Bond, Leahy Offer Amendment To Boost
National Guard
WASHINGTON
- U.S. Sens. Kit Bond (R-Mo.) and Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), co-chairs
of the Senate National Guard Caucus, today introduced an amendment
to the defense authorization bill to empower the Guard within the
Pentagon.
“The
Guard was there for Iraq, Afghanistan, Katrina and Rita, but they
are continually kept out of the major decisions affecting
them. If the Pentagon expects the Guard to be part of the team, it
needs to give the Guard a seat at the table,”
said Bond. “We need to give the Guard more bureaucratic
muscle, so that the force will not be pushed around in policy and
budget debates within the Pentagon."
“It is time for
the National Guard to have a voice and a formal set of duties in
line with its overwhelming contributions to our defense at home and
abroad,” said Leahy. “The Guard is a vital part of our homeland
security, as recent events along the Gulf Coast and the border
underscore. And, the active Army and Air Force simply cannot carry
out their missions in Afghanistan, Iraq and around the world without
the National Guard. Yet in key budget and policy decisions the Guard
is forced to justify its existence rather than being welcomed as a
crucial partner in our military. Our Guard empowerment legislation
changes that dynamic, giving the National Guard a much-needed
elevation in status and, more importantly, giving the country an
even more effective National Guard.”
The Bond-Leahy
amendment will ensure that the nation's citizen-soldiers and airmen
have access to the highest levels of the Department of Defense and
that key policy decisions impacting the Guard and the states are
heard and taken into account.
The
amendment involves four central elements:
·
Give the Guard more
muscle within the Pentagon by elevating the Chief of the National
Guard to a four-star position;
·
Direct that the Deputy
Commander of U.S. Northern Command be a member of the National Guard
to ensure that planning at NORCOM better encompasses the interests
of the National Guard;
·
Give the National Guard
Bureau the ability to identify and
validate equipment needs essential to its mission;
·
Allow the National
Guard Bureau to establish more direct lines of communication with
the Office of the Secretary of Defense, the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
states and federal agencies.
The National
Guard has a long history of assisting America's military abroad
while providing support and security at home. Since the attacks of
9/11, the National Guard has taken on even greater responsibilities
in the realm of homeland security.
Despite this,
the National Guard currently has only 35 percent of its required
equipment levels. Last year, Leahy and Bond led successful efforts
in the Senate to increase equipment funding for the National Guard
by almost $1 billion.
Bond and Leahy
pointed out that these citizen-soldiers are a tremendous value for
the capabilities they provide. The Guard makes up almost half of
the Total Force in the War on Terror and is a critical component of
civilian defense and emergency response here at home for as little
as 4.5 percent of the defense budget.
Bond and Leahy
noted that despite the critical role the Guard plays in national
defense at home and abroad, there are many obstacles that prevent
the force from reaching its full potential. Earlier this year the
Army proposed significant cuts to Guard troop strength. Bond and
Leahy led the Senate opposition and the Pentagon backtracked on
their plans to scale back the Guard's force structure after the
Senators organized broad opposition -- more than 75 senators -- to
the plan.
A vote on the
amendment introduced today will likely occur next week.
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