Readiness of Ground Forces Dangerously Low
In the Washington Post this morning, Army and Marine officials are reportedly saying that, as a result of the additional 30,000 forces in Iraq and Afghanistan, the readiness of the military for other conflicts is at the lowest level in years.
In a stark assessment a week before Gen. David H. Petraeus, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, is to testify on the war's progress, Gen. Richard A. Cody, the Army's vice chief of staff, said that the heavy deployments are inflicting "incredible stress" on soldiers and families and that they pose "a significant risk" to the nation's all-volunteer military.
"When the five-brigade surge went in . . . that took all the stroke out of the shock absorbers for the United States Army," Cody testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee's readiness panel.







