Most Surge Troops Identified, Official Says
Thursday, December 10, 2009
The military component that coordinates the forces that fight
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U.S. Joint Forces Command, a support beam in the Defense Department's policymaking structure, is formulating plans to carry out the influx of 30,000
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"We know the magnitude of the efforts," said Air Force Brig. Gen. Robert Yates, director of operations, plans, logistics and engineering at Joint Forces Command, said yesterday. "We are getting final details on some of the requirements; we know most of them."
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Obama last week announced a U.S. strategy for Afghanistan that entails bringing the number of forces to about 100,000, with the flexible goal of beginning to withdraw troops in July 2011. Just over half of the surge forces have been identified and informed of their upcoming deployments.
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The responsibility for coordinating such rotations falls to Joint Forces Command. Department officials announced this week that some 1,500 Marines from
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The 1st Marine Expeditionary Force at Camp Pendleton, Calif., also will deploy 800 Marines in the spring, along with an influx of 3,400 soldiers from the 1st Brigade Combat Team from the Army's 10th Mountain Division at Fort Drum, N.Y., department officials said.
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For its part, Joint Forces Command is putting together "courses of action" -- plans that detail a force composition based on troop availability, military specialties and other factors. Command officials will provide those plans to the Joint Staff, Yates told reporters on a conference call.
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"The Joint Staff will then decide on [a plan], and those will be the forces that will be flowed into
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The unveiling of the new
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In an interview in
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"We've got to know what their training status is so that we can deploy a combat-capable unit," he said in October. Invoking a mantra of the command's commander, Marine Corps Gen. James N. Mattis, Edgington added, "We will not deploy anybody who is not trained for the mission."
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The command's goal is to anticipate such requests and have necessary personnel identified and accounted for 18 months in advance of commanders' needs, but officials often must adapt quickly to changing demands on the ground.
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Written by John J. Kruzel
American Forces Press Service
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