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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Army extends tours of duty


An Iraqi boy comforts his mother at Baghdad's Al Numan hospital after she learned that one of her relatives died after a car bomb exploded in Baghdad on Wednesday, killing at least four people and injuring dozens, police said. An Iraqi boy comforts his mother at Baghdad's Al Numan hospital after she learned that one of her relatives died after a car bomb exploded in Baghdad on Wednesday, killing at least four people and injuring dozens, police said. 
 (Associated PressAssociated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Josh White Washington Post

WASHINGTON – Army officials announced Wednesday that thousands of active-duty and reserve soldiers who are nearing the end of their volunteer service commitments could be forced to serve an entire tour overseas if their units are chosen for deployment to Iraq or Afghanistan.

The order applies to all Army soldiers who are deployed in the forseeable future and means that many troops could face extended terms in the military after their formal contracts expire. The Army had previously issued such orders on a unit-by-unit basis, as troops deployed. Now, every soldier in the Army is on notice that if his or her unit is called into the fight, he or she will go – and stay.

Soldiers will be notified 90 days before their unit is to deploy, and under the policy, all soldiers must then serve with their units until 90 days after they return. If a soldier’s scheduled service end date falls anywhere within that window, he or she will be forced to serve out the entire tour.

Army officials said the move promotes cohesion by preventing Army divisions from being depleted shortly before they go into battle. But military experts and lawmakers said the decision indicates that the Army is being stretched thin by multiple operations, with some calling the program a draft in disguise.

“It’s a blanket imposition of extended service, and it has to raise questions about how adequately manned the Army is,” said Loren Thompson of the Lexington Institute, a nonpartisan think tank.

The so-called stop-loss policy prevents the normal attrition of troops from the Army and ensures that divisions won’t have to seek additional troops when they go to Iraq or Afghanistan, said Lt. Gen. Franklin Hagenbeck, the Army’s deputy chief of staff in charge of human resources and personnel. Congress authorized such measures after Vietnam, and they were first used during preparations for the Persian Gulf War in 1990. They have been used since to bolster divisions heading to Iraq and Afghanistan.

“If we don’t do that, a division would change 4,000 people out just before deployment, and that’s nonsensical,” Hagenbeck said Wednesday. He said it “puts soldiers’ lives at risk” to have soldiers meeting on the battlefield for the first time.

All 160,000 U.S. troops in Iraq, Afghanistan, Kuwait and Qatar are serving under the same stop-loss conditions, but Army officials decided to announce a policy that alerts all troops for the future. Though Hagenbeck said the Army does not need more troops, he acknowledged that it is “stretched.”

Because the U.S. military intends to keep about 140,000 troops in Iraq through 2005 to fend off an insurgency – instead of scaling down significantly, as originally planned – officials have extended the tours of 20,000 troops and recently announced that they will draw more than 3,500 troops from South Korea to support the mission. A few units are scheduled to deploy this summer to relieve the extended troops, and a full-scale rotation of troops is scheduled for this fall.

John Tillson, an expert with the Institute for Defense Analysis, said he thinks the stop-loss policy is essential to maintaining a presence around the globe.

“We’re in a war, so the question is, who pays the burden?” Tillson said. “The people who pay the burden are those who volunteered to join the military.”

Some, however, don’t see that as fair. One Army brigade commander, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said: “A soldier just said to me, ‘What happened to the volunteer force? This is a draft.’ ”

Members of Congress have been calling for a permanent increase in the size of the Army to deal with the war on terrorism, but the Pentagon has resisted that amid a call for a lighter, more mobile military. Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., a member of the Armed Services Committee, Wednesday renewed his call to permanently increase the Army by 20,000 soldiers, something he characterized as an “urgent need” in light of the stop-loss policy.

For Jessica Salamon of Ravenna, Ohio, the stop-loss policy has already affected her and her husband, Chad, a National Guardsman who is serving in Iraq with the 118th Medical Battalion as a mechanic. Chad Salamon’s six-year commitment should end in March, but he is almost certain not to return by then.

“This is supposed to be an all-volunteer military,” said Jessica Salamon, who has been to therapy and saw her dream of starting a family deferred. “They’re not volunteering when they’re told they can’t leave. That’s conscription. . . . Each one of these policy decisions tears up someone’s life.”

In a presidential campaign speech in Tampa, Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., said the military should not force soldiers to fight.

“You have what is a back-door draft that has been put into effect,” Kerry said. “People serving beyond the time of their voluntary service are no longer volunteers.”