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Home >> Headline News - 2007 Archive >> Army Secretary Pete Geren speaks on "balance" of today's forces at Annual Meeting and Exposition Email this... Email    Print this Print


Army Secretary Pete Geren speaks on "balance" of today's forces at Annual Meeting and Exposition
10/09/2007

AUSA Press Release 

 
ARLINGTON, Va., Oct. 9, 2007 - Army leaders promised Oct. 8 that the force is not facing irrecoverable harm despite the stresses caused by the ongoing missions in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere.
 
“There are some who care deeply about the Army who are concerned and ask if we are approaching the conditions that plague the Army in the ’70s,” Army Secretary Pete Geren told the Association of the United States Army’s Annual Meeting Monday.  “The answer is an unequivocal ‘No.’ Reenlistment rates are high, the quality of our soldiers - top notch. Discipline is strong. We are deploying the best-led, best-trained and best-equipped soldiers we have ever put in the field.”
 
“We are out of balance,” Army Chief of Staff George Casey told reporters. “Out of balance is not broken, it’s not hollow, it is an Army that is forced by the current demands on the force to do more in the current time-frame and at the expense of sustaining the all-volunteer force and building bridges for the future. We know what we need to do. We need to sustain our soldiers and families. We need to continue to prepare soldiers for success in the current conflict. We need to reset our forces as they come back from future contingencies and we need to continue to transform.”
 
Casey added that it would take two years after the end of the conflict for the force to be completely reset. “The question is when does the conflict end? As you suggested, as forces begin to drop down there’s still going to be a need to reset those forces,” he said.
 
Geren and Army Chief of Staff George Casey, who addressed the media together after Geren’s speech to the conference, emphasized a stepped-up effort to help Army families deal with the protracted conflict. Along those lines the two leaders and Sergeant Major of the Army Kenneth Preston, signed on behalf of the Army a “covenant” with Army families. “With this covenant, we recognize the commitment and increasing sacrifices that our families are making every day,” Geren said. He said that they are committed to standardizing and funding existing family programs and services, “increasing accessibility in quality of healthcare, improving soldier and family housing, ensuring excellence in schools, youth services and child care, expanding education and employment opportunities for family members.”
 
Geren told reporters that a final figure for funding the programs had not yet been determined, but that they are pouring over budget figures to produce a final number within a couple of weeks. “This will be a sustained investment in Army families,” he said. “Our goal is to make this investment long-term, build it into the base budget and work across the full range of initiatives that we identify in the Army Covenant.”
 
Geren and Casey both said that extended tours of duty in Iraq – currently set at 15 months – would continue but only temporarily. “We are in the midst of analyzing that and the impact on our ability to come off a 15-month deployment,” Casey told reporters.
 
 
POC:
John Grady
Director of Communications
Association of the United States Army
(703)-907-2613
jgrady@ausa.org
 


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