Logistics Still Rules
BY Herschel Smith15 years, 8 months ago
Concerns are being raised about potential loss of logistical support for troops remaining in Iraq.
The U.S. military withdrawal from Iraq will create a shortage of helicopters and logistics support that high-level officials worry will hamper the elite U.S. troops who stay behind to train Iraqi forces and to combat terrorist networks, according to experts studying the problem.
The shortage is part of an overall logistics crunch that the Pentagon is grappling with as it shifts forces from Iraq to Afghanistan, where the rugged terrain and lack of infrastructure require more helicopter transport, engineers and a slew of other support capabilities.
As the U.S. military pulls out the bulk of its 142,000 troops from Iraq by August 2010, troops such as Army Green Berets, who are specially trained to partner with foreign forces, are expected to remain in significant numbers.
Yet those troops currently are dependent upon the basing, aviation, communications and other logistical backing of conventional U.S. Army brigades that are slated to leave the country.
Senior Special Operations officials “are really worried about the conventional Army pulling out of Iraq and leaving us holding the bag unable to support ourselves,” said Roger Carstens, who studied the problem as a nonresident fellow for the Center for a New American Security and testified on the issue last week before a House panel.
The leadership of the U.S. Special Operations Command in Tampa, Fla., is particularly concerned about the Army’s difficulty in splitting off from its brigades vital capabilities including intelligence, communications and helicopters that are needed by the Special Operations troops, Carstens said.
“A lot of people do not understand that SOF [Special Operations forces] are really unable to support themselves,” said Carstens, who is currently working at Joint Forces Command in Norfolk, Va.
In the longer term, the Pentagon should consider creating at least two additional helicopter battalions dedicated to Special Operations forces, according to Robert Martinage, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessment, who also testified last week before the terrorism subcommittee of the House Armed Services Committee.
But the issue is larger than mere helicopters. Sustainability for a long term deployment requires consideration of food, fuel, ground transport, electricity, communication and connectivity, medical services, troops for force protection, interpreters, Chaplains, and so the list goes.
For all of the electioneering promises that have been made, Flag officers and even field grade officers will determine how many troops must remain if any do at all, how quickly the remainder will be able to withdraw, and what is needed to support the remaining troops who will remain deployed long term. But these officers will only weigh in after consultation with their logistics officers. Logistics rules.
Logistics trumps politics, and logistics even trumps valid orders. Orders cannot be carried out without the necessary support, support that most uninitiated people don’t even think about before it’s too late.
Prior:
- Destroyed Khyber Bridge Shuts Down Afghan Logistics Route
- U.S. Supplies Shrinking in Afghanistan
- Will Russian-Afghan Logistics Dictate Foreign Policy?
- New Afghan Supply Route Through Russia Likely
- U.S.-Georgia Strategic Partnership
- The Logistical Battle: New Lines of Supply to Afghanistan
- The Search for Alternative Supply Routes to Afghanistan
- Large Scale Taliban Operations to Interdict Supply Lines
- More on Lines of Logistics for Afghanistan
- Admiral Mullen to Obama: Logistics Rules Dude!
- How Many Troops can we Logistically Support in Afghanistan?
- Logistics Will Dictate Troop Withdrawal from Iraq
- Logistical Difficulties in Afghanistan
- Taliban Control of Supply Routes to Kabul
- Degrading Security in Afghanistan Causes Supply and Contractor Problems
- Interdiction of Supplies in Khyber Pass
- The Torkham Crossing
- The Khyber Pass
- Taliban and al Qaeda Strategy in Pakistan and Afghanistan
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