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By George C. Wilson, CongressDaily
gcwilson1@comcast.net
The stage is set for our armed services to relive the worst days of the 1970s when discipline broke down, crime ran rampant, race relations soured, many of the best and brightest in the junior officer corps left the military in disgust, planes couldn’t fly and ships couldn’t sail for want of spare parts and technical specialists. Generals, admirals and defense secretaries favored buying new over fixing up the old, generating a readiness crisis.
It doesn’t take a crystal ball to make those predictions, just time in grade. I saw all that happen from up close in the 1970s as a military correspondent for The Washington Post. The same dynamics that almost ruined the American military for good in the 1970s are in play right now. The relevant Congressional committees – armed services, budget, appropriations, government reform – need to take a hard look next year at the health of the armed services and either make some quick fixes or watch a rerun of that tragic Vietnam era movie.
“I don’t know how I can save the Army as an institution,” Gen. William Westmoreland, Army chief of staff, lamented to Washington Post executive editor Benjamin Bradlee in 1971. The justifiably alarmed Bradlee ordered Haynes Johnson and me to interview Army people at all levels in the United States and overseas to find out what the problems were and describe them in print. The resulting newspaper series and book, both entitled Army in Anguish, had impact because it was Army people talking about the sad state of their own Army, not reporters making sweeping judgments.
The basic problem during the Vietnam War and its aftermath was the same as it is today, especially for the Army and Marine Corps. There were, and are, not enough high quality young men and women willing to serve in the American military that had gotten into a war that most of the public didn’t give a damn about. The generals looked back, then and now, and saw most American citizens were not following them.
Yet the armed services, starting in 1973 when draft calls were suspended, were ordered by the President to fill vacancies in their ranks only with volunteers no matter what it took. The manpower problem is worse this time around, especially for the Army and Marine Corps, because the Pentagon master plan calls for those two services to get bigger at the very time parents and their children are turned off by another hard-to-explain war.
So what are Army leaders doing to ease their manpower crunch? Lowering admission standards, even to forgiving criminal records in some cases; raising the age limit; offering comparatively huge bonuses to enlist or re-enlist. I’ve seen the movie. Watch for exposes of military recruiters desperate to meet manpower quotas falsifying credentials of volunteers; for military stockades to fill up again as discipline breaks down; for race relations to deteriorate; for the brain drain to get worse as many of the best and brightest in the junior officer corps quit.
True, Chairman Charles Rangel, D-NY, of House Ways and Means has introduced a bill (HR 393) to bring back the draft which would certainly solve the armed services numbers problems. But his heart is clearly not in it, certainly not in this political season. Rangel went so far as to vote against his own bill (HR 163) on Oct. 5, 2004 when the Republican House majority called it up under suspension of the rules to embarrass the Democratic minority. Also, this year Rangel’s conscription bill was referred to the House Ways and Means Committee, which he chairs, but he chose to let it lie there rather than push it forward. (His bill was also referred to Armed Services.)
Congress with its Constitutional mandate to provide for the common defense could do itself, the nation, the next President and the American military a favor by divvying up the hot button defense issues among its committees, dig out the facts and set them down in hard-hitting reports to guide the actions of the new Congress and new President in 2009. Defense issues that need exploring include these:
Congress should address these and other defense issues next year before the elephant already in the living room gets too big to tame.
E-mail: gcwilson1@comcast.net
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Restoring the military requires that the mission be changed to solely the physical military defense of the “several states” - in other words, non-imperilaism. Military procurement could be greatly improved by nationalizing the military industries; a new F18 fighter costs half the annual budget of a nearlby major campus state universtiy. Pure insanity, and it is mostly war profiteering for a small number of filthy crooked rich. This naton could be defended from any threat, land, sea, air, or space, with an annual expenditure, including the oxymoroned-named “intelligence black-budget” of no more than 200-250 billion, instead of the present $700-800 billion. And we should go beyond conscription to a system of compulsory national service, no exemptions, no excuses; everybody serves 2 years beginning between ages 17 and 24, then goes into either the federal national reserves or state militias, until about age 40 or so.
The current administration has gutted the military to the enrichment of private industry. What ought to be done is a complete revamping top to bottom before disaster strikes. The National Guard, I hear is corrupted from it’s border work.
The Navy has it’s love boats and strange customs evolving. Have not chatted with contacts there since one of their interrogators died under strange circumstances.
The Coast Guard also has been corrupted in the war on drugs. If you call for help they arrest you and sink your ride.
Their stations are manned by weightroom steroid filled drug thugs.
So there appears to be a break down occurring in all the services.
This could be the outcome of the demise of the press.
There are answers and the previous posting is looking as well. Our voices are muted by the economics of the Empire.
Good points made by Scott and Cordly. I would add not to allow rich sons like GW Bush to go AWOL or shirk their obligations. Think of the investment in training him. Two other points are the religious proselytizing in the military academies and rape and harassment of women.
And we have the missionary deferments for Mormons. Mitt Romney had one after his three-year student deferment. Mitt is quoted as saying that after the war his father said that we were brainwashed into that war. Probably true about Iraq too but that doesn’t help those who return permanently maimed physically or psychologically. For more comment on this the Mormon deferment see the excellent discussion at http://independentsunbound.blogspot.com/2007/06/mitt-romney-anothet-gooper-with-better.html.
It will be hard to rebuild the military when the democrat controlled congress won’t even pass a bill to fund the troops let alone improve anything.
If the civilian government is bent on getting us involved in wars of agression, who would want to lay their life on the line? When a government official (someone I have never met, and who has him or herself never served)tells me I must put my life on the line, for what ultimately turns out to be a big corporation (or control of oil that rightfully belongs to the people of another sovereign nation), I would rightfuly refuse. It has become far too easy to make up reasons for going to war. Add to this, the fact that our congress wont even take responsibility for formally declaring a war (something that doesnt even require firing a shot or even so much as a lousy pushup!)We have not fought a “required war” since Korea or possibly even WW2! They keep trying to use the “terrorism card” to scare the citizenry of the U.S. And rob the citizen of his basic rights. Soon there wont be any rights or freedoms left to fight for and they will have to “invent another reason” …. Its always been about money and control. Repeat after me…. “We are not being threatened from another country, we are only being threatened by the enemies we created by our own lies thoughts and actions.”
Ask yourself this - - -If I kicked down your door and trashed your home, or worse shot up your family (your wife and kids), would you wish me dead? If I invaded your country (over a bunch of untruth’s) and killed 1.1 million of your citizens, and made homeless, still another 4-5 million, wouldn’t you want revenge? Would you be the terrorist in this situation or would I (the invader).
If this is the way the military is being used (and it is) I would have no part of it (draft or no draft). Making your own country a hated invader across the globe is no way to do service to your nation.
We invested $30,000 per person in this country just to wage the two wars we are waging (this estimate includes infants!). Now ask yourself how much have we ever invested in PEACE? Even our “so called” embassies are used more for spying and as an excuse for putting military in other countries than for peace.
Lastly - if the government insists on paying privatized mercenaries well and treating military as second “class servants” then who would want to join?
Brad, just to clarify: WW2 was the last “necessary” war we fought.
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