The largest
of the service branches, the Army plans to finish training the active duty
force of 565,000 by mid-July and the 567,000 members of the Guard and Reserve
by mid-August, officials said.
Gen. George Casey launched the effort with a slide
presentation in the Pentagon for most of service’s dozen four-star generals.
Mainly due to its size, the Army is scheduled to take
longer to complete the training than the smaller services. The Defense
Department has given the services a lot of leeway in determining how they
conduct the training and on what schedule.
The Marines said their instruction officially began Feb. 7.
Some commanders, chaplains, recruiters and military police have received
training and officials expect to complete the entire force by the end of May.
Marine Maj. Gen. Richard Mills, commander of U.S. forces in
southern Afghanistan, said Marines coming off the battlefield will undergo
formal classes, discussion groups and extensive training to make sure each
individual understands the new rules. Speaking to reporters by video
conference, he said most troops in Afghanistan will begin their training while
still deployed, but those who cannot for some reason will attend sessions at
U.S. bases.
The Air Force said it began training its experts such as
chaplains and lawyers this week. And, the Navy has begun the instruction of its
training teams and hopes to complete training the whole force by the end of
June.
President Barack Obama in late December signed the law to
repeal the 17-year-old “don’t ask don’t tell” policy under which soldiers,
sailors, airmen and Marines were required to keep their homosexuality a secret
or face dismissal.
Final implementation of the repeal does not go into effect
until 60 days after the president, defense secretary and chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff certify that lifting the ban won’t hurt the military’s ability
to fight.
Part of their decision will be based on the progress of the
training.