecstatic about
the response of reservists and employers.
Today, the spotlight is on actual deployments, but
the Pentagon has been studying ways to further transform
the Guard and Reserve components to make them more
relevant to an era of short-notice contingencies and
new missions such as homeland defense and regular peacekeeping
rotations.
As part of an ongoing Reserve Component Comprehensive
Review, Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld asked
the services and reserve components to consider changes
in the entire activereserve relationship. His
goal: smoother cooperation in peacetime and times of
crisis.
Along the way, Rumsfeld and his top aides have made
some controversial proposals. One calls for giving
back to the active force a number of missions now performed
by reservists. Rumsfeld was annoyed when he learned
that he couldnt swiftly execute some missions
because they required reserve activation.
However, any major change in that situation would
strike at the heart of the Total Force concept. Any
actual proposal to move missions from the Guard and
Reserve on a wholesale basis is sure to cause consternation
and anger in the reserve ranks.
Certainly, Secretary Rumsfelds suggestion
that it might make sense to move certain missions back
to the active component got our attention, said
Army Maj. Gen. Raymond F. Rees, acting chief of the
National Guard Bureau.
Rees went on to say, however, We think he just
wants to make sure we use the Guard in wise and prudent
ways. Certainly if we need to make adjustments well
respond, just as weve responded to the current
vision. Our strong feeling, however, is that citizen
soldiers should be fully involved in all aspects of
the Total Force, and what we hear Rumsfeld saying doesnt
contradict that idea.
The Total Force was born in 1973 and was directly
tied in principle to the all-volunteer force created
the same year in the backwash of Vietnam. President
Johnson had resisted a major reserve call-up throughout
the Vietnam years so as not to disturb his Great Society
legislative effort.
US military leaders have never forgotten that the
Johnson Administration, for reasons of political expediency,
refused to put the nation on a war footing, leaving
the uniformed services to fight the Vietnam War on
their own, with little up-front public support.
| An EC-130 crew from the 193rd
Special Operations Wing, Pennsylvania ANG, monitors
a radio broadcast. |
Done for a Reason
In the wake of Vietnam, postwar military leaders,
led by Army Chief of Staff Gen. Creighton W. Abrams
Jr., decided to make a wholesale transfer of combat
support functions to the reserves. The result was a
military force structure purposely configured to require
a Presidential reserve call-up in the event of a major
mobilization.
In the Air Force, reserve component forces account
for 64 percent of tactical airlift, 55 percent of aerial
refueling and strategic tankers, 38 percent of tactical
air support, and 27 percent of strategic airlift. Seven
of the Air Forces 20 fighter wing equivalents
(the term used to describe combat fighter aircraft
force structure) are in the Air National Guard and
Air Force Reserve Command. The AFRC forces also fly
B-52 bombers.
In the Army, 70 percent of combat service support
resides in the reserve component. The reserves are
also home to 97 percent of the Armys civil affairs
forces, and 82 percent of its public affairs officers.
Likewise, 81 percent of Army public affairs forces
are in the reserves; 81 percent of psychological operations
forces; 85 percent of medical brigades; and 66 percent
of military police battalions.
The Department of Defense has discoveredor relearnedthis
pivotal fact: The President needs to call up the reserves
even for such small-scale contingencies as Bosnia,
Kosovo, and the Gulf no-fly zone operations.
Under the pressures of real-world operations during
the past decade, the reserve components have learned
a new flexibility.
A real-world example came late last year. The Air
Force badly wanted to send home thousands of Air National
Guard and Air Force Reserve Command troops. They had
been on security duty at US and overseas bases for
more than a year, and they legally could have been
held on active duty for another 12 months.
However, the Air Force did not have sufficient personnel
to replace them. In the end, the Army National Guard
stepped in, activating and retraining 9,000 combat
troops for security duty and offering them as replacements.
I think the Army Guards willingness to
mobilize 9,000 of their troops to fill that shortfall
was a monumental event, said Duehring. It
showed the willingness of the reserves after 9/11 to
relax some of these entrenched philosophies and territorial
jealousies.
There is widespread wariness, however, that the reserve
review could make it easier to deploy military forces
without a call-up of reserves, and that would undermine
a fundamental principle of the Total Force.
I understand that the Secretary of Defense is
trying to [move] missions from the reserve into the
active-duty component in order to shrink the amount
of time it takes them to respond to a contingency,
but I fear making it possible to deploy our military
without the reserve component, said Alexander. That
makes it more likely that a particular Administration
will take us to war, rather than the United States
going to war as a whole nation. ... I also believe
the Guard and Reserve would become less relevant.
The reserve components arent averse to change.
In fact, officials say they are experimenting with
new ways to make the reserves more flexible and responsiveand
reserve duty less onerous once a unit or individual
is activated.
For many Army officials, the best model is the Air
National Guard. Ive said for years that
the Air Guard model makes a lot of sense for the new
operational environment were confronting, said
Rees of the National Guard Bureau.
Rees went on, Just look at Air Guard units,
attached to the 1st Air Force, that are ready to fly
air defense missions over the United States with only
minutes of warning. The Air Guard has proven for a
long time that the Guard can support rapid-reaction
missions. You just have to make the appropriate investment
in resources and training.
| SrA. Charles Schilling, a crew
chief from the 159th Fighter Wing, New Orleans
ANG, directs an F-15 out to the taxiway. Members
of the 159th were at Incirlik AB, Turkey, for
Operation Northern Watch. |
The Rainbow Effect
In a concept called rainbowing, Air Guard
units meet the requirements of a three-month Northern
Watch or Southern Watch deployment by bringing in fresh
units every two weeks. The units fall in on forward
deployed equipment. This avoids burdening a single
unit with an entire 90-day deployment, as is customary
for the active duty Air Force.
All of this is part and parcel of USAFs 10 Air
and Space Expeditionary Forces, or AEFs.
The AEF construct is clear evidence that the
Air Force and Air Guard have tried to come to grips
with the expeditionary requirements and the types of
deployment issues were increasingly confronting, said
Rees. Were not at that level of sophistication
yet with the Army Guard.
There are other lessons from the Air National Guard
model, say officials. They note many Air Guardsmen
are pilots or aircraft maintainers in civilian life,
and, as a result, they can often transition to their
military roles more quickly and with less training.
The lesson is that all service reserve components should
take care to match civilian careers with reserve force
occupations.
The Air Guard also defies the old one-weekend-a-month,
two-weeks-a-year scheme of reserve duty. Because some
Air Guard units are known to have high deployment rates
and operations tempothe Air Guards Commando
Solo 193rd Special Operations Wing in Pennsylvania
is a noted examplethey tend to attract reservists
with flexible careers and a thirst for adventure.
People realize when they join those units that
they have a high rate of tasking, and if that doesnt
fit the realities of their civilian careers or family
situations, they better look to join another unit, said
Duehring. Frequently, Air Guard pilots are on
reserve duty for much longer than the traditional two
weeks each summer, but their jobs allow for that.
In applying that concept across the board, the Office
of Reserve Affairs is looking to adjust the old model.
If an Army Guard armor unit takes a week to deploy
its equipment to the field for training and a week
to return it, for instance, it may need to train for
a full three weeks while dropping the requirement to
show up one weekend per month.
The point is that the threats to US security and national
interests around the world are changing more rapidly
than any time in memory, Guard and Reserve officials
say, and their forces are ready to adapt to the new
challenges.
As Duehring puts it, The idea is to be flexible.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rightsreserved.
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