Training scrapped as rapid-deployment unit moves to standby Speculation surged after the Army abruptly cancelled a major training exercise involving the division’s headquarters at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. That decision, rarely taken for routine reasons, raised immediate questions inside defence circles. Officials now say elements of the division — including a battalion from its 1st Brigade Combat Team and senior command staff — are being readied for potential deployment. The unit’s commander, Maj. Gen. Brandon Tegtmeier, is also expected to be involved. Paratroopers built for fast, high-risk strikes The 82nd Airborne is one of the US military’s most recognisable combat formations, built for rapid crisis response and high-risk missions. Its paratroopers specialise in “joint forcible entry” — parachuting into hostile territory to seize airfields, ports or strategic infrastructure. A key component is the Immediate Response Force, roughly 3,000 soldiers able to deploy anywhere in the world within 18 hours. Analysts say such units can threaten targets across the Gulf without relying on access through contested waterways. A combat unit with a long war record Formed in 1917, the 82nd gained global fame during World War II’s airborne assaults in Europe. Since then it has appeared in nearly every major US conflict. The division spearheaded the opening phase of the 1991 Gulf War and later played major roles in Iraq and Afghanistan. More recently it deployed to Iraq in 2020 after attacks on the US embassy in Baghdad and helped secure Kabul airport during the chaotic Afghanistan evacuation in 2021. Military build-up grows as diplomacy falters The airborne deployment would add to a rapidly expanding US presence in the region. Two Marine Expeditionary Units — roughly 5,000 Marines and sailors — have already been shifted toward the Middle East, alongside thousands more troops. Washington says diplomatic talks aimed at ending the crisis are underway, involving senior figures including Steve Witkoff, Jared Kushner, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Vice President JD Vance. Tehran, however, has flatly denied negotiations are happening — accusing the United States of “negotiating with itself” as military pressure mounts. Inside the 82nd Airborne: The US Army division set to deploy in the Middle East | The Independent
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