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Army seeks additional CAB to reach dwell goal |
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Written by davidtkl
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Friday, 08 January 2010 |
WASHINGTON (Army News Service, Jan. 6, 2010) -- In order to meet the
Army's dwell-time goal, the service will add a new combat aviation
brigade.
"That's coming out of resources we already have; we are still wrestling
with where that's going to go, where that's going to stand up," said
Maj. Gen. James O. Barclay III, commanding general of the Aviation
Center of Excellence and Fort Rucker, Ala.
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That will help some in the fight," he said. "That's one of the small
steps we are taking as we are trying to align and ensure with all
(components) that we can meet and try to get at what General Casey's
goal is: one to two."
Barclay spoke to an audience of Army aviation and defense aviation
industry professionals during the Association of the United States
Army's Institute of Land Warfare Army Aviation Symposium and
Exposition, Jan. 5-7 in Arlington, Va.
The Army now has 11 active-duty CABs and the reserve components have
eight. Barclay said meeting Chief of Staff of the Army Gen. George W.
Casey's goal of 24 months home for every 12 months deployed is
difficult with the current number of CABs, and the current demand for
eight CABs to support Iraq and Afghanistan.
Barclay also said continued development and employment of the Army
Force Generation model will help Army aviation meet the goal of keeping
Soldiers home for longer.
Since the onset of combat in Afghanistan and also in Iraq, Army
aviation has racked up more than 3.5 million flight hours, Barclay said.
"That ought to say a lot about what we have been able to do with our
aviation forces and the fleets and the airframes -- but more
importantly what the Soldiers and the aviators and maintainers have
been able to do in about the last eight years that we have been at
war," Barclay said.
The general added that not all the aviation hours were manned aviation,
but in fact include those from unmanned aerial systems as well -- and
not all flown by aviators.
"I think that's one of the things that's important to note, is that the
UAS has become a more important aspect of what we do every day and it
has become more integrated into the war fight," he said. "Most of those
hours are controlled by your brigade combat teams and fires brigades.
Those are the units that are utilizing them and flying and getting the
benefit from those platforms."
Despite plans to withdraw from Iraq, Barclay said he doesn't expect the number of hours flown by Army aviation to decrease.
"As we look at the drawdown in Iraq we are not seeing as many aviation
units on the drawdown chart as we are seeing some of the other units on
the drawdown chart," Barclay said. "If you look at those operations
tempos -- in the 50 to 60 hours every month on the different types of
airframes -- we don't see it coming down right now."
Source and credits : http://www.army.mil/-news/2010/01/07/32545-army-seeks-additional-cab-to-reach-dwell-goal/
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