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- <text id=91TT1248>
- <title>
- June 10, 1991: Lessons Of Desert Storm:Phantom Army
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- June 10, 1991 Evil
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 18
- LESSONS OF DESERT STORM
- Phantom Army
- </hdr><body>
- <p>For the most part the National Guard fought well in the gulf. But
- some outfits, plagued by no-shows and poor training, never got to
- the front.
- </p>
- <p>By ALEX PRUD'HOMME--Reported by Kristina Rebelo and Bruce van
- Voorst/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Few institutions are as quintessentially American as the
- National Guard. Founded by the colonists in 1607, blooded in the
- Revolution as the Minutemen, the Guard has served in every major
- U.S. conflict, and acts as a first line of defense when natural
- disasters strike. The 574,000 Guard members enrolled in 4,000
- units are the military's link to civilian society: part-time
- soldiers who are supposed to devote a minimum of 12 weekends and
- one two-week period each year to prepare themselves for battle.
- </p>
- <p> Since 1973, when the Pentagon abandoned the draft and
- installed the all-volunteer armed forces, the Guard, along with
- the armed forces reserves, has assumed a more central role in
- military planning. The Defense Department's Total Force policy
- is designed to have units of the Air National Guard and reserves
- and Army Guard support troops available for quick deployment;
- in the event of a war lasting more than a few weeks,
- heavy-combat Guard and reserve units would be called up to round
- out divisions of the regular Army. Based on the military's
- commitment to Total Force, Congress has poured more than $100
- billion into training the Guard and equipping its troops during
- the past decade.
- </p>
- <p> The strategy got its first real test in Op eration Desert
- Storm, when 228,500 Guard members and reservists were called up
- for active duty in the biggest mobilization since the Korean
- War. More than 100,000 of these part-time soldiers were sent to
- the Persian Gulf, while the remainder filled in Stateside for
- the departing regular forces.
- </p>
- <p> The gulf deployment showed the best, and the worst, of the
- weekend warriors. Air National Guard fighters and attack planes
- knocked out Iraqi tanks, and the Air Reserve conducted a huge
- airlift of troops and materiel. A force composed of the Marine
- Reserve blasted through Saddam Hussein's defenses and led the
- way to Kuwait City.
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, though, the Army encountered major
- difficulties in deploying its National Guard troops. Several
- thousand Guard members on the rosters could not be sent to the
- gulf because they had not attended basic training. Some were too
- old, others overweight and out of shape. A full 5% suffered from
- dental problems that needed treatment.
- </p>
- <p> Far more alarming was the attempted mobilization of three
- so-called round-out brigades, each of which had been scheduled
- to augment a regular Army division. Although the Pentagon had
- given all the units a C-2 rating, its second highest standard
- of battle readiness, the three brigades--totaling 15,000,
- one-fourth of the Army Guard members summoned to active duty--were declared unfit for combat by regular Army commanders and
- could not be sent to the gulf.
- </p>
- <p> Those failures have ignited an angry debate between the
- Pentagon, which wants to reduce the number of standby soldiers,
- and the weekend warriors' supporters in Congress. The dispute
- has become acrimonious because the Guard, the reserves and the
- regular armed forces are all fighting for a share of a defense
- budget that will shrink 20% during the next four years. The
- Guard's defenders accuse the Department of Defense of having
- kept the Guard and reserves out of the fray so that regular
- units could get more than a fair share of future appropriations.
- "The Pentagon took the position that they simply weren't going
- to use combat reserves," says Mississippi Democrat G.V.
- ("Sonny") Montgomery, the reserves' leading champion in the
- House. "That's not the Total Force concept Congress had in
- mind."
- </p>
- <p> Military leaders retort that rushing unprepared troops
- into action would have been irresponsible. Says Defense
- Secretary Dick Cheney: "I feel very strongly we would have run
- the risk of getting a lot of people killed unnecessarily if we
- sent units [to the gulf] before they were ready." Cheney
- argues that a balanced reduction in the overall strength of the
- armed services will require cutbacks in the Guard and reserves:
- "If we're going to cut active-duty personnel, and we are--the
- Army's going from 18 active to 12 active divisions--I don't
- need as many reservists and Guardsmen to back them up." Some of
- the duties the Guard now performs could be transferred to
- regular units, a prospect that raised alarms on Capitol Hill.
- Over Cheney's objections, the House voted two weeks ago to add
- $650 million to the $18 billion the Pentagon had requested for
- the Guard and reserves in 1992. It also voted to trim a planned
- cutback in Guard and reserve strength from 108,000 to 37,500.
- </p>
- <p> However the argument over funding is resolved, Desert
- Storm illuminated shortcomings, especially in the Army National
- Guard, that must be corrected if the weekend warriors are to
- play an effective role in the nation's defense. The problems
- fall into three overlapping categories:
- </p>
- <p> Lack of Readiness. Over the past three years, the
- government's General Accounting Office has issued several
- reports about slipshod training and severe shortages of
- equipment in Guard units around the country. Among the items
- listed in the GAO's February 1991 study: during a training
- exercise, one unit had only 40% of the chemical-warfare
- equipment it needed; a helicopter battalion was unable to
- practice because it was given only two usable antitank missiles
- for live-fire exercises; and an infantry battalion received only
- 19 of the 60 TOW missiles it had requested. All too often, the
- GAO reported, Guard units have failed to acquire combat skills
- because their training exercises are so unrealistic. Most
- disheartening, the agency concluded, few improvements have been
- made since similar problems were detected in 1989.
- </p>
- <p> Absenteeism. Critics of the Guard have long charged that
- the ranks of some units have been artificially swollen with
- "ghosts"--phantom soldiers who remain on the payroll even
- though they have missed more than the nine drills allowed by
- Pentagon regulations. "The Guard has people who show up for two
- or three drills, and they're never taken off the books," says
- John Womack, who retired as adjutant general of the Montana
- National Guard in 1980. "They're kept on the records as long as
- they can be, so when their strength figures go to Washington,
- they're still on the books."
- </p>
- <p> Sagging Morale. The Desert Storm call-up confronted many
- in the Guard with an obligation they thought they would never
- have to fulfill: abruptly leaving their jobs and families to
- march off to war. Untold numbers of recent recruits had enlisted
- mainly for the pay and never expected to face combat. Moreover,
- since many Guard units are assigned to logistical and other
- support duties needed to transport the massive amounts of
- military supplies sent to the gulf back to the U.S., they were
- forced to remain in the war zone long after virtually all the
- regular troops were sent home. Not until two weeks ago did the
- Defense Department announce specific departure dates for the
- remaining units. Over the years the Defense Department has tried
- to alleviate these problems, and in fact considerable progress
- has been made. Some Guard units received the latest tanks and
- infantry fighting vehicles before comparable regular soldiers
- did.
- </p>
- <p> But often these attempts at reform run into a hard
- political reality: unlike the reserves, which are controlled
- directly by the Pentagon, National Guard units are
- constitutionally protected creatures of the states and
- territories where they maintain their headquarters. Unless the
- President calls them up, Guard units are at the command of
- Governors, who also choose their senior officers. It is almost
- impossible for an officer to become a state adjutant general
- without being a master of politics.
- </p>
- <p> All that tends to create a climate in which cronyism and
- favoritism can flourish. In addition, the Guards are a potent
- force in local and congressional elections; the lawmakers who
- support hefty budgets for units filled with their constituents
- don't like to be told by critics that the money is not being
- well spent. On top of that, some Guard officers fear that a
- determined drive to raise attendance and training standards
- could lead to massive disgruntlement in the ranks and a wave of
- resignations. Says Colonel Patrick Garvey, commander of Camp
- Smith, a Guard facility in Peekskill, N.Y.: "In reality, it's
- an all-volunteer force based in the home community. If [the
- troops] are not happy, if they don't like the game, they'll go
- home."
- </p>
- <p> Balanced against those negatives is a fact of enormous
- importance in an era of federal austerity: on average, it costs
- only one-fourth as much to train an Army Guard member as it does
- to train a full-time soldier. That point was forcefully made
- last month in a letter to Cheney signed by 54 Senators from both
- parties. They charged that the Defense chief's plans to downsize
- the Guard "fail to recognize [its] cost-effectiveness...and, in effect, discards the Total Force policy at the precise
- time it has proven successful."
- </p>
- <p> The real question is what mix of regular and backup forces
- the U.S. needs for the challenges of the post-cold war era.
- Most foreign policy experts predict that future wars will be
- like the one in the gulf: intensely violent regional flare-ups
- that will play out in a matter of months at most. In those
- circumstances, it makes little sense to rely on large numbers
- of part-time soldiers, especially ground troops, who cannot be
- readied for combat before the fighting is over. But if the
- experts are wrong and the nation finds itself bogged down in a
- protracted struggle, it cannot afford to be without deep
- reserves. Whatever its numbers, the Guard must be better
- prepared than it is today to carry out its mission.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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