FORT CAMPBELL, Ky. - Despite the shrapnel wounds Staff Sgt.
William Pinkley suffered during his tour in Iraq, the 26-year-old
is joining other soldiers who are re-enlisting at rates that exceed the retention goals set by the Pentagon.
As of March 31, halfway through the Army's fiscal year, 28,406
soldiers had signed on for another tour of duty, topping the
six-month goal of 28,377. The Army's goal is to re-enlist 56,100
soldiers by the end of September.
Pinkley re-enlisted for three more years, citing the camaraderie
and the challenge of a new assignment.
"To come out and work with you guys every day, it's a good
feeling," Pinkley, 26, told his 101st Airborne Division buddies
during the ceremony earlier this month. His wife, Kimberly, watched
with a smile, their toddler in her arms.
"It's a very positive retention picture at this point," said
Lt. Col. Franklin Childress, an Army public affairs officer. The
Army had nearly a half-million active-duty soldiers.
However, Childress cautioned that factors such as an improved
economy and the Pentagon's decision to keep about 20,000 troops in
Iraq for longer than a year to help quell the violence could change
the picture.
Some contend a poor job market and re-enlistment bonuses worth
thousands of dollars are keeping soldiers in the Army. Col. Joseph
Anderson, commander of the 101st's 2nd Brigade, said it was more
about camaraderie, patriotism and duty.
"They've had a personally rewarding and professionally
developing experience," Anderson said. "I think they've formed
some bonds that are going to last a lifetime. It tends to make them
want to stay."
The only Army division not to meet its goal in the six-month
period was the 82nd Airborne Division, whose members have been sent
to fight in Afghanistan and Iraq since the Sept. 11 attacks. The
division wanted to re-enlist 1,221 soldiers but got only 1,136.
At Fort Campbell, soldiers from the 101st spent seven months in
Afghanistan after the Sept. 11 attacks. The entire division of
about 20,000 soldiers was sent to Iraq last year for major combat,
and the last planeload returned home in March. A grueling year in
Iraq claimed the lives of 61 Fort Campbell soldiers, and hundreds
more were wounded.
In the six-month period ending March 31, the 101st topped its
goal of re-enlisting 1,591. It got 1,737 to sign up for another
tour of duty.
Fort Campbell leaders said their numbers debunk the theory that
yearlong combat-zone assignments, not typically used since Vietnam, and the casualties in Iraq would discourage soldiers from re-enlisting.
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