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20
Apr
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by Jim Swanson • 9:35 am
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Looks like the Bush Administration is stretching our military so thin, they now have airmen/soldiers from the U.S. Air Force doing ground work in the desert. Bet they’re all prepared for that.
CAMP BULLIS, Texas - A row of rumbling flatbed trucks and Humvees outfitted with gun turrets lurches toward a mock village of cinderblock buildings where instructors posing as insurgents wait to test the trainees’ convoy protection skills.
The training range is Army, as is the duty itself - one of the most dangerous in Iraq these days. But the young men and women clad in camouflage and helmets training to run and protect convoys are not Army; they’re Air Force.
They are part of a small but steady stream of Airmen being trained to do Army duty under the Army chain of command, a tangible sign the Pentagon was scouring the military to aid an Iraq force that was stretched long before President Bush ordered 21,500 additional U.S. troops there.
“What we’ve seen is the Department of Defense continues to find ways to meet the requirements imposed by the commander in chief,” said retired Brig. Gen. Kevin Ryan, a senior fellow at Harvard University’s Belfer Center in the John F. Kennedy School of Government.
No plans to expand the Air Force’s role in convoy operations have been announced since Bush ordered the troop surge in Iraq, but Ryan said the Army and other branches of service have been looking at every possible job that can be shifted - from the Air Force performing convoy duty to the Navy setting up medical facilities far from waterfronts.
Many Airmen were surprised at the assignment.“I was expecting just to be a vehicle operations troop, dealing with wreckers, forklifts - vehicles like that,” said Senior Airman Robert Bledsoe, who manned a 50-caliber gun during his first deployment to Iraq. “It opened my eyes a bunch.”
He completed a second round of training last week with a unit that will deploy within about a week for a 6-month tour, longer than the standard 4-month deployments for most Air Force personnel but much shorter than the 15-month tours active Army personnel now face.
Staff Sgt. Stewart Jordan, a transport instructor for the course, said even the most reluctant Airmen-turned-Soldiers usually come around, ultimately finding the mission fulfilling.
“Those that it’s tougher on realize that they signed on the dotted line,” he said.









