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Bush's Stealth Draft
(Will Dunham, Reuters, June 30, 2004)
Thousands more former soldiers could be ordered to Iraq and Afghanistan in addition to 5,600 reservists already set to be called back into active-duty service, the Army said on Wednesday. . . . The Army is tapping into the Individual Ready Reserve, a rarely used pool now numbering 111,000 former soldiers who remain eligible to be called to active duty for years after completing their voluntary Army commitment and returning to civilian life. Many have been out of uniform for years. . . . These soldiers will begin to receive mobilization orders on July 6, said Robert Smiley, an Army official dealing with training, readiness and mobilization. . . . Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld in January approved an Army request to mobilize up to 6,500 soldiers from this reserve pool -- being used in large numbers for the first time in 13 years -- and the Army initially plans to mobilize 5,674 soldiers, officials said. . . . But Smiley said perhaps thousands more could be involuntarily mobilized. . . . "We expect to call some more," Smiley said. . . . These soldiers could remain on active duty for up to two years "based on mission requirements," Smiley said. . . . Army soldiers have been serving yearlong deployments in Iraq, although about 20,000 saw their tour extended by three months this spring. . . . "The active-duty army is too small to handle the ongoing missions that it has," Levin said. . . . Smiley said soldiers who already have served in Iraq or Afghanistan but left active duty before July 2003 could be mobilized and sent back there. . . . These troops, many from California and Texas, will fill vacancies in National Guard and Army Reserve units set to deploy to Iraq and Afghanistan this year and early 2005, officials said. Many have skills in big demand, including as military police, engineers and truck drivers, officials said. . . . The United States has about 140,000 troops in Iraq and 20,000 in Afghanistan.
posted by Lorenzo 4:52 PM
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