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    Lt. Gen.Talley outlines Rally Point 32 guidance for the Army Reserve

    Lt. Gen. Talley outlines Rally Point 32 guidance for the Army Reserve

    Photo By Timothy Hale | Lt. Gen. Jeffrey W. Talley, chief, U.S. Army Reserve, and commanding general, U.S....... read more read more

    FORT BRAGG, NORTH CAROLINA, UNITED STATES

    06.12.2012

    Story by Timothy Hale  

    U.S. Army Reserve Command

    FORT BRAGG, N.C. – Lt. Gen. Jeffrey W. Talley spent much of his first 48 hours as commanding general outlining his guidance for the Army Reserve.

    Talley shared his Rally Point 32 strategy with Army Reserve leaders at the Senior Leader Conference in Raleigh, June 10, 2012. He then held three town hall sessions with military and civilian employees at the U.S. Army Reserve Command headquarters here, June 11.

    Rally Point 32 ties together the Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army’s Marching Orders, Army Reserve Vision and Strategy 2020, and the Army Reserve Campaign Plan. It describes the Talley’s intent to sustain a high-quality, all-volunteer, operational Army Reserve for Army and Joint Force missions at home and abroad.

    By utilizing Talley’s guidance, Army Reserve soldiers, leaders, and units will couple vital military capabilities with their individual civilian-acquired skills to provide strategic depth across the full range of military operations.

    “The most important thing is that we provide soldiers, leaders, and units that are ready and available to Gen. (David) Rodriguez, our FORSCOM commanding general,” Talley said. “If we fail at that, we fail as an Army Reserve.”

    He said it is imperative to meet Army and joint force requirements for missions across the globe.

    “At the end of the day, that is all we have to do to be heroes. It is also the hardest thing we have to do,” he said.

    Talley pointed out that over the past 10 years of sustained operations, resources were abundant to meet mission requirements. Now, as the Army reshapes and refits going forward, manpower and budget challenges lay ahead.

    “We’re not going to be able to maintain the level of readiness across the Army Reserve that we’ve rolled into over 10 years of war,” he said. “Resources have to appropriately come down.”

    Talley said the Army Reserve will posture itself through “progressive readiness” by providing appropriate levels of readiness at the right place and right time.

    “That progressive cycle of readiness is really based upon us making sure that we are properly assessing the soldier, leader, and unit readiness that’s out there in our formations,” he said. “That is the overall priority for the Army Reserve.”

    Another key component of Rally Point 32 is getting back to basics through home-station training.

    Talley said a majority of Army Reserve soldiers, now serving are unfamiliar with home-station training because of the operational demands over the last decade.

    “We have to get back to, how does a unit train at home station? How do we make use of simulation equipment? How do we those command teams plan and execute their own training?” Talley said.

    He is putting the responsibility for these training requirements on the unit command teams with support from the training commands and USARC staff.

    “What we do up here, when we’re doing staff work, is to make sure that we are helping enable them to do a better job of training their formations so they will be ready when we need them,” he said.

    He is also challenging soldiers, leaders, and civilians to find balance in their lives and careers.

    “If you make sure that you are the best family member, ever, and then the best private-public civilian employee, and then best soldier, the Army wins,” he said. “Because that means you are at the top of your game across the spectrum of activity, no matter whether it’s at home, the office, or in the formation.”

    He also pointed out the reason for the existence of the Army Reserve is to serve the Army.

    “It should be about our Army and how we support the Army,” Talley said. “We shouldn’t ever feel like we’re second-class citizens because we’re part of the Army Reserve. Without the Army Reserve, the Army cannot win decisively.”

    He added that Gen. Raymond T. Odierno, the Army chief of staff, coming to Fort Bragg for the change of command ceremony, sends a “pretty clear message to the Army how important the Army Reserve is.”

    He closed by challenging soldiers, leaders, and civilians, to ask this question every day, “What am I doing today that makes the Army better?”

    Talley assumed command of the U.S. Army Reserve at a change of command ceremony, here, June 9, 2012. He is now the 32nd Chief, Army Reserve and the seventh commanding general of the U.S. Army Reserve Command headquartered here.

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 06.12.2012
    Date Posted: 06.12.2012 10:57
    Story ID: 89827
    Location: FORT BRAGG, NORTH CAROLINA, US

    Web Views: 548
    Downloads: 1

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