The Demographic Challenges of the US Army
By
Lawrence J. Korb,
Sean Duggan
|
October 17, 2007
In testimony
before the Senate Armed Services Committee in March of 2005, Army Vice
Chief of Staff, General Richard Cody, told lawmakers "what keeps me
awake at night is what this all-volunteer force will look like in
2007ï¿??????I think it ought to keep all of you awake."1 What
worried General Cody in the spring of 2005 was maintaining the quality
and standards of an all-volunteer Army with soldiers returning from
their second and third tours in Iraq and Afghanistan since September
11. What General Cody did not envision in the spring of 2005 was that
by December of this year, 13 of the Army’s 43 combat brigades would be
serving their third tour and 5 would be serving their fourth tour in a
combat zone since September 11. His boss, the Army Chief of Staff
General George Casey, put it correctly on August 30, 2007 when he said,
"the tempo of our deployments are not sustainable."
This article was originally published in
National Strategy Forum.