The Deployment Process Modernization Office
Answering Ever-Changing Deployment Questions
By Dr. Stewart W. Bentley
Article published on:
September 1, 2025 in the Fall 2025 Edition of Army Sustainment
Read Time:
< 2 mins
The Deployment Process Modernization Office (DPMO) is an integrated team
committed to leading with excellence in deployment readiness and execution
in the strategic environment. The team is active across the doctrine,
organization, training, materiel, leadership and education, personnel,
facilities, and policy (DOTMLPF-P) spectrum. Its goal is to improve the
deployment readiness of units and installations across the Army and the
joint force.
It is chartered by Headquarters, Department of the Army (HQDA) G-3/5/7 and
G-4, as lead for the Army’s deployment/redeployment process.DPMO
collects,consolidates, analyzes, validates, and integrates deployment
requirements across the Army and develops solutions for their resolution
to satisfy current and evolving total Army deployment and redeployment
requirements. DPMO guides the integration of deployment and distribution.
It does this by identifying and developing corresponding policies,
concepts, doctrine, training, deployment and distribution automated
information systems, and enablers. It also does this by conducting
experiments, analyses, and studies to enhance deployment and distribution
capabilities.
The office represents the commanding general (CG) of U.S. Army Combined
Arms Support Command (CASCOM), the CG of U.S. Army Transformation and
Training Command, and the Chief of Transportation (COT) on all issues
concerning deployment and redeployment of Army forces and the integration
with joint services across DOTMLPF-P.
DPMO serves as a member of the U.S. Army Forces Command’s assessment team
that conducts the Chief of Staff of the Army-directed Emergency Deployment
Readiness Exercise program in support of the Army’s Deployment Readiness
Exercise program.
DPMO coordinates with the Future Force Integration Directorate-Enterprise
Systems Directorate Transportation Branch to support U.S. Transportation
Command and HQDA G-4 in developing Army requirements and functionality in
support of the Joint Transportation Management System.
The office produces the DPMO newsletter for worldwide distribution in
support of the COT. This newsletter publishes articles on various
deployment issues to educate the force, share lessons learned, and
disseminate best practices across the Army. In addition, DPMO provides
matrixed support across CASCOM/ Sustainment Center of Excellence and the
schools as required for all matters pertaining to deployment,
redeployment, deployment/transportation information systems, movement
control, reception, staging, onward movement, and integration.
DPMO is organized into two branches. The Deployment Standards Branch is
the proponent for the Army’s deployment process and provides
recommendations to HQDA G-3/5/7 and G-4 on deployment doctrine,
regulation, policy, and process. This branch also serves as the lead Army
agency for incorporating deployment tools and products into the training
and education system and maintaining the Deployer’s Toolbox.
The Deployment Analysis Branch serves as the office of primary
responsibility for the Army-level proponent for the Command Deployment
Discipline Program and as the program manager for the Deployment
Excellence Award program. This branch also manages the Deployment Trends
Program to collect, analyze, and synthesize deployment-related challenges
and best practices to inform other DPMO efforts.
DPMO continues to seek opportunities to engage with the deployment
community and improve the Deployer’s Toolbox and other resources for the
Army. We encourage deployers to check out the toolbox and take our
surveys. Feedback and recommendations from the field are always welcome.
Author
Dr. Stewart W. Bentley is a military analyst with U.S.
Army Combined Arms Support Command’s Deployment Process Modernization
Office. A former infantry and military intelligence officer, he has a
Master of Strategic Intelligence degree from the National Intelligence
University. His previous publications include articles in the Studies in
Intelligence Journal, Army History Magazine, the Military Intelligence
Professional Bulletin, the U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command’s Mad
Scientist Laboratory blog, and the U.S. Military Academy’s Modern War
Institute website.