Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Our National Guard is Not Where it Belongs

While I am busy with preparing for a trial, I could not help and post this from Think Progress:

The San Francisco Chronicle reported last May that the California National Guard had been depleted and warned that severe “equipment shortages could hinder the guard’s response to a large-scale disaster,” such as a “major fire”:

In California, half of the equipment the National Guard needs is not in the state, either because it is deployed in Iraq or other parts of the world or because it hasn’t been funded, according to Lt. Col. John Siepmann. While the Guard is in good shape to handle small-scale incidents, “our concern is a catastrophic event,” he said. “You would see a less effective response (to a major incident),” he said.

At a press conference five months ago, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R-CA) echoed these concerns, stating, “A lot of equipment has gone to Iraq, and it doesn’t come back when the troops come back.” The Chronicle reported that the California National Guard was missing about $1 billion worth of equipment.

Now, as 14 major wildfires rage across the state, those earlier warnings are materializing. While California currently has approximately 1,500 Guardsmen serving in Iraq, the strains on the disaster response teams are compounded by the missing personnel and equipment.

Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA) said, “Right now we are down 50 percent in terms of our National Guard equipment because they’re all in Iraq. The equipment — half of the equipment, so we really will need help.” California Lieutenant Gov. John Garamendi (D) said on Harball yesterday, “What we really need are those firefighters, we need the equipment, we need, frankly, we need those troops back from Iraq.”

2 comments:

RTO Trainer said...

There's a lot in your information that's not complete.

As an example, while there is a chunk of the California guard's equipment in Iraq, using teh Hummvee as a representaive example, there are 290 of them overseas. 290 represents a very small percentage of trucks that CAARNG is authorized.

The larger problem is that most of the 50% of missing equipment has always been missing. That is, it was never purchased/allocated/delivered in the first palce. It's not that it was taken out of the state.

This is one of the ways the DoD and NGB have been doing business for decades.

Anonymous said...

Well, they were not my facts, but from the state of Ca. and from the Governor, who is a Republican...and we can talk around it all we want, but Iraq is the reason, pure and simple. If they weren't delivered, they were probably delivered to Iraq.