The term "hollow force"
describes the situation when military readiness declines because of
a lack of adequate funding. A hollow force lacks the resources to
provide trained and ready forces, to support ongoing operations,
and to modernize. In the past, when America's military has begun to
hollow, the strain showed first in the National Guard. The same
warning signs are here now. It will take a concerted effort from
Congress and the administration to address the issue.
Blast from the Past
The last time America's military went truly hollow was in the
aftermath of the Vietnam War, and no part of the force was less
prepared than the National Guard, where the Pentagon cut first and
deepest. Recruiting plummeted. None of the Army Guard's equipment
was modernized. There was no money to train. Even after the Reagan
defense build-up of the 1980s, readiness in the National Guard,
particularly in the Army, lagged. That was because defense policies
were designed to ensure that "units that fight first [would] be
equipped first regardless of component." Because war plans
committed active duty forces as "first to fight" ahead of all but a
handful of reserve units, these guidelines ensured that the lion's
share of resources went to active forces. The Army National Guard
got what was left.
Back to the Future
Since 9/11 the military has used the National Guard more than at
any time since World War II. Despite that, the Army is adopting new
policy guidelines that may hamstring the Guard as much as in the
1970s. The Army is establishing a "force generation" model for all
of its active and reserve forces. The model is designed to
establish a schedule for predictable deployments. For the Guard, it
calls for combat units in the "window" to be "called-up" for active
service once every six years. As the Army becomes strapped for cash
to modernize and train its forces, the force generation model is
also being looked at as a "resourcing" tool, fully funding and
outfitting only those units that are approaching the window for
deployment. This policy will replicate the Cold War's "first to
fight" rules that assured that Army National Guard forces were
chronically underfunded and unprepared to be called up for rapid
deployment.
Since the end of the Cold War, we have learned that any part of
America's Army could be the first to the fight, whether it is
called to deploy in support of operations in Afghanistan or Iraq or
to respond to homeland security missions at home. Tiered-readiness
systems that leave National Guard units ill-equipped and unprepared
to serve the nation are unacceptable.
The Problem and the Solution
Inadequate defense spending over the long term, driven by
ballooning federal entitlement programs that will consume an ever
large part of the federal budget, will force the Army to turn the
force generation model into a resource allocation model. That will
be a big step back towards the hollow force. The solution is to get
the federal budget under control, implement tax reforms that help
grow the economy, and ensure robust defense budgets-not just this
year but for the next decade. The alternative path puts the
security of the nation at risk.
James
Jay Carafano, Ph.D.,is Senior Research Fellow for Defense and
Homeland Security in the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute
for International Studies at The Heritage
Foundation.
Report Defense
Military Readiness and the National Guard: A Crisis in the Making?
June 5, 2006 2 min read
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Senior Counselor to the President and E.W. Richardson Fellow
James Jay Carafano is a leading expert in national security and foreign policy challenges.
Authors
James Carafano
Senior Counselor to the President and E.W. Richardson Fellow
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