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Bushs war czar floats call for military draft
By Bill Van Auken
15 August 2007
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The senior military officer tapped by President Bush to serve
as his war czar declared in a radio interview last
Friday that Washington should consider the reimposition of a military
draft to relieve the extreme pressure that the ongoing wars and
occupations in Iraq and Afghanistan are inflicting on the US military.
I think it makes sense to certainly consider it,
Lt. Gen. Douglas Lute said in an interview with National Public
Radios All Things Considered.
The general continued: And I can tell you, this has always
been an option on the table. But ultimately, this is a policy
matter between meeting the demands for the nations security
by one means or another.
The interview, the first given by Lute since he was confirmed
by the Senate in June, had all the earmarks of a trial balloon
aimed at introducing the idea of once again conscripting young
people into the armed forces for Americas colonial-style
wars, under conditions in which extended back-to-back combat deployments
are steadily wearing down the US military.
Lute, an active-duty general, was confirmed by the US Senate
last June to a position that amounts to a sort of liaison between
the White House, the military and other civilian agencies involved
in the Iraq occupation. At least five prominent retired officers
had rejected the post, some openly stating that they considered
any attempt to rescue the Iraqi intervention as hopeless. Lute
had reportedly long been a critic of the administrations
handling of the war from the standpoint of the strains that it
has placed on the American military.
The suggestion that military conscription should be reinstated
for the first time since President Richard Nixon suspended the
draft 34 years ago under conditions of massive opposition to the
war in Vietnam clearly is a political bombshell.
Lute hastened to qualify his remarks, acknowledging that the
action would represent a major policy shift. Reaffirming
the line generally given by both the Bush administration and the
Pentagon, he declared, Today, the current means of the all-volunteer
force is serving us exceptionally well.
White House and Pentagon spokesmen rushed to deny that Lutes
comments were connected to any plans for reviving the draft.
The presidents position is that the all-volunteer
military meets the needs of the country and there is no discussion
of a draft. Gen. Lute made that point as well, said National
Security Council spokesman Gordon Johndroe.
Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman chimed in, I can tell
you emphatically that there is absolutely no consideration being
given to reinstituting the draft. He added, The all-volunteer
force has surpassed all expectations of its founders.
There is undoubtedly extreme reluctance within both the US
military and the ruling elite as a whole to bring back the draft
under the present political conditions, in which a decisive majority
of the American population opposes the continued deployment of
US troops in Iraq. Not only is there the general fear that conscription
would incite a political explosion, but within the military brassmost
of which is drawn from veterans of Americas ill-fated war
in Vietnamthere is deep-seated concern that an army of conscripts
in Iraq could enter into the same kind of crisis, decomposition
and, in some cases, open revolt that was seen among US troops
in Southeast Asia 35 years ago.
There exists, however, an inescapable logic to the reemergence
of the draft as a serious subject of policy debate in Washington,
even as popular hostility to the war has grown to unprecedented
levels, seemingly making conscription politically unthinkable.
On the military side, there are increasing warnings from the
top uniformed ranks that the Iraq and Afghanistan wars are breaking
the army, steadily eroding its most qualified personnel, bringing
in recruits that would have been rejected in earlier years and
who are inadequately trained, and leaving too few units to maintain
these occupations, much less to conduct interventions elsewhere.
Lute referred to the strains placed on the troops. Theres
both a personal dimension of this, where this kind of stress plays
out across dinner tables and in living room conversations within
these families, he said. And ultimately, the health
of the all-volunteer force is going to rest on those sorts of
personal family decisions.
The back-to-back deployments and the curtailing of dwell
time, in which troops are meant to recuperate from combat
duty, retrain and reequip, have wreaked havoc on soldiers
personal lives, with divorce, suicide and alcoholism rates all
up sharply.
Meanwhile, one third of those returning from Afghanistan and
Iraq to be treated at government facilities have been diagnosed
with mental illness. According to the Pentagons own mental
health taskforce, the protracted deployments of US troopsconsiderably
longer than combat tours served by soldiers in either Vietnam
or World War IIhave resulted in 38 percent of regular army
soldiers, 31 percent of marines and 49 percent of National Guard
troops showing symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder within
three months of returning from Iraq.
At the same time, the extreme unpopularity of the war has generated
a deepening recruitment crisis for the US military. The army was
able to meet its July recruitment goal only by adding a $20,000
sign-up bonus. The incentive, combined with a significant beefing
up of the recruiters ranks, came after two straight months
of enlistment shortfalls, with recruiters missing their target
by 15 percent in June.
The military has also been forced to drop its recruitment standards.
In 2006, for example, just 73 percent of army recruits were high
school graduates, compared to over 90 percent two years earlier.
At the same time, it has increased the number of so-called waivers
for recruits with criminal convictions that would otherwise keep
them out of the army by 65 percent since the beginning of the
war and has also raised the maximum enlistment age to 42.
The depth of the crisis confronting the US militaryand
the inability of these stopgap measures to resolve a systemic
crisiswas spelled out late last month in Congressional testimony
by Lawrence
Korb, who served as assistant secretary of defense in charge
of manpower from 1981 through 1985 under the Reagan administration.
The decision to escalate or to surge five
more brigades and a total of 30,000 more ground troops into Iraq
has put additional strain on the ground forces and threatens to
leave the United States with a broken force that is unprepared
to deal with other threats around the world, Korb told Congress.
The simple fact is that the United States currently does
not have enough troops who are ready and available for potential
contingency missions in places like Iran, North Korea, Pakistan,
or anywhere else, he said.
He charged that the administrations order to extend tours
in Iraq and Afghanistan from 12 to 15 monthswhich he pointed
out had not been done even during the Vietnam and Korean warsas
well as the reduction in training given to those sent into combat
was placing unreasonable stress on American forces.
Korbs experience as the Pentagon official responsible
for troop levels lends substantial weight to his remarkswhich
included his own assertion that a revived draft is required.
He argued that the present deployments in Iraq and Afghanistan
represent a complete misuse of the all-volunteer military.
This volunteer force, he said, was designed to act as
an initial response force, a force that would be able to repel
and counter aggression. If America ever found itself in a protracted
ground war, or was forced to act against an existential threat,
the all-volunteer force was to act as a bridge to reinstating
conscription. This is why we require young men to register when
they turn 18.
Citing the statement made last fall by Gen. John Abizaid, the
former head of the US Central Command, that the all-volunteer
military was not built to sustain a long war, Korb
continued: Therefore, if the United States is going to have
a significant component of its ground forces in Iraq over the
next five, 10, 15, or 30 years, then the only correct course is
for the president and those supporting this open-ended and escalated
presence in Iraq to call for reinstating the draft. That would
be the responsible path.
Korb hastened to make clear that he did not support such an
option, but instead believed that the US should conduct a strategic
redeployment, withdrawing US forces from Iraq over the next
10 to 12 months.
While there is no doubt that the overwhelming majority of the
American population supports such a withdrawal, there are increasing
indications that no section of the American ruling elite nor the
leaderships of the two major political parties is contemplating
a withdrawal from Iraq.
What is envisioned is a large-scale military occupation of
Iraq for many years to come, precisely the situation that the
senior uniformed commanders and military analysts insist requires
conscription to adequately sustain.
Whatever their criticisms of the Bush administrations
mismanagement of the war in Iraq, the Democratic leadership
remains committed to the original goals for which this war was
launchedestablishing US hegemony over the oil-rich Persian
Gulf as a means of securing a strategic advantage over Washingtons
economic rivals in Europe and Asia. In this context, the war is
not an aberration but part of a global struggle which poses still
more such interventionsin Iran, Venezuela or in other areas
of the globefor which still more young Americans will be
needed as cannon fodder.
This is the objective context that gave rise to Lutes
remarks, which reflect a far more extensive discussion on military
conscription that is unfolding behind the backs of the American
people.
See Also:
New York Times defends military
escalation in Iraq
[15 August 2007]
US generals insist on no troop withdrawal
from Iraq
[9 August 2007]
Pentagon survey exposes deep
demoralization of US occupation troops
Support for torture, routine abuse of Iraqi civilians
[9 May 2007]
Pentagon extends tours for
US troops in Iraq and Afghanistan
[13 April 2007]
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