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    Rumsfeld: US military not overextended
    (AP)
    Updated: 2006-01-26 09:13

    US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld on Wednesday disputed reports suggesting that the U.S. military is stretched thin and close to a snapping point from operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, asserting "the force is not broken."

    "This armed force is enormously capable," Rumsfeld told reporters at a Pentagon briefing. "In addition, it's battle hardened. It's not a peacetime force that has been in barracks or garrisons."

    Rumsfeld spoke a day after The Associated Press reported that an unreleased study conducted for the Pentagon said the Army is being overextended, thanks to the two wars, and may not be able to retain and recruit enough troops to defeat the insurgency in Iraq.

    Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld gestures as he answers reporters questions during a news conference at the Pentagon, Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2006.
    US Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld gestures as he answers reporters questions during a news conference at the Pentagon, Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2006. [AP]
    Congressional Democrats released a report Wednesday that also concluded the U.S. military is under severe stress.

    Reports suggesting that the U.S. military is close to the breaking point "is just not consistent with the facts," he said.

    In an apparent shot at the Democratic Clinton administration, Rumsfeld said a number of components of the armed forces were underfunded during the 1990s, "and there were hollow pieces to it. Today, that's just not the case."

    He said there were over 1.4 million active U.S. troops, and some 2 million — counting National Guard and Reserve units — of which only 138,000 people were in Iraq.

    "Do we still need more rebalancing? You bet," Rumsfeld said.

    The secretary suggested he was not familiar with reports suggesting an overburdened military. But, he said, "It's clear that those comments do not reflect the current situation. They are either out of date or just misdirected."

    Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and former Secretary of Defense William Perry, both members of the Clinton administration, were credited among the authors of the study that congressional Democrats released.

    It said that U.S. ground forces are under "enormous strain," adding, "This strain, if not soon relieved, will have highly corrosive and potentially long-term effects on the force."

    In the earlier report obtained by The Associated Press, Andrew Krepinevich, a retired Army officer who wrote it under Pentagon contract, concluded that the Army cannot sustain the pace of troop deployments to Iraq long enough to break the back of the insurgency.

    As evidence, he pointed to the Army's 2005 recruiting slump — missing its recruiting goal for the first time since 1999 — and its decision to offer much bigger enlistment bonuses and other incentives.

    Rumsfeld said that "retention is up" and that recruitment levels must meet higher goals, ones raised because of the operations on the ground.

    At the same time, Rumsfeld added: "There is no question if a country is in a conflict and we are in the global war on terror, it requires our forces to do something other than what they do in peacetime."

    "The force is not broken," Rumsfeld said, suggesting such an implication was "almost backward."

    "The world saw the United States military go halfway around the world in a matter of weeks, throw the Al Qaida and Taliban out of Afghanistan, in a landlocked country thousands and thousands of miles away. They saw what the United States military did in Iraq.

    "And the message from that is not that this armed force is broken, but that this armed force is enormously capable," Rumsfeld said.

    The Army fell more than 6,600 recruits short of its goal of enlisting 80,000 troops last year, the first time it missed its annual target since 1999 and the largest shortfall in 26 years.

    But the Army exceeded its monthly recruiting goal in December for the seventh consecutive month, though some of those targets were lowered from last year's. It will have to increase its recruiting pace, however, to meet its target of 80,000 that it has set for the budget year ending next Sept. 30.

    A new law will let the Army attract older recruits, raising the top age from 35 to 42. In addition, financial bonuses for enlistments and re-enlistments have increased.

    Also, according to Rumsfeld, an increased emphasis and spending on Special Operations forces and intelligence operations results from lessons learned in Iraq.

    The Pentagon's next budget and a broadbased review of U.S. defense strategy should be seen as "the next step in a long line of bold changes" for the military, rather than a list of program adjustments, he said. Both the budget for fiscal 2007 and an update of the Pentagon's long-range plans are to be released early next month.

    Special operations and intelligence are among the programs expected to see increased funding in the new spending plan. Rumsfeld said that improvements in the programs reflect setbacks and successes since the first days of combat in Iraq.



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