U.S Army |
The U.S. Army plans to cut at least a dozen brigades over the
next five years as part of a large-scale restructuring of the
active-duty force, Chief of Staff Gen. Raymond Odierno announced
Tuesday.
The service plans to reduce the number of brigade combat teams, or
BCTs, from 45 to 33 as part of a previously announced plan to reduce the
active component by 80,000 soldiers, or 14 percent, to 490,000 soldiers
by 2017, Odierno said today at a press conference at the Pentagon.
Another brigade may still be eliminated for a total of 13, he said.
And it could get worse. The Army's plans are a result of about $500
billion in decade-long defense spending reductions mandated in the 2011
deficit-reduction legislation known as the Budget Control Act.
They don't take into account an additional $500 billion in automatic
cuts known as sequestration that will slice into the Pentagon's
long-term budget unless Congress and the White House come up with an
alternative plan.
"As damaging as they are, these cuts don't begin to reflect the
crippling damage sequestration will do to our armed forces and national
security," Rep. Howard "Buck" McKeon, R-Calif., chairman of the House
Armed Services Committee, said in an e-mailed statement after the Army's
announcement. "This is only the tip of the iceberg. Much deeper cuts
are still to come."
The move -- which is estimated to save $400 million in military
construction costs alone -- will affect bases across the country.
At least 10 stateside installations are slated to lose a brigade,
including Fort Bliss, Texas; Fort Bragg, N.C.; Fort Campbell, Ky.; Fort
Carson, Colo.; Fort Drum, N.Y.; Fort Hood, Texas; Fort Knox, Ky.; Fort
Riley, Kan.; Fort Stewart, Ga., and Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash.
Lawmakers from those states were upset but tempered in their reaction to the news.
"I am very disappointed that Fort Carson is one of ten bases around
the country that will lose a brigade combat team by the year 2017," Rep.
Doug Lamborn, R-Colo., said in an e-mailed statement. "However the blow
is considerably softened by the fact that all but 750 of those soldiers
will remain at Fort Carson and be reassigned to other missions.
Including other restructuring changes, the Army anticipates Fort Carson
will actually increase in size by 1,800 active duty Army personnel."
Two more brigade combat teams are already in the process of being
removed from Germany, one from Baumholder and another from Grafenwoehr.
The Army plans to keep two BCTs in Europe to meet strategic commitments.
Decisions on where to make the reductions were based on numerous
factors, Odierno said, from cost and regional socio-economic impacts to
the strategic distribution of forces, including the service's alignment
with the Pentagon's planned shift in focus to the Asia-Pacific region.
The Army is also reorganizing the makeup of the brigade combat teams
to sustain as much combat potential as possible despite the overall
reduction in quantity, Odierno said. The reorganization is based on
extensive analysis and the lessons learned from more than a decade of
war, he said.
"We will add a third maneuver battalion – and additional fires and
engineering capability to each of our armor and infantry brigade combat
teams in order to make them more lethal, more flexible and more agile,"
he said.
The decision to restructure the BCTS eliminates the headquarters but
preserves 13 armor and infantry battalions "that would be lost without
the reorganization," according to a statement provided by the Army. The
service will also continue to invest in aviation, special operations,
missile defense and cyber security, it states.
While the plans detailed thus far only affect the active component,
sequestration would require an additional reduction in the Guard and
Reserve forces of as much as 100,000 troops, Odierno said.
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