National Guard chief details contributions of the force over past year

By Jim Garamone, DOD NewsJune 25, 2021

National Guard Chief Details Contributions of the Force Over Past Year
1 / 3 Show Caption + Hide Caption – More than 80 New Jersey Air National Guard members departed this past Monday and Tuesday for the U.S. Central Command’s area of responsibility to provide expeditionary support for Operation Freedom’s Sentinel, Operation Inherent Resolve and Operation Spartan Shield until spring 2021. (Photo Credit: Staff Sgt. Kenneth Brown) VIEW ORIGINAL
National Guard Chief Details Contributions of the Force Over Past Year
2 / 3 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Chief Deputy U.S. Marshal for the District of Columbia Lamont Ruffin swears in nearly 2,000 National Guard Soldiers and Airmen to be deputized in Washington, D.C., Jan. 17, 2021. National Guard Soldiers and Airmen from several states have traveled to Washington to provide support to federal and district authorities leading up to the 59th Presidential Inauguration. (Photo Credit: Master Sgt. Matt Hecht) VIEW ORIGINAL
National Guard Chief Details Contributions of the Force Over Past Year
3 / 3 Show Caption + Hide Caption – A CALFIRE personnel meters the fire retardant being loaded onto a U.S. Air National Guard C-130H Hercules from the 153rd Airlift wing out of Wyoming, used in airborne fire fighting operations, at McClellan Air Park, California, Aug. 21, 2020. C-130s equipped with Modular Airborne Firefighting System II from Wyoming and California are working together with other fire fighting aircraft to tackle various fires throughout Northern California. (Photo Credit: Tech. Sgt. Christian Jadot) VIEW ORIGINAL

ARLINGTON, Va. – National Guardsmen and women more than demonstrated their value to America during 2020, and the need for their service has never been greater, said Army Gen. Daniel Hokanson, the chief of the National Guard Bureau and a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, yesterday during a Pentagon news conference.

He cited two numbers to demonstrate the value of guardsmen: 12 million and 21 million.

Guard members vaccinated 12 million people against COVID-19 and thousands of guardsmen worked throughout the pandemic to care for, feed, transport and help fellow citizens.

Twenty-one million refers to the "personnel days" Guardsmen and women served during 2020. "Whatever the mission — combat deployments, COVID, wildfires, civil disturbances or severe storms — the National Guard answered every call in 2020 and 2021, as we have for the past 384 years," Hokanson said.

The personnel days include troops deployed around the world in support of the Guard's primary mission: to fight and win the nation's wars, the general said.

June 2020 saw the most Guard members mobilized since World War II. "Nearly 120,000 Soldiers and Airmen were mobilized supporting combatant commanders overseas or in domestic operations here at home," Hokanson said. "And despite the COVID environment, we continued our military training and met every overseas deployment."

Guard members deployed in the wake of the murder of George Floyd in 2020; responded to the insurrection at the Capitol on Jan. 6, and more than 26,000 arrived in Washington to help protect the presidential inauguration. "'Always Ready, Always There' is more than our motto; it's our promise," the general said.

Hokanson highlighted the efforts of the guard on Labor Day 2020. "That weekend, more than 64,000 National Guard members were on duty around the world," he said.

"Roughly 20,000 were deployed across 34 nations in support of our combatant commanders. During the same weekend, more than 18,000 were helping their communities fight COVID-19 — from manning testing sites to supporting long-term care facilities to working in food banks."

In Texas and Louisiana, more than 3,500 guardsmen were working to help communities recover from Hurricane Laura. More than 2,600 Guardsmen were on the Southwest border, providing aviation and operational support to U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

"More than 1,500 were protecting the rights of peaceful protesters and safeguarding communities against violence in Georgia, Texas, Kentucky and Wisconsin," Hokanson said. "More than 1,100 were guarding America's skies — from pilots and maintainers manning the Aerospace Control Alert Mission at fighter and tanker bases across the country to the five 24/7 command-and-control sites in the continental United States, Alaska and Hawaii."

More than 90 Guardsmen and women were operating ground-based missile defense sites in California and Alaska. "That same week in Alaska, a team of Guardian Angel Airmen was awarded the Wilderness Rescue of the Year by the American Red Cross of Alaska for rescuing two hikers, [including] one who had fallen more than 100 feet off a cliff," he said.

Guard members combated wildfires throughout the West. On Labor Day, California National Guardsmen and women rescued 240 people trapped by wildfires in the Sierra National Forest.

"This daring night rescue in heavy smoke was possible because our crews were equipped with modernized helicopters and the latest-generation night vision goggles," the general said. "For their heroism and extraordinary achievement, the aircrews were awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross."

Guard members are also U.S. ambassadors. Under the Guard's State Partnership Program, state or territory guard units partner with nations to help build bridges between nations, help nations develop security capabilities, and aid in programs put forth by combatant commands.

"I recently returned from a trip to Africa where I witnessed the signing ceremony of our newest partnership between Egypt and the state of Texas, as well as observed the Utah and Morocco State Partnership Program in action during Exercise African Lion 2021," the general said.

Given all that Guard members do for the nation, Hokanson said service members should receive premium-free health care. "Whether they are serving our nation overseas or their communities here at home, it is important they have access to medical care, so we can keep our promise to remain always ready, always there," he said.

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