Troop Levels Worry Congress

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Soldiers stand in formation.
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Troop Levels Worry Congress

The House Appropriations defense subcommittee has expressed concern about the Army and Marine Corps having the lowest troop levels in more than 60 years.

The current National Defense Strategy was developed when the Army had 485,000 active-duty soldiers and the Marine Corps had 178,000 active-duty personnel. The fiscal 2024 budget is dramatically smaller, with Army end strength set at 452,000 and the Marines at 172,300.

Schaefer: People Remain Priority in Army of 2030

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Squad training
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Schaefer: People Remain Priority in Army of 2030

Fifty years after the birth of the all-volunteer force, the Army’s top concern is ensuring Americans understand their Army. 

Large swaths of the country … just aren’t familiar with the Army,” said Agnes Schaefer, assistant secretary of the Army for manpower and reserve affairs. “We are seeing a really big and growing cultural knowledge gap about the military, and so … we’re trying to fill that.” 

AUSA Unveils 2023 Focus Areas

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US Capitol
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AUSA Unveils 2023 Focus Areas

On-time and adequate funding, as well as programs focused on people, modernization and readiness, remain top advocacy efforts for the Association of the U.S. Army.

People Remain Top National Guard Priority

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FLorida Guard soldiers loading a Chinook with hurricane relief supplies
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People Remain Top National Guard Priority

From expanding benefits to modernizing its combat forces, the National Guard continues to prioritize its people after a challenging year, the component’s top general said. 

“What does the future look like for our National Guard? What are our priorities going forward? They’re … people, readiness, modernization and reform,” said Gen. Daniel Hokanson, chief of the National Guard Bureau.

DoD Expands Parental Leave Policy

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Army family with baby
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DoD Expands Parental Leave Policy

Soldiers will have more time to spend with their growing families under DoD’s recent expansion of its Military Parental Leave Program. 

“It is important for the development of military families that members be able to care for their newborn, adopted or placed child or children,” Gilbert Cisneros Jr., undersecretary of defense for personnel and readiness, said in the memo announcing the expansion. 

Brito Cites Progress in Diversity, Inclusion Efforts

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Brito Cites Progress in Diversity, Inclusion Efforts

The Army is making progress on its efforts to increase diversity, equity and inclusion in the ranks, a senior Army leader said recently.

In written testimony for the Senate Armed Services subcommittee on personnel, Lt. Gen. Gary Brito, deputy Army chief of staff for personnel, said the Army is focused on its strategy of placing people first, with a “mission and vision to acquire, develop, employ and retain the diversity of soldier and civilian talent needed to achieve Total Army readiness.”

Army Adjusts to Meet Recruiting Challenges

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Recruits gather before a drill sergeant
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Army Adjusts to Meet Recruiting Challenges

As the pool of eligible recruits continues to shrink, the Army is working to improve its recruiting strategy by focusing on untapped segments of the population and enhancing its marketing efforts, the service’s top personnel chief said.

Brito: Army Works to Refine, Improve Talent Management

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Lt. Gen. Gary Brito presents an award to a soldier.
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Brito: Army Works to Refine, Improve Talent Management

The Army continues to refine and build its talent management system so it can recruit and retain the best, the service’s top personnel officer said.

Testifying before the House Armed Services personnel subcommittee, Lt. Gen. Gary Brito, Army deputy chief of staff for personnel, stressed that the Army will continue to prioritize its people.

Brito: ‘People First’ Doesn’t Mean Going Soft

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LTG Brito
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Brito: ‘People First’ Doesn’t Mean Going Soft

Lt. Gen. Gary Brito, the Army deputy chief of staff for personnel, said having a people-friendly force that gives soldiers occasional time off isn’t a bad thing.

Speaking Dec. 7 at an Association of the U.S. Army Hot Topic focused on medical care, the Army G-1 said recruiting and retaining a volunteer Army and making certain the force is ready for combat requires keep soldiers’ lives in mind.

“Don’t confuse taking care of our people, whether through medical issues or other efforts, with being soft,” Brito said.