Why It Will Take Until 2028 To Make Soldiers Look Like They Did In 1945

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November 25, 2018 Topic: Security Region: Americas Blog Brand: The Buzz Tags: U.S. MilitaryAmericaUniformsWorld War IIArmy Greens

Why It Will Take Until 2028 To Make Soldiers Look Like They Did In 1945

It's complicated.

The Army will field its new World War II-throwback uniforms over a period of eight years to ensure that enlisted soldiers have plenty of time to accumulate enough money from their clothing allowances to buy them, a top service spokesman said on Monday.

New soldiers will begin receiving the “Army Greens” at their first units in summer 2020 and the uniform will become mandatory to wear in 2028, officials told reporters at a roundtable.

For soldiers who join their first units in spring 2020 – right before the Army Greens are issued – it will take six years of clothing allowances before they have enough money to purchase the uniform without spending any of their own money, said Brig. Gen. Omar Jones, head of Army public affairs.

“So there’s no requirement for them to buy anything for this uniform until the U.S. Army has given them every single dollar to pay for that uniform,” Jones told reporters at a media roundtable. “For them, that would be the spring of 2026.”

However, the actually cutoff, Jones explained, is 2028, so that “that every soldier in the U.S. Army [has] ample time to get the uniform at no cost.”

Army Greens are expected to cost more than the current service uniform but should last longer – for six years as opposed to four, officials said at Monday’s roundtable. It is too early to say exactly how much each soldier will have to pay for Army Greens, in part because the design is still being refined.

“The one I wore – the one you saw – has a gold belt buckle,” Sergeant Major of the Army Daniel Dailey explained on Monday. “That’s not going to be the color on the final one. It’s going to be subdued, like the buttons. The chief of staff of the Army has made a slight change on the length of the collar on the male jacket.”

This article by James Clark originally appeared at Task & Purpose. Follow Task & Purpose on Twitter. This article first appeared in 2018.

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