Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Costs Increase for Revamping Nation Guard

The AP reports that overhauling the U.S. Army National Guard training program, allowing for soldiers to spend more time at home, will cost $128 million this year and nearly double that next year to equip and train their troops, say officials.

The Guard has been trying for over a year and half to shorten the training process. Leaders have managed to shave months off the time these citizen soldiers are required to spend away from home due to deployments in Afghanistan or Iraq.

From the article:

Until early 2007, Guard combat brigades were training for up to six months — much of it away from home — and then would spend 12 months to 15 months in the war zone. The average time has been slashed to a bit more than 13 months, including about a month of training at home, another 40 to 70 days at the formal Army training center and roughly 10 months on the battlefront.

Spurred on by the Pentagon's promise that Guard deployments would be limited to one year, military leaders pledged to spread some of the required pre-deployment war preparation into the soldiers' routine weekend and week-long training exercises each year.

The boost in funding will pay for the roughly 2,000 Guard trainers to ensure Guard members will receive as much training as possible while at home for much of the year before deploying to one of the 10 mobilization centers for their final, prewar training.

-Dippold

Political Online Reputation

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Thursday, August 14, 2008

Some Recent Military Headlines


  • U.S. deserter ordered deported from Canada [CNN]
  • US Navy Agrees To Limit Potentially Harmful Sonar Use [AP via HuffPo]
  • Army major pleads guilty in $5.8M bribery deal [Newsvine]
  • US Cyberspace Command Put On Hold, May Be Axed By Pentagon [AP via HuffPo]
  • Military lays out $4.4 M to supersize network monitoring technology [Network World]
  • Aspiring Congressman Fights for Wounded Vets [NPR]

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Monday, August 04, 2008

Fallen Soldiers Honored in Country Wide Run

While not a particularly political story, CBS News ran a story yesterday about a ten week jaunt across the country -- called the Run For The Fallen -- to honor 4,129 U.S. soldiers killed in Iraq.

Jon Bellona, 26, from Clinton, New York came up with the idea of running a mile for each soldier killed in Iraq. Each is honored, one every mile, in the order in which they died by a placard placed on a sign or fence.

The run started on June 15 on Father's Day at Fort Irwin, California. It will pass through a dozen states before ending at Arlington National Cemetery, in Virginia, on August 24. The team will cover more than 60 miles a day, every day, for ten weeks.

The majority of the article briefly tells the stories of individual soldiers who are honored along the way.

http://www.runforthefallen.org

-Dippold

Political Online Reputation

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