Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

National Guard sees its ranks shrink with fewer re-enlistees

- By Lolita C. Baldor

WASHINGTON — Soldiers are leaving the Army National Guard at a faster rate than they are enlisting, fueling concerns that in the coming years units around the country may not meet military requiremen­ts for overseas and other deployment­s.

For individual states, which rely on their Guard members for a wide range of missions, it means some are falling short of their troop totals this year, while others may fare better. But the losses comes as many are facing an active hurricane season, fires in the West and continued demand for units overseas.

According to officials, the number of soldiers retiring or leaving the Guard each month in the past year has exceeded those coming in, for a total annual loss of about 7,500 service members. The problem is a combinatio­n of recruiting shortfalls and an increase in the number of soldiers who are opting not to re-enlist when their tour is up.

The losses reflect a broader personnel predicamen­t across the U.S. military, as all the armed services struggled this year to meet recruiting goals. And they underscore the need for sweeping reforms in how the military recruits and retains citizen soldiers and airmen who must juggle their regular full-time jobs with their military duties.

Maj. Gen. Rich Baldwin, chief of staff of the Army National Guard, said the current staffing challenges are the worst he’s seen in the last 20 years, but so far the impact on Guard readiness is “minimal and manageable.”

“However, if we don’t solve the recruiting and retention challenges we’re currently facing, we will see readiness issues related to strength begin to emerge within our units within the next year or two,” he said.

According to Gen. Daniel Hokanson, head of the National Guard Bureau, both the Army and Air Guards failed to meet their goals for the total number of service members in the fiscal year that ended last Friday. The Army Guard’s authorized total is 336,000, and the Air Guard is 108,300.

 ?? Patrick Semansky
The Associated Press ?? National Guard members take stairs toward the U.S. Capitol before a rehearsal for thenpresid­ent-elect Joe Biden’s Presidenti­al Inaugurati­on in Washington on Jan. 18, 2021.
Patrick Semansky The Associated Press National Guard members take stairs toward the U.S. Capitol before a rehearsal for thenpresid­ent-elect Joe Biden’s Presidenti­al Inaugurati­on in Washington on Jan. 18, 2021.

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