Shaping the Future: Reserve Chief Daniels Reviews Critical Capabilities
Shaping the force for tomorrow means training realistically today, said Lt. Gen.
Shaping the force for tomorrow means training realistically today, said Lt. Gen.
As the Army looks at restructuring to meet the demands of the future fight, the Army Reserve is poised to follow suit in the coming months with its own review of existing and future capabilities, the component’s top officer said.
“The active component has gone through a ‘night court’ equivalent of all of its formations and is making adjustments to the Total Army, … deciding which units are the most important and rank ordering them, and we will do that starting this fall,” said Lt. Gen. Jody Daniels, chief of the Army Reserve and commander of the Army Reserve Command.
The Association of the U.S. Army’s Coffee Series will feature Lt. Gen. Jody Daniels, chief of the Army Reserve and commanding general of the Army Reserve Command, on Aug. 3.
The in-person event will take place at AUSA headquarters in Arlington, Virginia. The event opens at 6:30 a.m. with coffee and networking. Daniels is scheduled to speak at 7:20 a.m.
It is free for military members, government employees and the media. All attendees must be vaccinated against COVID-19. Masks are optional.
The world keeps changing, but the in-depth analysis in a 2016 report whose main theme was the importance of harmony among the Army’s three components remains relevant, the authors of a new paper assert.
Faced with two nuclear-capable competitors in China and Russia, Army National Guard and Army Reserve forces must modernize to ensure readiness, the components’ leaders told lawmakers.
All organizations have unique circumstances that pose leadership challenges and opportunities. In the U.S.
The Army Reserve has set long-term retention goals as it strives to keep quality soldiers in the ranks despite having missed its recruiting targets for two consecutive years, the component’s top enlisted leader said.
In remarks Dec. 13 during a webinar hosted by Association of the U.S. Army, Command Sgt. Maj. Andrew Lombardo acknowledged the Reserve missed its fiscal 2021 recruiting goal but added that there are “some positive aspects” that offset the challenge.
The senior enlisted leader of the Army Reserve will speak Dec. 13 during a webinar hosted by the Association of the U.S. Army.
Command Sgt. Maj. Andrew Lombardo’s presentation is part of The AUSA Noon Report series. The event begins at noon Eastern. It is free, but registration is required here.
The National Guard and Army Reserve are stepping up efforts to tackle the most pressing mental health care issues facing their soldiers.
The chief of the U.S.