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82nd Airborne Quick-Strike Force Gives Obama New Option in Mideast Crises

2 years ago
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David Wood
Chief Military Correspondent
FORT BRAGG, N.C. -- As revolution zigzags chaotically across the Middle East and North Africa, the U.S. Army is sharpening its readiness to launch rapid-reaction, kick-in-the-door combat forces, adding capabilities and skills that had atrophied during a decade of counterinsurgency missions in Iraq and Afghanistan.

For the first time in years, the 82nd Airborne Division here has stood up its "ready brigade," trained to a razor's edge and poised to move instantly, as one of its paratroopers said, "to the sound of the guns."

This new capability gives President Obama the option to swiftly land powerful military forces anywhere in the world for missions that could include evacuating American citizens, safeguarding fragile new democracies from counterattack, or violently taking down a renegade regime.

At the same time, the Army is considering reinforcing this Global Response Force with heavier combat units that could swiftly reinforce the 82nd Airborne's lightly armed paratroopers.

With these steps, said the division commander, Maj. Gen. Jim L. Huggins, the United States is regaining the "strategic depth" it lacked during much of the past decade when the Army was struggling to man the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and simply lacked the troops to set aside for crisis response. "The resources are flowing, and we are building that capability back," he said.

And it's coming just in time. Few may hope more devoutly for peaceful, democratic change in the Middle East than the division's 20,000 hardened war-fighters, many of whom are facing their fifth or sixth combat deployment.

But hope is not a strategy.

Instead, Huggins' soldiers are honing their skills at "forcible entry" -- the ability to parachute into enemy territory with their armored gun trucks and 155mm howitzers, seize and defend an airfield to enable reinforcements to land, and fight their way to the objective. Safely landing 2,000 paratroopers and equipment at night on a three-mile-long, blacked-out drop zone and then swiftly organizing and moving out, Huggins observed dryly, "takes some practice."

But as political upheaval boils, from nuclear-armed Pakistan to the oilfields of the Persian Gulf fiefdoms and North Africa, sending in paratroopers may not be enough if heavy armed conflict begins to threaten vital U.S. national interests.

With the encouragement of Gen. Martin Dempsey, selected to become the Army's new chief this spring, the Army is considering adding "medium and heavy combat brigades" to the Global Response Force, said Col. Dan Baggio, a spokesman for the Army's Forces Command. The units being evaluated, which could include elements of a Stryker brigade and even heavy armored brigades, are stationed in the United States and would have to be airlifted into combat.

The idea is to provide a heavy force quickly for major combat, Dempsey wrote in a new addition to the Army's operations field manual, to "gain the initiative . . . and set conditions for stability operations" to follow.

All these steps seem in sync with an emerging vision for a leaner, smaller, faster Army after Iraq and Afghanistan. In a widely noted speech last month at West Point, Defense Secretary Robert Gates memorably trashed the idea of sending a massive land force into war in the Middle East or Africa, saying big wars should be the responsibility primarily of naval forces and aviation. But he strongly endorsed the "strategic rationale for swift-moving expeditionary forces" as "self-evident" for counterterrorism, rapid reaction, disaster response, stability or security force assistance missions.

The Obama administration also has proposed cutting the size of the Army by 27,000 soldiers beginning in 2015, assuming that by then the Afghan war will be winding down, Gates said last week.

Expanding from the narrow mission of counterinsurgency to quick-reaction missions -- which might demand a full spectrum of skills, from providing disaster relief to fighting the opening battles of World War III -- marks an abrupt change for the 82nd Airborne Division. For a decade it has fought in small units, squads of nine to 12 soldiers and platoons of 30 or 40, working with local soldiers and villagers in a kind of armed nation-building. These operations required little or no coordination with neighboring units.

But now, with its ready brigade unhooked from this counterinsurgency mission, it can refocus on the skills required for larger company- and battalion-size maneuvers involving hundreds of soldiers in tight coordination with artillery, mortars, helicopter gunships and Air Force strike fighters. And the paratroopers, relieved of counterinsurgency duty, can catch up on the jumping skills they hadn't been able to practice in Iraq or Afghanistan. Before 2001, it was common to see a staff sergeant here with 60 or 70 jumps to his credit; today, a senior enlisted paratrooper may have fewer than 20, said 1st Sgt. Christian Requejo of the 2nd Battalion, 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment.

They are getting the practice. In one exercise last month, the division and the Air Force coordinated an airdrop of 1,600 paratroopers, together with eight armored Humvee gun trucks, two howitzers, a dump truck and a grader (for building airfield defensive fortifications) from an air armada of 27 C-17 and C-130 airlifters.

Doing all that quickly and safely requires an immense amount of preparation. "We were not used to maneuvering as a company or a battalion," said one company commander, Capt. Mike Thompson. "It takes meticulous planning -- or it can be a goat-screw."

Early on a recent, chilly morning, a clutch of captains and lieutenants of the division's ready brigade gathered to rehearse a complex mission: coordinating air strikes from F-16s and attack helicopters with artillery and mortar fire as paratroopers maneuvered through bands of enemy to seize a small village.

A scale model of the terrain was laid out on the grass behind their barracks, with tape marking out routes and plastic blocks representing houses. In what is called an ROC (rehearsal of concept) drill, the lieutenants who lead platoons walked through their actions as they engaged the enemy and made quick decisions on whether calling in artillery strikes would endanger nearby troops or conflict with the Apache helicopter gunships and UAVs orbiting over the battlefield.

Their battalion commander, Lt. Col. Marcus Evans, is a demanding teacher and coach. "If you haven't run through this four or five times with a chalk board before you come out here, you're missing something," he told his young officers. "Drill it, drill it, drill it!" And plan for the unexpected, he added. "We can't war-game all the contingencies -- but we can do the top 10 and rehearse them!"

Brigades training in these skills will get severely tested at the Army's National Training Center at Fort Irwin, Calif., which has built extensive facilities for counterinsurgency training, including mock Afghan villages and Pashtun-speaking role players. But starting this August, the NTC will switch from training only for counterinsurgency, and instead will hold six month-long war games over the course of a year, pitting visiting brigades against the battle-hardened 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment in simulated, but grueling, full-spectrum combat.

None of the skills and capabilities the Army is regaining may be applicable as upheaval sweeps across the Middle East and North Africa. As Gates and others have noticed, the Pentagon has a perfect record in predicting where and when future conflict will erupt: It has gotten it wrong every time. But that is one reason for the "full-spectrum" preparation of the 82nd Airborne Division's ready brigade.

"We've been deficient as a great power in being overly committed to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan without having any additional capacity to do anything else that could come along," said John Nagl, a former West Point armor officer and Rhodes scholar who is president of the Center for a New American Security, a nonpartisan research institution in Washington, D.C. "The Army was really tapped out."

"Particularly with what's going on in the world, it's not hard to imagine the president needing a brigade of the 82nd at short notice," Nagl said. "But having that capability doesn't mean we're going to use it."

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26 Comments

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ayyiyicaramba

During my days in US Army ('68-'71) the 82nd Airborne Division was designated as a state-side unit whose sole mission was to respond anywhere in the world within 24-72 hours. Even during the height of the Vietnam War, this division, with the sole exception of one brigade which rapidly deployed to counter the Tet Offensive, remained at Fort Bragg, N.C.

As for today, with all the on-going problems in the Middle East, the real solution is for the US Army-Europe to reinforce my former Vietnam War airborne unit -- the 173rd AIRBORNE BRIGADE, now based in Italy, back to the same strength it enjoyed in "Nam." Back then this unit consisted of four (4) Infantry Battalions + Support forces, and was designated as an "independent [Seperate] brigade" headed by a One Star [Brigadier] General.

March 10 2011 at 9:21 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
dougmcfarland3

The 82nd's "capabilities and skills that had atrophied" were in that state prior to being tasked with counter-insurgency. A creeping logistics nightmare was present in the Division that made the lofty claim of "18 hours wheels up, to anywhere in the world" a piece of fiction. The problem was that nobody knew how much they weighed. The 101st had the first boots on the ground because the 82nd didn't know how much fuel to order to get itself out of the states.

This was a result of too many toys being given to America's Guard of Honor. Paratroopers are meant to travel fast and light, their greatest weapon is the ability to appear where the enemy believes they cannot possibly be. The Devils in Baggy Pants do not need and should not be burdened with heavy support. Just because you can airdrop an engineer package, tanks, or artillery doesn't mean they should accompany airborne infantry, especially in a day of UAVs and air support.

I understand the desire to provide your warfighter with every available resource, including armor and big, big guns. "I realize that a parachutist is not merely a soldier who arrives by parachute to fight, but is an elite shock trooper and that his country expects him to march farther and faster, to fight harder, and to be more self-reliant than any other soldier." Search: airborne creed.

March 10 2011 at 10:36 AM Report abuse +1 rate up rate down Reply
Lady Shae

The same people who are complaining about smaller government, and stay out of their lives or don't tell them what to do, wants the President to send our men and women to get involved in another countries problems. How many dummies on Fox news said "what is the President or we going to do about the middle east problems"? How about you allow our President to worry and do something about our country, and let the rest of the world deal with theirs, like they are silently letting us suffer through ours!! The GOP won't have a problem about financing another war, but can't find the finances to help takecare of Americans. How sad and truly transparent these people are.

March 09 2011 at 11:40 PM Report abuse -4 rate up rate down Reply
1 reply to Lady Shae's comment
vicbar88

As long as we continue to "deal with the whole world" and have interests in most countries we are committed to protect those interests wherever they are. These are deals that were made decades ago and must be kept to maintain our credibility. If not we must pull ourselves out completely and retreat back to our own borders and close them completely. You cannot have it both ways - we are either part of a world economy or we are our own - Period!

March 11 2011 at 7:33 AM Report abuse +1 rate up rate down Reply
Robert

Just like afganistan once the 82nd hits the ground they won't know their friends from their foe. The Rebels might even start attacking the Americans. I think we should start with a no fly zone and let countries other than the US enforce it.

March 09 2011 at 7:02 PM Report abuse +1 rate up rate down Reply
Robert

This is just what we need another theatre of war for our American men and woman to die in for oil. Our government is putting us farther and farther into debt. Here in Texas the Houston school district has to let go 1200 teachers, because they dont have the money to pay them, but we have deep pockets to keep the war machine going.....wise up obama and let other countries fight their own battles...

March 09 2011 at 6:59 PM Report abuse +1 rate up rate down Reply
shotbag

when is the last time the mc had an opposed amphilious operation?

March 09 2011 at 5:32 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
drdave415

Let them fight their own war.

March 09 2011 at 5:22 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
eeodjo

To land where the Eagles dare is NOT the answer to get involved with what is happening in Libya. Let's just watch them reduce themselves to uselessness. Who cares who oppresses whom. Let them wiggle it out and leave them alone. We can get oil from somewhere else. WE HAVE GOT TO LEARN TO FOCUS NOT TO GET INVOLVED.

March 09 2011 at 5:20 PM Report abuse -1 rate up rate down Reply
shotbag

Wood doesn't know what the hell he's talkin about, the 82 Abn always has had a Abn Bde ready to go anywhere, any time,any place the mc has the capacity to float off shore for 30 dys, thats nice, The Parachute Combat Arms Units of the US Army are God's greatest gift to creation, they are strategically & tactically up there with the B52s ,B1s & Nuke Subs, they are show stoppers, & war winners, the surpreme strike force! but with the DOD & CIC we have now it's probably a mute point, should be noted that a Lt O'Bannon & a Co. of Marines, with a US Navy sailing Ship clean up the Lybian coast bout 200yrs ago, & put the USA on the world stage

March 09 2011 at 5:19 PM Report abuse +3 rate up rate down Reply
1 reply to shotbag's comment
rswkfam

Wow, "God's Gift" ? Drop a Brigade into somewhere now days and they are potentially cut off and impossible to support or reinforce. An airborne assault can be used to secure an airfield for the air flow of heavier forces, but that also means we have to take out all ADA and SAM sites that would threaten slow moving AF transports. Mass airborne assaults have limited usefullness in modern warfare and we have Ranger units more skilled at airfield take-downs. The folks that push for airborne forces are wedded to the past.

March 10 2011 at 10:49 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
robiehenry

Stay out so we can do our thing and not thiers ,it will comeback to bite us.

March 09 2011 at 5:04 PM Report abuse +1 rate up rate down Reply

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