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Have you seen or heard about the new Army Dress Uniform?

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Won't it having us looking like the Air Force?

Good idea or bad idea?

Dress Greens Out, Dress Blues In For Army

ARLINGTON, Va. -- It's official: The Army's blue Class A uniform will become the single approved Army Service Uniform, triumphing over the less popular dress greens and rarely seen mess-dress whites.

The decision was announced Wednesday in an all-Army message from Chief of Staff Gen. George Casey and Sgt. Maj. of the Army Kenneth Preston.

The greens and whites are being phased out over the next six years, with the Army mandating dress blues as the exclusive Class A uniform by 2014.

The Army began looking at the issue of consolidating its three existing dress uniforms into a single version two years ago, after Gen. Peter Schoomaker, then Army chief of staff, said he wanted to streamline the number of uniforms soldiers purchase and maintain throughout their career.

The dress blue uniform, which features a dark blue jacket and light-blue pants, has roots in U.S. Army uniforms that date back to the Revolutionary War, and is usually worn during ceremonies and formal occasions.

In contrast, dress greens date only to the 1950s, and are the Army equivalent of a civilian business suit.

Dress greens have never been popular with soldiers. Many criticize what they say is an un-military, suit-like appearance and a thick, all-polyester fabric that is sturdy but has an unflattering, stiff drape.

The tropic-weight dress white uniform, meanwhile, is so rarely worn that a soldier can easily spend an entire Army career without seeing it. It is passing into history largely unnoticed.

But the green-versus-blue debate has been lively and loud in Army circles, and service leaders took input from "hundreds of thousands of soldiers" before deciding to nix the dress greens and revise the wear of the dress blues, according to the message.

The result of the input is a new version of the dress blues that will be available in stores in winter 2009, the message said.

The new dress blues sport "a more tailored, athletic cut," and will be made from a heavier, more wrinkle-resistant fabric made of 55 percent wool and 45 percent polyester. There also will be heavier, more wrinkle-resistant short- and long-sleeve white shirts.

The Army decided not to adopt the gray shirt it had been considering.

New recruits will begin receiving dress blues, instead of dress greens, in their initial basic clothing issue beginning in 2010.

For the rest of the force, the Army will adjust clothing allowance stipends for enlisted troops to fund the purchase of dress blues, which previously have been an optional-wear item, purchased out of pocket.

Officers, meanwhile, will no longer be required to own and maintain both blue and green Class A uniforms.

Dress blues will now be worn differently than in the past. The Army will authorize combat service identification badges on the blue jacket, as well as overseas bars on the jacket sleeves of both officers and enlisted soldiers.

Enlisted troops can wear their unit insignia on the shoulder loops of the blue coat. Paratroopers, meanwhile, can wear black jump boots with the blue uniform.

Blousing -- the practice of tucking pants into boot tops -- will be permitted for soldiers who wear green (Special Forces), tan (Ranger) or maroon (Airborne) berets, soldiers assigned to air assault coded positions and military police on duty.

The Army on Monday, August 25 will launch a Web site, www.army.mil/asu, with more details of the uniform and its wear, spokesman Lt. Col. Lee Packnett said.

http://www.military.com/features/0,15240,174185,00.html?ESRC=army.nl

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8 ANSWERS


  1. Doesn't matter how you dress them up, military men are all the same.

    Brycey G: you're right, being thumbed down by misogynists does make me feel empowered.


  2. I think its the Air Force uniform

  3. This only serves to cheapen the Army Dress Blue Uniform, Dress Greens should be preserved for less formal, work environments.

  4. The uniform is not new. Have you ever seen the tomb guards at the "Tomb of the Unknowns" in Washington? They wear the same uniform. It's originates from 1779 and the current cut is from 1937. No it does not look like the Air Force uniform. Course it predates the Air Force existence 168 years. I have seen the Army dress blues and Air Force uniforms up close and they don't look anything a like. Different colors and cut. It's is the original Army blue uniform. You might recognize the uniform from movies about the old west Indian Wars and the American  Civil War. The jackets color  originates from 1779, the royal blue trousers 1822, and stripes on the trousers 1827. I have no beef with the Class A and dress blue versions. But the Class B version is just not cutting it. The Army also added too may doo-dads to the uniform . The original Army dress blue uniform was never as cluttered. There should also be a cloth waist belt added as well. Great uniform, just needs some tweaks. The last two sites below show Airmen and Soldiers next to each other.

  5. I would have MUCH preferred going back to the WWII style khaki.

  6. They are just trying to look like Marines....

  7. I agree that they do look more like the Air Force but I don't know why they would do this. The greens were much better and looked more presentable.

    I do have to disagree with "better to be liberal than right" though because she's just being ignorant by saying that.

  8. I didn't hear about that. That's kinda weird, and I think most people will confuse it for air force clothes..  

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