WASHINGTON, Oct. 18, 2006

Second Iraq Tour For Marine Reserves

Marines Devising Strategy To Return Reservists To War In 2008

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    Marine Reserve units are mobilized for 12 months, to include pre-deployment training, seven months in Iraq and then a period of demobilization.  (AFP/Getty Images)

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(CBS/AP)  The Marines are planning to send back to Iraq at least some reserve combat battalions that have already served one tour there, officials said Wednesday — the first time such units would be returned to the war.

The plan to remobilize those reserve forces is designed to relieve some of the growing strain on active-duty Marines.

A Marine Corps spokesman, Lt. Col. Scott Fazekas, said Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld gave the Marines the go-ahead to conduct detailed planning on how the battalion reactivations would be done. Initially, Fazekas said Rumsfeld had approved the plan itself. Later he said the approval was for detailed planning.

Eric Ruff, a spokesman for Rumsfeld, said Wednesday evening that no specific proposals have been presented to Rumsfeld. "The Marines are reviewing a range of options and concepts for future consideration by the secretary and, to date, nothing has been approved," Ruff said.

The Army, which is organized differently than the Marine Corps, has not sent any of its National Guard combat brigades back to Iraq for a second tour, although it is considering making more use of the Guard. Both the Marines and Army have sent reserve support units and active-duty forces to Iraq multiple times.

The announcement came after the U.S. military reported Wednesday that 10 American troops had been killed the day before, raising the death toll so far this month to 69 and putting October on track to be the deadliest month for coalition forces since January 2005.

The return of Marine Reserve combat battalions to Iraq would begin in 2008, according to a senior Marine officer who discussed the subject on condition he not be identified because no official announcement has been made. Thus, the first picked to go back probably would be remobilized next year to train for the mission.

The plan, put forward by Gen. Michael Hagee, the Marine commandant, could be modified as the situation in Iraq changes, officials said. For planning purposes, the Marines are working out future force rotations that would include at least one Reserve combat battalion starting in 2008.

"I did not think it would go on as long as it has now. I was obviously wrong," Hagee tells CBS News national security correspondent David Martin of the Iraq war. "My sense is now that it's going to go on for some time and we, the nation, we have to be prepared for a long war."

Sending hundreds of reservists back into combat starting in 2008 will take some of the strain off active duty Marines which currently serve seven-month tours in Iraq and are home for only seven months.

The Army, which provides the bulk of the troops in Iraq, is in a similar bind. Its units serve one-year tours and are home for only 14 months, reports Martin.

Marine Reserve units are mobilized for 12 months, to include pre-deployment training, seven months in Iraq and then a period of demobilization.

The short respites between combat tours are not only a morale issue but also an obstacle to providing soldiers and Marines with sufficiently varied training and adequate time to attend professional development schools.

The Marines, for example, are not doing as much training for large-scale, high-intensity combat — combining their air, land and sea forces — as they normally would do, officials said. They do, however, have the time to do high-intensity combat training on a smaller scale, in addition to counterinsurgency training for Iraq missions.

It's a killing pace made necessary by the rising sectarian violence which forced the U.S. commander in Iraq, Gen. George Casey, to scrap plans for withdrawing any troops this year, Martin reports.

The Marines have 24 active-duty combat battalions. At any given time, nine of them are in Iraq.

To increase the amount of time between deployments, the Marines have decided to make more use of their reserve combat battalions, of which there are nine. The main restriction the Marine Corps faces is a 24-month limit on the amount of time a reservist can be mobilized, so those who were on active duty for more than 12 months the first time will not be remobilized, since the planned mobilizations would be for 12 months, Fazekas said.

The Marine plan does not represent a change in the 24-month policy, which is set by the partial mobilization order signed by President Bush in 2001. It pertains to deployments for Iraq, Afghanistan and other places deemed part of the global war on terrorism.

The Marines have not yet decided which of the nine Marine Reserve battalions would be the first to be recalled for another tour in Iraq, Fazekas said.

He said officials would examine which battalion is best prepared for a second combat tour, based on the number of Marine reserves in its ranks who are still eligible for mobilization, the condition of the unit's equipment, the state of its training and other factors.

The last of the nine Marine Reserve combat battalions to serve in Iraq is the 1st Battalion, 24th Marines, based in Michigan and Ohio. The battalion is operating in the Fallujah area in western Anbar province.

©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Video and Galleries from Iraq After Saddam

Add a Comment
by rharrin1 October 18, 2006 7:22 PM PDT
STAY THE COURSE ?
Reply to this comment
by reader42 October 18, 2006 7:53 PM PDT
My husband, a Marine RESERVIST, returned from his SECOND TOUR in April 06. This is NOT new.
Reply to this comment
by marcelde October 18, 2006 9:46 PM PDT
%u201CStay the course%u201D means STAY THE CURSE!

"Mission Accomplished" means that over 2,700 of our soldiers have died.

"Bring 'em on" means if you object to the deaths of our soldiers, you are unpatriotic.

An "Inconvenient Truth" : IRAQ DID NOT INVADE US!

WE INVADED IRAQ BECAUSE BUSH%u2019S SAUDI OIL FRIENDS, LIKE BIN LADEN, BOMBED THE WORLD TRADE CENTER. IF BUSH HAD BEEN PRESIDENT WHEN PEARL HARBOR WAS ATTACKED BY JAPAN, HE WOULD HAVE BOMBED THE PHILLIPINES BECAUSE ASIANS LIVED THERE!

Reply to this comment
by charles8220 October 18, 2006 9:47 PM PDT
Reader42, Mr. Rumsfeld would like to send your husband for a third tour.
Reply to this comment
by grazinggoat October 18, 2006 10:47 PM PDT
Not enough new blood to spill on Iraqi Soil, Mr G.Walking-liar Bush, so we use the old one. Way to... stay the course. Not making enough money to pay, Mr Bush. What are you waiting for raising the Oil price and pay well earned money for that new blood? Ask your OPEC friends to cut their oil production, for then, skyrocketing the price. Easy said, easy done.
Reply to this comment
by nothappyatall October 18, 2006 10:48 PM PDT
Reader42: wait till your husband returns for his THIRD and FOURTH tour, courtesy of the Bush regime and LIES, DECEIT and FRAUD!!!

Iraq had NOTHING to do with 9/11 OR wmd, just as we all have been saying and as his own committee reports recently STATED, yet this moron STAYS with this idiotic failed war!!!

There will be NO end to this, the military is already making plans for the next FOUR YEARS stay there, so get used to it- YOU voted this moron Bush and his nazi regime INTO power or back in, now you pay the price for that.
Reply to this comment
by gmond October 18, 2006 11:41 PM PDT
Now here is a tip for all posters reading the CBS news forums:
If you are fundamentally illiterate and can't understand or correctly spell your response to what most posters here are saying, then go to courttv.com where you will belong, and gain many, many friends amongst the great unwashed.
Reply to this comment
by frankly6 October 19, 2006 12:36 AM PDT
Had enough? Vote for change.
Reply to this comment
by zeekylord October 19, 2006 12:56 AM PDT
In a related story, Bush compared the current spat of violence to the Tet offensive in Vietnam.

Ummmmm...

Maybe I'm missing something here, but wouldn't that be the last thing you should be doing Georgie Boy?
Drawing comparisons to Vietnam?

I wouldn't want the voters thinking about the last unpopular war when considering the current one - especially in voting season.
Reply to this comment
by cofmanaaron October 19, 2006 2:14 AM PDT
Want to be drafted? I guarentee you that if the Republicans continue to control our government past November, after the threat of Election year is past, Bush will use his "mandate" to escalate the war in yet another short-sighted campaign again profitable to the military industrial complex. And who will fight and die? Me, your husband, your sons, your brother, and probably you too.
Reply to this comment
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