Published
for the Fort Bliss/El Paso, Texas Community
July
15, 2004
Texas Guard
included in Iraq, Afghanistan troop-rotation plans
Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON – Troop levels will stay the same for the next rotations
of operations Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom, Defense Depart-ment
officials said July 8. Among units scheduled for duty in the regions
is the 56th Infantry Brigade of the Texas Guard.
Army Gen. John Abizaid, commander of U.S. Central Command, has requested
138,000 troops in support of 17 brigades for Iraqi Freedom 3. He also
requested about 20,000 American Soldiers for Afghanistan in support
of three brigades for Enduring Freedom 6.
The military has expanded the window for troop rotations into and out
of the country. In fact, the so-called OIF-3 rotation really has already
started. Soldiers of the 2nd Brigade, 10th Mountain Division, and Marines
are beginning to flow into the region to relieve the Army’s 1st
Armored Division and 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment. Elements of those
units were extended in country following an upsurge in violence in the
so-called “Baathist Triangle” and from illegal militias
in the southern part of Iraq.
The active duty and reserve units have been given a long lead time for
the deployment. Army officials said the longer the lead time, the better
prepared the units. Also, it allows Soldiers in the reserve components
to prepare their families and their employers for their absence.
“We’ve learned lessons from the past, said an Army spokeswoman.
“We’re applying them now.”
The two big units in OIF-3 are the 3rd Infantry Division, based at Fort
Stewart, Ga., and the 42nd Infantry Division, of the New York National
Guard. The 3rd Division will be making its second trip to Iraq. The
unit was on point in March and April 2003 and took Baghdad. The 3rd
Infantry Division headquarters will command two brigades of the division
and the 256th Infantry Brigade of the Louisiana National Guard. The
division will relieve the 1st Cavalry Division in and around Baghdad.
The other two maneuver brigades of the 3rd will come under command of
the 42nd Infantry Division. Also with the 42nd will be the 116th Cavalry
Brigade out of Boise, Idaho. The 42nd will relieve the 1st Infantry
Division.
The 42nd Infantry will begin flowing into Iraq in December. The 3rd
Infantry will begin flowing into the country in January.
The 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, from Fort Carson, Colo., also will
return to Iraq, beginning in February. The 2nd Brigade, 2nd Infantry
Division, from Camp Hovey, South Korea, will begin flowing into Iraq
next month.
The “Black Horse Cav” – the 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment
– will stop serving as the opposing-force training unit at the
National Training Center in Fort Irwin, Calif., and will join with the
155th Armored Brigade of the Mississippi Guard. They will begin entering
Iraq in January.
The 1st Brigade, 25th Infantry Division, at Fort Lewis, Wash. —
the Army’s second Stryker brigade — will relieve the 3rd
Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division, in Mosul beginning in September.
The Tennessee Guard’s 278th Armored Cavalry Regiment will roll
into Iraq beginning in November. The Texas Guard’s 56th Inf. Bde.,
and the 29th Infantry Brigade, of the Hawaii National Guard, will begin
providing theater security in February.
In Afghanistan, the Southern European Task Force based in Vicenza, Italy,
will take command from the 25th Infantry Division in March. The 173rd
Airborne Brigade and elements of the 18th Airborne Corps will be part
of the command. The 76th Infantry Brigade, of the Indiana National Guard,
will take over responsibility for training the Afghan National Army
at the same time.