Southwest Asia
The end of the draft in 1973 ushered in a period of
tremendous change for the U.S. military. Cut off from their source of cheap
manpower and under pressure to cut costs, the active services realized they must
make better use of their reserve components. The Air Guard had been integrated
into the workings of the Air Force since the mid-1950s. By the mid-1970s the
"Total Force" policy resulted in more Army National Guard missions, equipment,
and training opportunities than ever before.
The National Guard shared in the huge defense buildup initiated by President
Ronald Reagan. In 1977, the first small Army National Guard detachment had
traveled overseas to spend their two weeks of active duty training with regular
Army units. Nine years later, the Wisconsin National Guard's 32nd Infantry
Brigade was deploying to Germany with all its equipment for the major NATO
exercise REFORGER.
From the first days of Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait, Army National Guard
soldiers reacted, initially as volunteers, and later as members of mobilized
units. During this period the Guard went through its largest mobilization since
the Korean War. More than 62,000 Army National Guard soldiers were mobilized, of
which 39,000 deployed to Southwest Asia. Six Army National Guard field artillery
battalions supported the advance into Iraq, including one with the
Multiple-Launch Rocket System. These systems were so accurate and deadly that
the Iraqi soldiers called them “steel rain.”