I've run into a bit of trouble processing ICM/AFGM/GWOT-Es and hoped some of the wiser folks out there might be able to help me out.
For the last two years I've been submitting people for these medals as they reach the magic 60 non-consecutive days in or over country required by the regulations. Because we (C-17s) don't stay in country we've been counting dates for each medal as we visit either Iraq or Afghanistan. We, of course, don't count the same date twice but if we go to Iraq during one CDD/FDP and to Afghanistan on the next CDD/FDP we've been giving credit for both. I figured this was totally legit; we're fighting a two front war and eventually amassing 60 days in each theater to earn the medal.
Last week I turned in a new batch of AF104s and the MPF folks told me that this methodology was bogus. I called AMC awards & decorations and was told that we could only earn points for one of the three medals during each "service period" and that their definition of a service period was departure from home station until return to home station. I asked for an official reference to this definition but all they could give me was the ICM/AFGM release memo which mentions service period but does not specify what exactly it is. This limitation is bad enough when it screws you out of one or two service days on a short trip that transits both countries but when they apply it to a four month deployment everyone loses credit for more than half of their time out there.
Like many other regulations, the ICM/AFGM stuff seems to be written from a long-term ground deployment perspective. The fact that people fly in and out of both countries on a daily/weekly/monthly basis from home station, on 10 day SRTs, and/or on deployments doesn't fit their cookie-cutter "service period" definition. I could understand if CENTAF came up with this retarded idea but it seems AMC is equally guilty of not understanding how we fight this war. Each day is a new service period for crews who fly both theaters and never know where they will be the next day.
As a squadron A&D guy I've seen how long it takes to get 60 days for any of these medals. The idea that we're automatically screwed out of 66% of our qualified service dates blows my mind. I've been flying for 2 years now and have between 50 and 60 days (away from home, fighting the war, in-country) for each campaign and for the GWOT-E. Now apparently 100+ of those days don't count for anything. It gets worse for other guys who still don’t have enough credits despite five or more years flying to both these countries. This seems like a very poor way to recognize the hard work and sacrifice of flyers who are fighting the war but not deployed in-country.
My view is that the 30 consecutive or 60 non-consecutive days requirement is enough of a restriction already and that the whole “service period” is a moot point. If someone spends part or all of 60 days in either Iraq or Afghanistan they’ve clearly participated in the campaign and should be recognized for it. I’ve done far more for the Iraq/Afghanistan medals I don’t have than I ever did for the National Defense Service Medal that I do have.
A few questions for those who may be in the know:
1. Who at AMC decides what a "service period" is and why don't they understand how C-17s fight these wars?
2. What do your squadrons/bases/MAJCOMs count towards your 60 days for a campaign medal?
3. Are there any loopholes or creative ways to process AF104s to recognize people for their actual campaign participation rather their artificially low “AMC-approved” service time?
I appreciate any feedback you have.