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Stretched Army Speeds Troops Back to Iraq
Associated Press  |  April 03, 2007
WASHINGTON - For just the second time since the war began, the Army is sending large units back to Iraq without giving them at least one year of rest at home between deployments, officials said Monday.

Poll: Will shortening dwell time between Iraq tours to less than a year hurt Army retention?

The move signaled just how stretched the U.S. fighting force has become.

A combat brigade from New York and a Texas headquarters unit will return to Iraq this summer in order to maintain through August the military build-up President Bush announced earlier this year. Overall the Pentagon announced that 7,000 troops will be deploying to Iraq in the coming months, as part of the effort to keep 20 brigades in the country to help bolster the ongoing Baghdad security plan. A brigade is roughly 3,000 soldiers.

"Obviously right now the Army is stretched, and we will make every effort possible not to break their dwell time," said a senior Army official, who requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue. "But in this case we had to."

The 4th Infantry Division headquarters unit from Fort Hood, Texas, will return to Iraq after a little more than seven months at home - the largest break to date from the Army's goal of giving units a year's rest after every year deployed. The 1st Brigade of the 10th Mountain Division, based at Ft. Drum, N.Y., will go back to Iraq after just 10 1/2 months at home.

The only other major unit to spend less than one year at home was the Georgia-based 3rd Brigade of the 3rd Infantry Division, which returned to Iraq 48 days short of a year's rest, and is there now.

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Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


 


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