Got this from the Army Times:
Report claims 50,000 troops could surge
Pentagon disputes Congressional Budget Office estimate
By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : February 12, 2007
The Defense Department and the Army are disputing a new report that says the 21,500 additional combat troops being sent to Iraq by the Bush administration could result in up to 50,000 troops actually being deployed to the region when all support forces are taken into account.
Defense and service officials say only a fraction of that number would be needed.
The report from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office bases its projection on the fact that the Bush plan is unclear about whether the 21,500 troops needed to quell violence are all combat troops or if that number already includes support forces.
“Over the past few years, DoD’s practice has been to deploy a total of about 9,500 per combat brigade to the Iraq theater, including about 4,000 combat troops and about 5,500 supporting troops,” says the five-page report requested by Rep. John Spratt, D-S.C., the House Budget Committee chairman, and Rep. Ike Skelton, D-Mo., the House Armed Services Committee chairman.
Spratt said the report raises the question of whether even one year at home between deployments can be guaranteed.
“The Pentagon will probably have to relax ‘dwell time’ standards even more,” Spratt said, using the military phrase to describe time at home between deployments.
But speaking to Pentagon reporters Feb. 2, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said the CBO study “dramatically overestimates” the numbers needed to support the new American brigades going to Iraq. The CBO study extends through fiscal 2009, while the Defense Department’s estimates only go through fiscal 2007, Gates said.
“When we made the first announcement of the force levels, we acknowledged that there would be some additional support forces,” Gates said. “We think that number — it’s not settled for sure right now — but that number looks like it will be about 10 percent to 15 percent of the number that CBO cited.”
At a Jan. 23 hearing, Army Chief of Staff Gen. Peter Schoomaker said he believed the 21,500 increase included four support battalions.
“Right now, we do not anticipate there will be increased combat service support requirements over what is now embedded inside of the brigade combat teams we have,” Schoomaker said.
Army spokesman Lt. Col. Gary Kolb said Feb. 1 the support needs of the additional five brigade combat teams will be satisfied by the current support network in Iraq and the support units embedded within those teams.
But the additional support troops included in the budget office estimates are based on the possibility that Schoomaker is wrong, an armed services committee aide said. “While Schoomaker initially said it wouldn’t take extra support troops, CBO doesn’t believe that is possible,” an aide to Skelton said.
Under the administration’s plan, the force increase — already underway — will reach its peak in May. The plan calls for a three-month buildup with a similarly gradual decline when the mission is done. The report does not try to estimate how long the mission might last, looking at only the cost to sustain it for various lengths of time.
Staff writers Gordon Lubold and Matthew Cox contributed to this report.
Report claims 50,000 troops could surge
Pentagon disputes Congressional Budget Office estimate
By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : February 12, 2007
The Defense Department and the Army are disputing a new report that says the 21,500 additional combat troops being sent to Iraq by the Bush administration could result in up to 50,000 troops actually being deployed to the region when all support forces are taken into account.
Defense and service officials say only a fraction of that number would be needed.
The report from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office bases its projection on the fact that the Bush plan is unclear about whether the 21,500 troops needed to quell violence are all combat troops or if that number already includes support forces.
“Over the past few years, DoD’s practice has been to deploy a total of about 9,500 per combat brigade to the Iraq theater, including about 4,000 combat troops and about 5,500 supporting troops,” says the five-page report requested by Rep. John Spratt, D-S.C., the House Budget Committee chairman, and Rep. Ike Skelton, D-Mo., the House Armed Services Committee chairman.
Spratt said the report raises the question of whether even one year at home between deployments can be guaranteed.
“The Pentagon will probably have to relax ‘dwell time’ standards even more,” Spratt said, using the military phrase to describe time at home between deployments.
But speaking to Pentagon reporters Feb. 2, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said the CBO study “dramatically overestimates” the numbers needed to support the new American brigades going to Iraq. The CBO study extends through fiscal 2009, while the Defense Department’s estimates only go through fiscal 2007, Gates said.
“When we made the first announcement of the force levels, we acknowledged that there would be some additional support forces,” Gates said. “We think that number — it’s not settled for sure right now — but that number looks like it will be about 10 percent to 15 percent of the number that CBO cited.”
At a Jan. 23 hearing, Army Chief of Staff Gen. Peter Schoomaker said he believed the 21,500 increase included four support battalions.
“Right now, we do not anticipate there will be increased combat service support requirements over what is now embedded inside of the brigade combat teams we have,” Schoomaker said.
Army spokesman Lt. Col. Gary Kolb said Feb. 1 the support needs of the additional five brigade combat teams will be satisfied by the current support network in Iraq and the support units embedded within those teams.
But the additional support troops included in the budget office estimates are based on the possibility that Schoomaker is wrong, an armed services committee aide said. “While Schoomaker initially said it wouldn’t take extra support troops, CBO doesn’t believe that is possible,” an aide to Skelton said.
Under the administration’s plan, the force increase — already underway — will reach its peak in May. The plan calls for a three-month buildup with a similarly gradual decline when the mission is done. The report does not try to estimate how long the mission might last, looking at only the cost to sustain it for various lengths of time.
Staff writers Gordon Lubold and Matthew Cox contributed to this report.
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