Alaska Army National Guard

The Alaska Army National Guard is a component of the United States Army and the Alaska Department of Military and Veterans Affairs. Along with the Alaska Air National Guard, it makes up the Alaska National Guard. Alaska Army National Guard units are trained and equipped as part of the United States Army. The same ranks and insignia are used and National Guardsmen are eligible to receive all United States military awards. The Alaska Guard also bestows a number of state awards for local services rendered in or to the state of Alaska.

Alaska Army National Guard
Seal of the Alaska Army National Guard
Active1940–present
Country United States
Allegiance United States
 Alaska
Branch United States Army
Army National Guard
TypeARNG Headquarters Command
Part ofNational Guard Bureau
Alaska Department of Military and Veterans Affairs
Garrison/HQFort Richardson, Alaska

In 2006, the Alaska Army National Guard was composed of approximately 1850 soldiers and maintained 77 armories and other facilities, including Fort Greely.

History

The Alaska Army National Guard was originally formed in 1940-41. However, since the Second World War, the Alaska Army National Guard had not seen significant overseas deployments. It appears that the 207th Infantry Battalion was active in the state after the Second World War, with its distinctive unit insignia and coat of arms originally approved on 4 June 1952. However it was rescinded (cancelled) on 10 May 1960.[1]

Members of the 297th Infantry Regiment awaiting their graduation ceremony upon completing a special basic training course at Camp Carroll, Alaska, 7 April 1976

In 1976, the Alaska National Guard asked the WAC (Women's Army Corps) Center to develop and conduct a basic training program for female members of the Guard. The scout battalions of the 297th Infantry, Army National Guard, which patrolled the western border of Alaska, recruited native Alaskan women for duty and it needed a special training program. The WAC Center assigned a team of trainers to the project. "The team visited Alaska, studied the problems involved, returned to Fort McClellan, drew up a course, then returned to Alaska." Fifty-two female recruits participated in the course at Camp Carroll in Anchorage, and fifty-one graduated. The course taught "map reading, marching, communications procedures, intelligence gathering, arctic survival and bivouac, first aid, weapons (M16 rifle), and other subjects." After completing the basic training, the women went to Army training schools outside Alaska for advanced individual training before being assigned for duty with the scout battalions. The course was successful and it was repeated in 1978.[2]

In 2004, a company of infantry was mobilized to serve in Iraq, serving with the Hawaii Army National Guard's 29th Brigade in 2005. In 2005 through 2008 smaller detachments were deployed to both Iraq and Afghanistan. An infantry battalion was deployed to the Middle East in 2006, and another infantry company was deployed to Iraq in 2007. The Alaska Army National Guard's aviation units have seen a series of company sized rotations to Iraq, including the loss of a helicopter and crew in January 2006.[3]

These deployments seem small in comparison to the units that other states have deployed. However given the small size of Alaska's population and National Guard they represent a very large percentage of the Alaska Army National Guard. When young men are deployed there is a particular impact on smaller "Alaska Bush" villages that have a subsistence lifestyle.

The 49th Missile Defense Battalion (GMD) is an Alaska Army National Guard unit that is permanently on active duty at Fort Greely, as part of the 100th Missile Defense Brigade (GMD).

The Alaska Army National Guard regularly sends soldiers to train in Mongolia as part of the State Partnership Program. In addition, the Mongolian Army deployments to Iraq were typically accompanied by Alaska Army Guard members. Now that the Mongolian Army has shifted its focus to Afghanistan, Alaska National Guard soldiers accompany them there.[4]

An instructor conducting a cold-weather preparedness class, January 2015

In 2007 the original insignia of the 207th Infantry Battalion was readopted for use by the 207th Regiment; the insignia was reinstated and redesignated for the 207th Regiment with the description and symbolism revised on 7 April 1997.(TIOH)

In 2008, the Alaska Guard began transforming the 207th Infantry Group into the modular 297th Battlefield Surveillance Brigade. It had originally been intended to become the 207th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, prior to the National Guard Rebalance Initiative. In addition the 38th Troop Command was stood up to provide command and control for miscellaneous units.

In 2013, media coverage increasingly focused on allegations of misconduct within the Alaska National Guard. These incidents included the dismissal of a senior officer in a high-profile post for failing to control or actively encouraging sexual misconduct among subordinates,[5] as well as allegations of longstanding problems with both sexual assaults within the ranks and a command climate that suppressed reporting of these crimes and targeted whistle blowers for retaliation.[6] By late 2013, the situation had become high-profile enough that the Alaska National Guard leadership appointed a special investigator to pursue inquiries into the pervasive problem of sexual misconduct and the organizational culture and command climate that condoned and promoted it.[6]

Current Units

Alaska Army National Guardsmen competing in the Hero Games, 23 June 2012

In January 2017, the Alaska Army National Guard included the following units:[7]

gollark: I also have HSTS configured to prevent any possibility of MITM attacks.
gollark: And anything which mildly reduces network snooping is good in my book.
gollark: I have automatically issued free ones via LetsEncrypt.
gollark: I run a ton of different random programs and some use unreasonably large amounts of RAM.
gollark: It has some ancient Xeon, an equally ancient 1TB disk, and 4GB of RAM.

See also

References

  1. The Institute of Heraldry
  2. Morden, Bettie J. (1990). "The Women's Army Corps, 1945–1978". history.army.mil. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Army Center of Military History. p. 295. Retrieved 30 October 2019.
  3. Information on all of these deployments is available at the Alaska DMVA website, for example http://www.ak-prepared.com/dmva/press-releases/11Nov06%20patch.pdf%5B%5D, which conveniently lists them. However the .pdf format may not be suitable for reference links if users have limited bandwidth.
  4. Alaska Department of Military and Veteran's Affairs, Accessed 1 July 2010.
  5. Friedman, Sam (12 June 2013). "Fort Greely missile defense commander loses job over sex misconduct investigation". Fairbanks Daily News-Miner. Retrieved 4 July 2016.
  6. Cockerham, Sean (27 October 2013). "Alaska National Guard unit being investigated for allegations of sexual misconduct". McClatchy DC. Archived from the original on 17 March 2015. Retrieved 4 July 2016.
  7. "FY2018 Department Overview". Alaska Department of Military and Veterans Affairs. 19 January 2017. p. 13. Archived from the original on 19 August 2017. Retrieved 18 August 2017.
  8. Bedard, David (16 October 2016). "Army National Guard infantry unit stands up" (PDF). 134th Public Affairs Detachment. Archived (PDF) from the original on 18 August 2017. Retrieved 18 August 2017.
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