Army Reserve in ‘grave danger,’ lt. general warns

? The head of the Army Reserve has sent a sharply worded memo to other military leaders expressing “deepening concern” about the continued readiness of his troops, who have been used heavily in Iraq and Afghanistan, and warning that his branch of 200,000 soldiers “is rapidly degenerating into a ‘broken’ force.”

In the memo, dated Dec. 20, Lt. Gen. James “Ron” Helmly lashed out at what he said were outdated and “dysfunctional” policies on mobilizing and managing the force. He complained that his repeated requests to adjust the policies to current realities have been rebuffed by Pentagon authorities.

The three-star general, who has a reputation for speaking bluntly, said the situation has reached a point where the Army Reserve is “in grave danger of being unable to meet” its operational requirements in the event other national emergencies arise. Insistence on restrictive policies, he continued, “threatens to unhinge an already precariously balanced situation in which we are losing as many soldiers through no use as we are through the fear of overuse.”

His pointed remarks represent the latest in a rising chorus of warnings from military officers and civilian defense specialists that the strains of overseas missions are badly fraying the U.S. Army. The distress has appeared most evident in reservist ranks. Both the Army Reserve and the National Guard last month disclosed significant recruiting slumps.

Helmly’s memo was addressed to Gen. Peter Schoomaker, the Army chief of staff, and sent up the command chain through the office of Gen. Dan McNeill, who oversees Army Forces Command. It surfaced Wednesday in the Baltimore Sun.