5,000 Ex-GIs Face Call Up
The U.S. Army is preparing to notify about 5,600 retired and discharged soldiers who are not members of the National Guard or Reserve that they will be involuntarily recalled to active duty for possible service in Iraq or Afghanistan, Army officials said Tuesday.
It marks the first time the Army has called on the Individual Ready Reserve, as this category of reservists is known, in substantial numbers since the 1991 Gulf War. Several hundred of them have volunteered for active-duty service since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
Some 138,000 U.S. troops are in Iraq, along with far smaller units from 31 other countries.
Those who are part of the involuntary call up are likely to be assigned to National Guard or Reserve units that have been mobilized for duty in Iraq or Afghanistan, according to Army officials who discussed some details Tuesday on condition they not be identified because a public announcement was planned for Wednesday.
Members of Congress were being notified of the decision Tuesday, the officials said.
Any former enlisted soldier who did not complete their eight-year obligation is in the Individual Ready Reserve pool, as are all officers who have not resigned their commission. About 300,000 people are in the IRR.
The Army has been reviewing its list of 118,000 eligible individual reservists for several weeks in search of qualified people in certain high-priority skill areas like civil affairs.
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