Most Guard units not war-ready
WASHINGTON – More than two-thirds of the Army National Guard’s 34 brigades are not combat ready, mostly because of equipment shortages that will cost up to $21 billion to correct, the top National Guard general said Tuesday.
Lt. Gen. H. Steven Blum spoke to a group of defense reporters after Army officials, analysts and members of Congress disclosed that two-thirds of the active Army’s brigades are not ready for war.
The budget won’t allow the military to complete the personnel training and equipment repairs and replacement that must be done when units return home after deploying to Iraq or Afghanistan, they say.
One Army official acknowledged Tuesday that while all active Army units serving in the war zone are “100 percent” ready, the situation is not the same for those at home.
“In the continental United States, there are plenty of units that are rated at significantly less than a C-1 rating,” said Lt. Col. Carl S. Ey. “Backlogs at the depots, budget issues and the timeliness of receiving funds to conduct training are all critical to the Army’s ability keep their force trained, ready and at the highest readiness level possible.”
Once a taboo subject for the military, often buried deep in classified documents, readiness levels – generally ranked from C-1 (the best) to C-4 (the worst) are now being used as weapons themselves to force money out of Congress and the administration.
And while Army officials still won’t specify how many units are at which levels, they are being more open about the overall declining state of readiness.
A key element of the problem is that Army units returning from the war have either left tanks, trucks or other equipment behind or are bringing them home damaged. Once back, many soldiers either leave the Army or move to other posts, forcing leaders to train others to replace them. As a result, the unit’s ratings drop, said Ey, an Army spokesman.
Last week, several House Democrats said that two-thirds of the Army brigades are rated not ready for combat, and Army officials have not disputed that figure.