DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, July 9, 2015 – Army officials today announced
force structure decisions and stationing plans for the reduction of the regular
Army from 490,000 to 450,000 soldiers.
The reduction of force structure will occur in fiscal years
2016 and 2017. The end-strength reduction of 40,000 will be completed by the
end of fiscal year 2018, and will be accompanied by the reduction of 17,000
Army civilian employees, officials said, adding that the cuts will affect
nearly every Army installation in the United States and overseas.
As part of these reductions, the number of regular Army
brigade combat teams, the basic deployable units of maneuver in the Army, will
continue to decline from a wartime high of 45 to 30 by the end of fiscal year
2017.
The Army will convert the 3rd Infantry Division’s 3rd
Brigade Combat Team at Fort Benning, Georgia, and the 25th Infantry Division’s
4th Airborne Brigade Combat Team at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska,
into smaller units -- maneuver battalion task forces -- by the end of fiscal
2017.
Brigade combat teams consist of about 4,000 soldiers; the
battalion task forces will have about 1,050 soldiers.
Additional Changes
The 25th Infantry Division’s 2nd Brigade Combat Team will
remain a brigade combat team, but will convert its primary maneuver platform,
officials said. Currently a Stryker brigade combat team, it will become an
infantry brigade combat team without Stryker combat vehicles.
Additionally, officials said, the Army is analyzing a
proposal to use the brigade combat team’s current Stryker equipment to convert
an Army National Guard brigade combat team in the Pacific Northwest to a
Stryker configuration.
The Army selected these brigade combat teams for
reorganization based on a variety of factors, including strategic requirements
and the inherent military value of the installations where they are based,
officials said in announcing the changes, adding that the force structure decisions
best posture a smaller Army to meet global commitments.
Necessitated by Budget Constraints
Budget constraints are forcing the Army’s reduction, said
Lt. Gen. Joseph Anderson, the Army’s deputy chief of staff for operations and
plans.
“These were very difficult decisions to make as all of our
installations and their communities offer tremendous value to our Army and the
nation,” he said. “In the end, we had to make decisions based on a number of
strategic factors, to include readiness impacts, mission command and cost.”
If no change takes place regarding sequestration spending
caps scheduled to return scheduled Oct. 1, the Army’s end-strength will be
further reduced to 420,000 soldiers by the end of fiscal 2019, officials said,
resulting in a cumulative loss of 150,000 soldiers from the regular Army -- a
26 percent cut over a seven-year period.
The resulting force, they added, would be incapable of
simultaneously meeting current deployment requirements and responding to the
overseas contingency requirements of the combatant commands.
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