The Army is training medics to provide prolonged field care in case US forces don’t have “the luxury of air superiority” in future conflicts, Army Surgeon General Lt. Gen. Nadja West told reporters Thursday. The freedom of movement in recent conflicts allowed the Army to “evacuate our casualties at will,” West told the Defense Writers Group in Washington, D.C, noting one service member who received a head injury in Afghanistan was in surgery at a US hospital less than 24 hours later. She said the instruction will include how to perform life-saving, resuscitative surgery and manage the aftercare so that casualties can be maintained for long periods in an environment that’s “not as permissive.” “Trying to teach some of these techniques, we’re going to ask a lot of our medics,” said West, who also heads US Army Medical Command.
President Donald Trump on July 4 signed into law $150 billion in defense funds as part of the tax-and-spending package known as the “One Big, Beautiful Bill” after congressional Republicans approved the legislation in narrow, drawn-out votes earlier this week.