San Francisco Chronicle

Relentless demands keep troops away from home

- By Lolita C. Baldor Lolita C. Baldor is an Associated Press writer.

In the searing 108degree heat, far from his Louisiana health care business, Army Col. Scott Desormeaux and his soldiers are on a dusty base near Syria’s northern border, helping rebel forces battle Islamic State militants and keeping an eye on Russian troops in the region.

It’s tough duty for the soldiers. But their deployment to the Middle East last November is just a small part of the blistering pace of missions that members of the Louisiana National Guard and America’s other citizensol­diers have faced in the past 18 months.

Beyond overseas deployment­s, Guard members have been called in to battle the COVID19 pandemic, natural disasters and protests against racial injustice. For many, it’s meant months away from their civilian jobs and scarce times with families. While Guard leaders say troops are upbeat, they worry about exhaustion setting in and wonder how much longer U.S. businesses can do without their longabsent workers.

Back home in Louisiana, Sgt. 1st Class Bray Harris has been living in hotels around Baton Rouge since March 2020, helping provide coronaviru­s testing and the vaccine to residents. He’s only been able to race home to Lake Charles — two hours away — a few times, including to evacuate his mother during one of the major storms that hit the state.

Nearby at Camp Beauregard, Capt. Michael Switzer has been sleeping in his office. Over the past 15 months, he and his soldiers have juggled security and work at virus testing sites with road clearance and emergency supply deliveries during the storms and then distributi­on of the vaccine. For Father’s Day, his wife bought him a cot and a foam mattress to replace the air mattress he’d been using.

Since March 2020, Guard units around the country have been lurching from one national crisis to the next. They were tapped almost immediatel­y when the pandemic broke out to help conduct testing, build field hospitals, provide health care and, eventually, deliver vaccines. But at the same time, many — like those in Louisiana — were also facing a record year of storms and hurricanes while taking weeks off from their regular jobs to protect their communitie­s during the race riots. More than 26,000 Guard members also deployed to Washington, D.C., to secure the president’s inaugurati­on.

“This past year was an extraordin­ary one for the National Guard,” said Gen. Dan Hokanson, chief of the National Guard Bureau. Does he worry about exhaustion setting in? “That’s something I’ve been very concerned with right from the start.”

Across the states, there are growing concerns about returning troops to their regular jobs and getting them back to critical training schedules.

“A lot of our soldiers and airmen that may not have had employment, or were furloughed during that time frame, a lot of them are asking them to go back to work,” Hokanson said, adding that the adjutants general in all the states must carefully manage their troops’ operations and training in the coming months.

 ?? J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press ?? National Guard troops reinforce a security zone Jan. 19 surroundin­g Capitol Hill in Washington.
J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press National Guard troops reinforce a security zone Jan. 19 surroundin­g Capitol Hill in Washington.

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