By Adrian Bonenberger,
As Army leadership ponders who and what to cut from its budget,
the first groups in the crosshairs are the junior and mid-level
officers. This is a logical step: To wage counterinsurgencies in Iraq
and Afghanistan, the Army expanded its fighting force, and now it’s time
to draw down. What isn’t logical is that other ranks will largely get a
free pass.
The Army, and the military overall, would be better served by
retiring some of the generals, colonels and senior lieutenant colonels,
and promoting the best captains, majors and junior lieutenant colonels
into those roles.
When the United States invaded Afghanistan in
2001, the Army stood at 480,000 soldiers. Over the next decade, it
ballooned to 565,000 soldiers in 2011 and has since shrunk back to
528,000. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said last summer that the Army
needed to reduce its numbers to as few as 380,000, the lowest since
before World War II. It seems likely that the Pentagon will adopt this
number as its target for 2020. These cuts will overwhelmingly fall where
the recent growth occurred: younger soldiers and officers, nearly all
of whom joined to fight in Iraq or Afghanistan.