Army
to force out 550 majors; some in Afghanistan
The Associated Press
Published: August 2, 2014
Thanks to C.
Army
officers receive professional development training at Fort Rucker, Ala., on
June 26, 2013. The Army announced Friday that it plans to cut 550 officers with
the rank of major by next spring.
WASHINGTON
— About 550 Army majors, including some serving in Afghanistan, will soon
be told they have to leave the service by next spring as part of a
budget-driven downsizing of the service.
Gen.
John Campbell, the vice chief of the Army, acknowledged Friday that telling
troops in a war zone that they’re out of a job is a difficult task. But he said
some of the soldiers could join the National Guard or the Army Reserve.
The
decision to cut Army majors comes on the heels of a move to slash nearly
1,200 captains from the ranks. Army leaders were criticized at the time for
giving 48 of them the bad news while they were deployed to Afghanistan.
The
Army declined to say how many majors will be notified while they are at the
battlefront.
“The
ones that are deployed are certainly the hardest,” Campbell told reporters.
“What we try to do there is, working through the chain of command, minimize the
impact to that unit and then maximize the time to provide to that officer to
come back and do the proper transition, to take care of himself or herself, and
the family.”
Campbell
said it’s difficult to avoid cutting deployed soldiers because of the timing
schedules.
All
the soldiers being forced to leave have probably already been given a heads-up
that they were at risk of the job cut and will meet with a senior officer,
according to the Army.
Those
who are cut have nine months to leave the Army. And the soldiers who are
deployed, including those in Afghanistan, will generally have about a month to
move out of that job and go home to begin to transition out of the service.
The
cuts have been difficult for many young officers, particularly captains, who
tend not to have enough years in service to retire.
To
make the cuts, the Army looked at about 8,500 majors who joined the service
between 1999 and 2003. Some may have about 15 years of service, depending on
all factors that go into credit for years of service, and might be able to
retire, but many won’t have enough time in the job, Campbell said
Guard
and reserve leaders are looking for officers, especially captains, so there
could be opportunities for the soldiers to continue to serve, he said.
After
13 years of war that forced a significant and rapid build-up of the Army to
about 570,000, the military now has to reduce its combat forces to meet budget
cuts.
The
Army has close to 514,000 soldiers now, but will have to be down to 510,000 by
October, shrink to 490,000 by October 2015 and be down to 450,000 by 2019. In
addition, if Congress doesn’t act to prevent automatic budget cuts from
resuming, the Army may eventually have to get down to 420,000 — a size that
that leaders say may not allow them to wage even one major, prolonged military
campaign.
The
Army tried to avoid some cuts by slowing enlistments and using attrition and
some voluntary separations. It also has been combing through files looking for
soldiers with disciplinary or other problems in their annual evaluations to
weed out lower-performing officers first, officials said.
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