FORSCOM 09DEC11
Transcription
FORSCOM 09DEC11
G-1 9 December 2011 FORSCOM G-1 FORSCOM Mission FORSCOM prepares conventional forces to provide a sustained flow of trained and ready land power to Combatant Commanders in defense of the Nation at home and abroad FORSCOM FORSCOM UNITS G-1 1/4 HBCT 71st ORD 2/4 HBCT GRP 3/4 HBCT 4/4 IBCT 43rd SUST Ft Lewis 1/1 HBCT 2/1 HBCT 4/1 IBCT 1 ID CAB 1st SUST (3/1 IBCT @ FKKY) 3rd ESC 3/1 IBCT East Ft Meade 101st 201st BfSB 1/101 IBCT 2/101 IBCT SUST 3/101 IBCT 4/101 IBCT 101ST CAB 52nd ORD GRP 159th CAB 555th ENG NTC 49th QM GRP Ft Lee Ft Drum 2/2 SBCT 3/2 SBCT th 4/2 SBCT 17 FiB 593rd SUST 11th TTSB Ft Riley Ft Leonard Wood Ft Carson Ft Irwin 75th Ft Huachuca Ft Sill 35th TTSB Ft Hood 82nd SUST 13th FIN 3rd SBCT 504th BfSB JRTC 89th MP 36th ENG 69th ADA Ft Stewart/ HAAF Ft Polk 1/82 IBCT 2/82 IBCT 3/82 IBCT 20th ENG 4/82 IBCT 82d CAB 18th FiB 44th MED 162nd ITB 1st MED Ft Gordon 4th MEB ADA Ft Bliss/ WSMR 32nd 1/1 SBCT 212th FiB AAMDC 2/1 AETF 3/1 IBCT 4/1 HBCT th 15 SUST 11th ADA 1AD CAB Ft Bragg FiB 214th FiB 31st 48th CM BDE Ft Knox Ft Campbell 16th CAB West 7th SUST Ft Eustis Rock Island Arsenal 11th ACR 62nd MED 42nd MP 20th SPT CMD APG 1/1 HBCT 2/1 HBCT 3/1 HBCT 4/1 HBCT 1 CD CAB 41st FiB 4/10 IBCT 1st MEB 13th ESC 21st CAV ATSCOM Ft Rucker 3/3 HBCT Ft Benning 1/3 HBCT 2/3 HBCT 4/3 IBCT 3 ID CAB 3rd SUST (3/3 HBCT @ FBGA) 4th SUST 85th CA BDE FORSCOM 16th MP 525th BfSB 108th ADA G-1 Deployments • FORSCOM is responsible for more than 288,000 AC Soldiers, about 205,000 USAR Soldiers, 360,000 ARNG Soldiers, and 3,000 DA Civilians • In January 2011, FORSCOM had about 200,000 FORSCOM Soldiers deployed in 120 countries. Missions are carried out in the Balkans, Sinai, Asian tsunamis, earthquakes in Pakistan, and hurricane relief here in the United States. • To illustrate the vital role of the RC, 28 of 28 NG BCTs have deployed to the Central Command theater at least once. Parts of these BCTs, as well as others, have deployed to other theaters or been employed in Homeland Defense missions too. FORSCOM G-1 FORSCOM G-1 ARFORGEN Definition UNCLASSIFIED The structured progression of increased unit readiness over time, resulting in recurring periods of availability of trained, ready, and cohesive units prepared for operational deployment in support of combatant commander and other Army requirements. ARFORGEN Force Pools UNCLASSIFIED FORSCOM 6 G-1 XVIII ABN Corps / 82nd ABN DIV Commitment to the War • All of Fort Bragg’s units have done more than their fair share in supporting the enduring operation for the past 10 years • HQ XVIII ABN Corps is now closing-out of the IRAQI footprint and shifting some of its support to Kuwait but will be returning now thru January • The 82d ABN Division continues to provide operational support in Afghanistan through 2012 (1st Bde, 2d Bde, and 4th Bde), while also maintaining the home-front as part of our Global Response Force (3d Bde) FORSCOM G-1 Cost of the War # Soldiers Deployed: Since September 11, 2001, FORSCOM has trained, made ready and deployed more than 1.2 million Soldiers # Army Soldiers Wounded/Killed: OIF/OND OEF Total Total Fatalities KIA 2,573 1,029 3,602 DECD 719 250 969 WIA 22,516 10,212 32,728 NC 63 20 37 8 100 28 602 333 935 4,571 FORSCOM For Official Use Only G-1 Active Duty End Strength 580 570 560 FY11 570K 550 540 530 520 510 Grow the Army 65K FY16 520K 500 490 FY05 482K 480 For Official Use Only FORSCOM G-1 Recruiting and Retention Mission 80,000 74,500 70,000 60,000 50,000 64,000 65,000 58,000 60,000 55,000 43,600 40,000 30,000 FY09 FY10 Recruiting Mission Tools to Reduce the ForceReduced Accessions Normal Attrition Retain Soldiers with Greatest Potential FY11 FY12 Retention Mission FORSCOM G-1 Quality of the Force The percent of new enlistees who possess a high school diploma (HSDG) and category. Category is determined by score on the Armed Forces Qualification Test (AFQT): FY06 FY11 - HSDG 81.2% 98.58% CAT I – IIIA 61.4% 62.77% CAT IV 3.8% 0.33% An enlistee’s category is determined by their score on the AFQT. Score and category breakdown: CAT I: Score of 93-99 on the AFQT CAT II: Score of 65-92 CATIIIA: Score of 50-64 CAT IV: Score of 16-30 FORSCOM ARFORGEN – The Model G-1 UNCLASSIFIED Progressive, cyclical readiness – Requirements driven – Capability / Capacity based Trained and Ready Modular Capabilities RESET Pool Aim Point 2 Aim Point 1 Deployment Expeditionary Force (DEF) Contingency Expeditionary Force (CEF) Army General Purpose Force units assigned or allocated during the Global Force Management and ARFORGEN Synchronization Processes and Having the responsibility to execute assigned operational missions. Army General Purpose Force units designated during the ARFORGEN synchronization process to execute a contingency mission, operational plan or other Army requirement. UNCLASSIFIED FORSCOM 12 G-1 End Strength Reduction The Army plans to reduce the force by 49K by the end of 2016: 22K TESI off-ramp by the end of 2013 13.5K additional cut in force size in 2015 13.5K further additional cut in force size in 2016 Approximate end-strength is 520K * Note: 10-years ago Army end-strength was ~480K The active component experienced significant growth from FY05 to FY11 in support of OCO Beginning in FY12, the Army will execute a measured drawdown that leverages lower enlisted accessions and retain those Soldiers with the greatest potential to achieve end strength goals while minimizing involuntary separations FORSCOM G-1 Combatant Commands United States Africa Command - CDR General Carter F. Ham (Army) United States Central Command - CDR, General James N. Mattis (Marine) United States European Command - CDR, Admiral James G. Stavridis (Navy) United States Northern Command - CDR, Gen. Charles H. Jacoby, Jr (Army) United States Pacific Command - CDR, Admiral Robert F. Willard (Navy) United States Southern Command - CDR, General Douglas Fraser (Air Force) United States Special Operations Command - CDR, ADM Bill H. McRaven (Navy) United States Strategic Command - CDR, General C. Robert "Bob" Kehler (Air Force) United States Transportation Command - CDR, General Duncan J. McNabb (Air Force) FORSCOM G-1 FORSCOM/USARC Personnel FORSCOM 53% USARC 47% Military/Civilian/Contra ctor Military 42% Civilian 48% Contractor 10% *63.31% Civilian Transfer & Acceptance Rate Marshall Hall Capacity - 2773 ~1430 FORSCOM ~1340 USARC FORSCOM/USARC Headquarters Construction Completion – 21 Jun 2011 Move In Began – 5 July 2011 Special Troops Battalion, FORSCOM Band, Public Affair Detachments are located external to the new HQ FORSCOM