April 25,2008:
The U.S. Department of Defense plans to halt using "stop loss" (keeping
troops in up to 12 months beyond their discharge or retirement date) within the
next two years. Because of retirements, schools, leave, expired enlistments and
so on, military units today can have over twenty percent of their troops away,
or about to leave, at any one time. To keep units headed for Iraq up to
strength, the U.S. Army began using the "Stop Loss" rule six years
ago. This meant that troops could not retire, and if they were at the end of
their enlistment, they had to stay in the service until their tour of duty in
Iraq is completed. The main reason for policy was to save lives. The majority
of people stop lossed were NCOs (usually squad and team leaders about to be
discharged, or senior ones about to retire) and technicians. The NCOs were
critical in combat, the glue that held units together. Replacing these leaders just before a unit ships out to a combat
zone, leaves troops with unfamiliar replacement leaders, which leads to
mistakes, and dead soldiers.
Stop Loss
also halts scheduled transfers from a unit so affected. The Stop Loss has been
applied separately to active duty and reserve units, causing some morale
problem in Iraq when reserve units were under Stop Loss and active duty units
were not. So far, over 60,000 active duty and reserve troops have been hit with
a Stop Loss order, and served another few months, or as much as a year.
During World
War II, troops were in "for the duration" (of the war.) Historically,
that was the exception, not the rule in the American military. During the
American Revolution and American Civil War, troops served fixed enlistments and
left when their six months, two years or whatever were up. The government was
wary of issuing a "for the duration" order because of the potential
political backlash. During the Korean and Vietnam war there was a limit of 13
months service in the combat zone and enlistments were rarely extended
involuntarily. Iraq was another one of those wars where the government feels it
can get away for a little "for the duration lite", which is what Stop
Loss is.
Stop Loss
has been part of the enlistment contract since the 1970s. Basically, troops
take on an eight year obligation when they enlist, even if the specified period
of active service is only three or four years. Normally, the rest of the
obligation is served in the IRR (Individual Ready Reserve), which usually
requires no contact with the military. Thus, at the end of three or four years,
troops receive a document saying they have been "released from active service."
Four or five years later, they get their discharge. It's just another example of why you should
always read the fine print.