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US election stokes fears of military draft
By Patrick Martin
12 October 2004
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In a vote by the House of Representatives last week and a categorical
denial by President Bush during Fridays debate with Democratic
candidate John Kerry, the Bush administration has sought to allay
widespread concern among American young people that it plans to
reinstate the military draft after the election.
Reports that the draft will be resumed to meet the manpower
requirements for the war in Iraqand future wars against
Iran, Syria, North Korea or other countrieshave been circulating
widely on the Internet and in the pages of student newspapers
on college campuses. Recently the Rock the Vote organization sent
out an e-mail to 640,000 young people with a mock draft card and
the subject line, Youve been drafted, as part
of a campaign to increase voter registration.
According to a poll released last week by the University of
Pennsylvanias Annenberg Center, more than half of young
people aged 18 to 29 believe that Bush will reinstate the draft
if he is reelected, compared to seven percent who believe Kerry
would do so.
These suspicions are only half right. While the Bush administration
is being driven towards conscription as the only way to deal with
the demands of war in Iraq, a Kerry administration, pledged to
essentially the same policy of military victory, will face the
same pressures.
The initial political fallout, however, has hit the Republicans
hardest, as the actions by congressional Republican leaders last
week attest. They called up a bill to reestablish the draft, HR163,
introduced by Democrat Charles Rangel of New York, and put it
to a vote. It was defeated 402-2, with even Rangel voting against
it. Only two congressmen, Democrats John Murtha of Pennsylvania
and Fortney Stark of California, voted for it.
The bill was brought to a floor vote out of regular order,
with no hearings or testimony. The sole purpose of the exercise
was to make a pre-election show of opposition to resumption of
the draftalthough the gesture may backfire if the next Congress
takes the opposite decision.
Congressional Republican leaders admitted they were responding
to discussion of the issue on the Internet among young people.
Majority Leader Tom DeLay of Texas said, After all the conspiracy
talk and e-mails flying all over this country, especially the
conspiracy talk weve heard lately from the Kerry Democrats,
we took a look around and found that the only plan to bring back
the military draft, secret or not, was the Democrats. Were
going to bring it out there, and were going to put a nail
in that coffin.
Another senior Republican congressman, John McHugh of New York,
said Americans have been whipped into a frenzy by this controversy.
Duncan Hunter of California, the Republican chairman of the Armed
Service Committee, said, The reason we are doing this is
to expose the hoax of the year, which has been needlessly scaring
young people.
It is remarkable that, despite the obvious concern among young
people, there has been almost no discussion about the draft in
the major media until this week. The media continues to downplay
the possibility, accepting as good coin the reassurances of Republicans
and Democrats that there is no thought of reestablishing conscription.
The question was raised directly to Bush and Kerry during their
debate Friday night in St. Louis, when one of the audience participants,
a young man named Daniel Farley, asked Bush a clearly hostile
question: Mr. President, since we continue to police the
world, how do you intend to maintain our military presence without
re-instituting a draft?
Both candidates had to respond, and each did what he does best:
Bush lied and Kerry evaded.
Bush declared flatly, Were not going to have a
draft, period... Now, forget all this talk about a draft. Were
not going to have a draft so long as I am the president.
Bush did not attempt to respond to the police the world
part of the question, which gave some hint of the deep-seated
popular opposition, not only to the war in Iraq, but to the threat
of new wars implicit in Bushs doctrine of preemptive war.
Bush has repeatedly threatened Iran and North Koreaalong
with Iraq, part of his axis of evila phrase
he revived in the course of Fridays debate. Given that Iraq
has tied down parts or all of the ten divisions that now comprise
the US Army, major military action against any other antagonist
would clearly require a vast increase in military personnel, which
only conscription can supply.
Kerry followed Bush in responding to the draft question. He
said, Daniel, I dont support a draft. But let me tell
you where the presidents policies have put us... our military
is overextended under the president. Our Guard and reserves have
been turned into almost active duty. Youve got people doing
two and three rotations. Youve got stop-loss policies, so
people cant get out when they were supposed to. Youve
got a back-door draft right now.
Kerrys answer was more revealing than Bushs. His
pro forma statement of non-support to the draft was followed by
six sentences elaborating the reasons why the US military needs
more manpower than it currently has access to. He decided not
to repeat Bushs categorical formulation, no draft
as long as Im president.
The Annenberg poll reveals illusions among young people that
a vote for Kerry is a means of staving off the draftillusions
that could tip the balance in a close election. But the foreign
policy proposed by the Democratic candidate will involve deployment
of US military forces on a scale equivalent to that planned by
Bush, requiring recruitment far beyond the 40,000 additional troops
for which Kerry has publicly called.
Kerry criticizes the Bush administrations treatment of
recently retired Army Chief of Staff Eric Shinseki in many of
his campaign speeches. Shinseki was repudiated by the Pentagon
after he told Congress, prior to the invasion, that several hundred
thousand troops would be required to conquer and control Iraq.
He was subsequently forced out.
Kerry also hailed the admission last week by former Iraq civilian
administrator Paul Bremer that he had been rebuffed in seeking
more troops.
The Democratic candidate has repeatedly declared that his policy
in Iraq is not to withdraw, but to win. It is no secret that any
serious effort to suppress the growing nationalist insurgency
in Iraq will require deploying tens of thousands of additional
US troops.
Kerry has also criticized Bush for allowing Iraq to distract
him from greater threats in Iran and North Korea. Any significant
military conflict with Iran (population 70 million, compared to
25 million in Iraq), or with North Korea (population 23 million,
with an army of one million and reportedly a small number of crude
nuclear weapons), would require a rapid increase, perhaps a doubling
or tripling, of deployable US military manpower.
Neither party can talk about this reality before the election.
But the immediate electoral impact is not the main reason the
politicians hesitate to push forward with any move to return to
the draft. More fundamental are the implications for the stability
of American society itself. Within the ruling elite, there are
fears that reestablishment of conscription under the present circumstances
would lead to a political explosion.
This accounts, in large part, for the prevailing opposition
to the draft among the Pentagon brass, despite the obvious strains
on military manpower. Those now in command of the US military
are for the most part veterans of the Vietnam War debacle, where
they experienced the decomposition of a mass conscript army in
an unpopular war against an intransigent and highly motivated
enemy. With good reason, they fear a similar outcome in Iraq.
There are also related to domestic considerations. The American
ruling elite, whose social policies are ever more overtly directed
against the basic interests of the working population in favor
of the further enrichment of a financial oligarchy, require a
military that could be trusted to employ violence against mass
social and political unrest at home. There are doubtless those
who argue that a professional, rather than a conscript, army would
be a more reliable instrument for internal repression. But the
requirements of an aggressively imperialist foreign policy, whose
aim is the establishment of American global hegemony, increasingly
render the maintenance of an all-volunteer military untenable.
See Also:
Democrat Edwards backs war, austerity
in vice presidential debate
[6 October 2004]
Contradictions of Bush-Kerry debate:
pro-war candidates confront debacle in Iraq and anti-war sentiment
at home
[5 October 2004]
Bush-Kerry debate: two candidates committed
to war
[1 October 2004]
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