The DRAFT: Bush's Plan for Conscription of Americans

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Why Would Bush Do It?
(
after the election of course)

1.  Pre-emptive War Creates the Need

The Bush Doctrine of "pre-emptive" war has led us to a valid war against the Taliban in Afghanistan after September 11, but then to unjustified unilateral action against Iraq.  Though the Bush administration claimed Iraq had links to al Qaeda and that there was a current danger to the U.S. from his weapons of mass destruction, neither has proven to be the case.  And it may be just the beginning of the Bush military march on the Arab world.  Iran, Syria and others have been discussed as possible next targets.

2.  Unsustainable Troop Levels

According to an article in the November 7 New York Times,

According to the Pentagon troop rotation plan announced by Mr. Rumsfeld, 8 of the Army's 10 active divisions will be on their way to Iraq and Afghanistan or returning from those countries over the next several months — the largest single movement of Army forces since World War II. Only two active Army divisions — the Second Infantry Division, which defends South Korea, and the Third Infantry Division, which took Baghdad and only recently returned home — are not part of the rotation. A division typically numbers 15,000 to 20,000 troops.

That's not the whole story. Three Army National Guard brigades — about 5,000 troops each — are being deployed to Iraq. So are the Marines, who left Iraq after turning their responsibilities over to a Polish-led division in September. With the Army short of troops and foreign troops scarce, the Marines are being tapped to serve in Iraq again. The First Marine Division will supply a headquarters that will command a combined force of some 20,000 Marines as well as Army troops.

A major worry for the Army is also that a third year of large-scale deployments in Iraq will make it difficult to retain the noncommissioned officers and experienced reserves that are needed for a quality volunteer force. Reserves will account for more than a third of the troops deployed in Iraq next year. Retention is a lagging indicator, but the anecdotal indications from reservists in Iraq is that some will leave the military at the first opportunity if they conclude that it entails regular yearlong tours away from home.

No doubt the Defense Department projects that the occupation force in 2005 will be a fraction of the current troop presence. But that is what the Defense Department initially projected for September 2003. 
"Sending the Guard", By MICHAEL R. GORDON, NY Times  11/7/03

3.  No Quick Solution to Pacify Iraq

There are some very strong arguments to suggest that the country will not be pacified any time soon.  The Iraqi Council is barely functioning, the Sunni’s hate us more with every passing day and there are many thousands whose livelihoods are gone along with Hussein, the borders are porous so that lots of Islamic militants have free access, The Shiite’s are not really very stable and would no doubt fight among themselves and with the Sunnis if the U.S. leaves.  The Kurds are the one bright spot since the Turks were smart enough to stay out, but if the Kurds assert more independence from the central government, Turkey will feel threatened and trouble could start.  The whole place is a mess.

 4.  Our Patriotic Duty will be Called

After the election, the President will no doubt again call on the American people to fight terrorism (especially if there is any kind of attack in the U.S.) and the bandwagon to start the draft will be underway.

"[M]ilitary observers and some members of Congress say that the notion of a possible military draft is gaining traction, in part because of questions from Democrats in Congress about the conduct of the Iraqi reconstruction, from retired military officers who are worried that the force is too small to accomplish such a big and difficult job -- and because of the administration itself.

The Defense Department fueled the debate this week when it placed a notice on its Web site asking for "men and women in the community who might be willing to serve as members of a local draft board.""  "Talk of a draft grows despite denials by White House"
CHARLES POPE
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER 11/7/03
 

4.  When will Bush Re-instate the Draft?

Before the election? Oh NO.

After the election?  Wakeup America.

Bush and the Draft*

Bush . . .could be forced into it by events. Republican Sen. Chuck Hagel, a likely presidential candidate in 2008, says that a draft "might become necessary" in the years ahead. The threshold question before the election is this: which candidate is more likely to have so few international friends amid a crisis that he would have to move beyond the all-volunteer force? This question takes the seemingly arcane issue of burden-sharing and brings it home to the American heartland. If we need, God forbid, to occupy another country that truly threatens the United States, we will either do it with the help of our allies or with the conscription of our kids. . . Every military expert agrees that the Army is already badly overstretched . . .Guard recruitment is down 12 percent, and Reservists as old as their late 40s are being mobilized. . . soldiers at Fort Carson, Colo., for instance, have been told that if they don't re-up to 2007 they will be shipped out pronto for Iraq.  Jonathan Alter, Newsweek, 10/4/04 issue MORE

 

Bush Draft Proposal?*

"Defense manpower officials concede there are critical shortages of military personnel with certain special skills, such as medical personnel linguists, computer network engineers, etc.  The costs of attracting and retaining such personnel for military-service could be prohibitive, leading some officials to conclude that while a conventional draft may never be needed, a draft of men and women possessing these critical skills may be warranted in a future crisis, if too few volunteer. . .In addition to the basic identifying information collected in the current program, the expanded and revised program would require all registrants to require all registrants to indicate whether they have been trained in, possess, and professionally practice, one or more skills critical to national security  . . Men and women would enter on the SSS registration form a multi-digit number representing their specific critical skill"  DOD Issue Paper, 2/11/03 MORE 

 

Read the Bush Selective Service System Plan

 

The Selective Service System (SSS), in accordance with the provisions of the Government Performance and Results Act (GPRA), developed this Annual Performance Plan (APP) for FY 2004. This Plan, aligned with the SSS’ Strategic Plan (FY 2001 - 2006), is an outgrowth of extensive internal evaluations of Agency statutory responsibilities viewed in
light of new challenges, fiscal issues, and needs of Agency customers. Measurement of the Agency’s institutional progress toward improvement in programmatic activities, service to customers, and the prudent management of fiscal resources forms the basis for the
development of this plan. Ultimately, performance measurement provides the path of accountability between the Agency’s long-term vision and the day-to-day activities of its employees.
 
Selective Service System Plan, 2004  MORE

 

Military Solutions and the Draft*

[Given] the political unpopularity of a return of the draft, it seems highly unlikely that a bill to return the draft would be enacted before the election in November.
A draft seems more likely in 2005 or beyond if we stay in Iraq with large numbers of troops, if re-enlistments of military personnel fall dramatically as some predict, if our government decides to wage pre-emptive war on another country and if we continue to address international problems with military solutions.  Using military solutions before exhausting all other solutions is wrong. We have learned in Iraq that military solutions don't work, don't build a country. Too many families, both Iraqi and American, have lost precious members to death and injury. 
Carol Van Houten, The Register-Guard, 6/25/04  

 

Would a Second Bush Term Mean a Return to Conscription? Why Dodging the Draft Would Be Trickier Than You Think by Maureen Farrell, BuzzFlash.com, November 11, 2003

Link to full Article

Excerpts: 

Michael O'Hanlon, of the Brookings Institution, tried to be equally reassuring. "Even if one imagines a major ground war against Iraq or Afghanistan," he said, "these are the sorts of things that we've been planning to do with our active duty force for a long time." O'Hanlon added that the only scenario under which a draft might occur would be if the US were to occupy another country for an extended period of time. "If we had a five-year occupation ... and needed to help shepherd in new governments before we could withdraw -- just as we did in Germany and Japan after World War II, then conceivably you would get into the kinds of manpower requirements that would advise in favor of a draft," he said, on Sept. 18, 2001

. . . .

So now that occupation "ifs" have become reality, concerns that the US military is stretched too thin are being voiced regularly. And news that the Pentagon is advertising for personnel to staff draft boards has notched up speculation. "This is significant," Dartmouth presidential scholar and former professor of strategy at the National War College in Washington Ned Lebow said. "What the department of defense is doing is creating the infrastructure to make the draft a viable option should the administration wish to go this route." . . .

"The experts are all saying we're going to have to beef up our presence in Iraq," Rangel said in the Nov. 3, 2003 edition of Salon.com. "We've failed to convince our allies to send troops, we've extended deployments so morale is sinking, and the president is saying we can't cut and run. So what's left? The draft is a very sensitive subject, but at some point, we're going to need more troops, and at that point the only way to get them will be a return to the draft."

. . .

1) No college deferments:

. . .

2) Smarter borders:

In Dec., 2001, Canada and the US signed a "Smart Border Declaration," which, in addition to keeping terrorists out of America, could also be used to keep would-be draft dodgers in.

 

Many in the well-informed audience were surprised at provisions of the [No Child Left Behind] law, even after having heard about it for a year. In particular, several attendees were stunned to hear that high schools must produce a list of all enrolled students for the draft board.  Jackie Burrell
CONTRA COSTA TIMES


George Bush:  Sky Pilot*

 

"He smiles at the young soldiers
Tells them it's alright
He knows of their fear
In the forthcoming fight.

Soon there'll be blood
And many will die
Mothers and Fathers
Back home they will cry".


"Sky Pilot"

Eric Burdon and the Animals, February 1968

 

 

News about the Draft

Draft back on US agenda *

THE United States would "have to face" a painful dilemma on restoring the military draft as rising casualties saw the number of volunteers dry up, a senator warned today.  Joseph Biden, the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, made the prediction after new data released by the Pentagon showed the US Army failing to meet its recruitment targets for four straight months.  "We're going to have to face that question," he said on NBC's Meet the Press TV show when asked if it was realistic to expect restoration of the draft.  "The truth of the matter is, it is going to become a subject, if, in fact, there's a 40 per cent shortfall in recruitment. It's just a reality," he said.  The comment came after the Department of Defence announced the army had missed its recruiting goal for May by 1661 recruits, or 25 per cent.   Maxim Kniazkov, News.com.au, 6/13/05  MORE

 

 

Draft in a Year? *

 

 

What Would You Call That Breeze I Feel? *

The Selective Service System is looking for men and women to serve as members of local boards that are currently in a standby mode. A prospective member must be a United States citizen, at least 18 years old, registered with the Selective Service (if male), not employed in law enforcement, not an active or retired Armed Forces member and not convicted in any criminal offense. . . .If a military draft becomes necessary, approximately 2,000 local and appeal boards throughout the nation would decide which young men in each community receive deferments, postponements or exemptions from military service, based on federal guidelines and community standards. . .visit www.sss.gov and click on "Board Member Application."  Aberdeen News (MD), 1/13/05 MORE

 

Students and the Draft *

 

More Troops to Iraq; More Need for a Draft*

Concerned that they won't get enough new troops from allies to help provide security for Iraqi elections in January, Pentagon officials are considering increasing the current U.S. force by delaying the departures of some U.S. troops now in Iraq and accelerating the deployment of others scheduled to go there next year. The goal is to temporarily raise the number of U.S. troops in Iraq from the current 138,000 to almost 160,000 to help protect international and Iraqi election workers and secure polling locations.  That addition would bring the sustained U.S. troop presence in Iraq to its highest level since President Bush declared an end to major combat operations on May 1, 2003. . .Four Defense officials with direct knowledge of troop planning for Iraq . . .asked not to be identified because troop matters are highly sensitive and decisions have not yet been finalizedUSA TODAY, 10/26/04  MORE

 

Feeling the Draft

Those who are worrying about a revived draft are in the same position as those who worried about a return to budget deficits four years ago, when President Bush began pushing through his program of tax cuts. Back then he insisted that he wouldn't drive the budget into deficit - but those who looked at the facts strongly suspected otherwise. Now he insists that he won't revive the draft. But the facts suggest that he will. . .Mr. Bush's claim that we don't need any expansion in our military is patently unrealistic; it ignores the severe stress our Army is already under. And the experience in Iraq shows that pursuing his broader foreign policy doctrine - the "Bush doctrine" of pre-emptive war - would require much larger military forces than we now have.  This leads to the justified suspicion that after the election, Mr. Bush will seek a large expansion in our military, quite possibly through a return of the draft.  Krugman, NY Times, 10/19/04 MORE

 

Youth Awaken to Bush Danger?*

Election interest at this stage of the 2004 presidential campaign is substantially higher than during the same period of the 2000 campaign. Of the two leading issues of the campaign, Iraq rather than the economy is the main reason for the surge. . .Young adults have been particularly responsive to the Iraq issue. Among adults who are 30 years of age or younger, 72 percent of those for whom Iraq is the top issue say they have been paying relatively close attention to the campaign. . .Young adults’ election involvement is perhaps higher in 2004 than in any presidential election since 1972. That election, too, was waged against the backdrop of a controversial war—the conflict in Vietnam. . .Turnout is likely to increase more sharply among young adults who have attended or are currently in college. Compared with young adults who have not attended college,  Vanishing Voter Project’s national survey of September 8-12  MORE

 

Bush Post-Election Inductions*

Kerry, who a day earlier insisted Bush has failed to be truthful about a deteriorating situation in Iraq, accused the president of secretly planning a post-election call-up of Guard and reserve units.  "He won't tell us what congressional leaders are now saying, that this administration is planning yet another substantial call-up of reservist and Guard units immediately after the election," Kerry said at a town hall-style meeting at a community center in the battleground state of New Mexico. "Hide it from people through the election, then make the move." 
Kerry's comments came as Rep. John Murtha (D-Pa.) issued a statement in which he said he had learned through conversations with Pentagon officials that beginning in November, "the Bush administration plans to call up large numbers of the military Guard and Reserves, to include plans that they previously had put off to call up the Individual Ready Reserve."
 
Frank James and Rick Pearson, Chicago Tribune, 9/18/04 MORE

 

Volunteer Army?

The Pentagon is forcing thousands of discharged soldiers back into the military, but that does not mean the United States needs to reinstate the draft, the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee said Sunday.  "I can tell you the all-volunteer forces worked” when former President Nixon ended conscription during the Vietnam War, said Sen. John Warner, who was Nixon’s secretary of the Navy in 1973. . . Sandy Berger, who served as national security adviser under President Bill Clinton, told "Meet the Press" that the order showed that the Bush administration had not planned adequately for postwar Iraq. "I think in a manner of speaking, these people have left the Army involuntarily now called back. Associated Press, 7/4/04

 

A Draft by Any Other Name *

Amid Congressional concerns that the military is stretched too thin, the Army is preparing to take advantage of a rarely used wartime program that allows it to recall soldiers who have left the service and did not join the reserves. Pentagon officials said Tuesday that 5,600 former soldiers were going to be called up for yearlong tours, mostly assignments in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The decision was immediately cited by members of Congress as more evidence that the deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan and, more broadly, for the global campaign against terrorism, have left the Army unable to fulfill all its missions. . . some lawmakers have described the large reserve mobilizations and other unusual steps to fill the rosters in Iraq and Afghanistan as an unofficial draf
t.  THOM SHANKER, NY Times, 6/29/04

 

Reasons for a Return of the Draft

Analysts say there are two main reasons the idea [of reviving the draft] keeps coming back. One is that even with its 1.4 million active-duty volunteers and thousands more reservists, the United States seems to have too few troops for the wars it is fighting.
The other is a kind of guilt that the cost of the wars is being paid by very few Americans, analysts said.
The war in Iraq, coming on top of the global war on terrorism, has caused unprecedented strain on U.S. armed forces. The Defense Department has stopped thousands of soldiers from leaving when their enlistment times were up, made some stay longer in Iraq than the promised year, made unprecedented use of the National Guard and Reserve forces and is bringing troops from Korea for the first time in decades as it struggles to maintain more than 138,000 in Iraq.
PAULINE JELINEK, Associated Press, 5/31/04

Bush Prepares for Draft*

The chief of the Selective Service System has proposed registering women for the military draft and requiring that young Americans regularly inform the government about whether they have training in niche specialties needed in the armed services.   The proposal, which the agency's acting Director Lewis Brodsky presented to senior Pentagon officials just before the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, also seeks to extend the age of draft registration to 34 years old, up from 25.

The Selective Service System plan, obtained under the Freedom of Information Act, highlights the extent to which agency officials have planned for an expanded military draft in case the administration and Congress would authorize one in the future.  ERIC ROSENBERG
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER, 5/1/04

 

Bush War Leads toward the Draft*

Someone finally said it aloud and it turned out to be Sen. Chuck Hage [r] of Nebraska.  The country needs to think about drafting young people into the military, Hagel said.
He added that even certain rodents in D.C. know that the war is going to require lots more of the public treasure.
Hallelujah! The king is as obviously naked as a streaker on the 50 yeard line.  America's far-flung interventions and its role as bodyguard in many nations have stretched the military too thin, Hagel said. . . A song performed by the late Phil Ochs in the 1960s noted:
"It's always the old who lead us to the war; it's always the young who fall ..."
  ED HOWARD, Nebraska StatePaper.com 4/22/04

 

Military Draft of IT and Language Specialists *

The Selective Service System has begun the process of creating the procedures and policies to conduct such a targeted draft in case military officials ask Congress to authorize it and the lawmakers agree to such a request.
Richard Flahavan, a spokesman for the Selective Service System, said planning for a possible draft of linguists and computer experts had begun
. . .
The issue of a renewed draft has gained attention because of concerns that U.S. military forces are over-extended. Since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist strikes, U.S. forces have fought two wars, established a major military presence in Afghanistan and Iraq and are now taking on peacekeeping duties in Haiti.
Eric Rosenberg, Hearst Newspapers, 3/11/04

 

Rumsfeld on the Draft

 Q: Could I take you back to the strain on the military of fighting a war in Iraq and the war on terrorism? And just for clarity, do you absolutely rule out ever recommending to the president that a draft be reinstituted? Is that just a bad policy?
Rumsfeld: If -- I never rule out anything almost; almost never. I guess never say never. But I just -- if I saw a circumstance where the national security of our country was such that it was not being properly defended because we were unable to attract and retain the forces we needed, and the only alternative were to turn to compulsion, obviously, anyone with the responsibility to defend the country would turn to whatever direction you had to turn to to see that you were capable and competent to protect the American people
United States Department of Defense. News Transcript 1/6/04

 

Bush's "Volunteer" Army*

The Army will prohibit troops returning from Iraq and Afghanistan from retiring or leaving the service for other reasons for up to 90 days after arriving at their home bases, military officials said Monday. . .Ted Carpenter, a defense analyst with the Cato Institute think tank, said the "stop loss" decision undercuts the concept of an all-volunteer military, which America has maintained for three decades.
"Clearly, if large numbers of personnel have their terms extended against their will, that violates the principle of volunteerism," Carpenter said. . .
Carpenter said if the personnel strains continue or worsen, the Pentagon may feel compelled to return to a military draft.
 
Reuters on CNN.com, 1/5/04

 

Is the US Army too small? A Pentagon briefing last week raised that issue when officials said only two of the Army's active divisions not deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan will be combat-ready during six months next year. Four other divisions coming home from Iraq will need that time - the usual period following deployment - to rest, retrain, and reequip. . .The Pentagon says the force is large enough. Yet a number of retired generals in recent years have complained otherwise. Congress should keep the matter under constant review. Christian Science Monitor Editorial 12/8/03

Reserves, Guard . . .Draft?*

Reserve and National Guard troops will play an increasingly important role in the next rotation. By spring, reservists will represent about 37 percent of the total force in Iraq, or 39,000 troops, compared with about 22 percent now, or 28,000 troops. The big difference is that the reservists in Iraq now are support personnel. In the next rotation, there will be 15,000 troops from three National Guard combat brigades.

The large-scale mobilization of reservists, and the strains it places on their families and employers, has been a difficult issue for the Pentagon, and military officials had sought to limit this next round of call-ups ERIC SCHMITT and THOM SHANKER, NY Times, 11/19/03


Rumsfeld Goal is not to reduce U.S. forces in Iraq

"As we replace U.S. forces serving in Iraq, beginning next year, the level of coalition and U.S. forces will depend on the security situation on the ground and also on the pace at which Iraqi forces, security forces, are able to assume additional responsibilities.  But let me be clear. The goal is not to reduce the number of U.S. forces in Iraq.  It's not to develop an exit strategy.  Our exit strategy in Iraq is success. It's that simple."  Rumsfeld, 11/10/03


Wakeup America:  NEWSWEEK POLL:
Saturday November 8,

Americans are not worried about a renewal of the draft; 63 percent of those polled say the U.S. commitment to rebuilding Iraq will not lead to a reinstatement of a military draft in America; 23 percent say it will.  NEWSWEEK WEB EXCLUSIVE


The Draft!*

according to a story by Dave Lindorff in Salon.com, the administration has launched a low-profile recruiting effort to fill vacancies in local draft boards. Board members, wrote Lindorff, "report that at training sessions last summer, they were unexpectedly asked to fill some of the estimated 16 percent of board seats that are vacant nationwide."  . . . "We must significantly increase the active duty end strength of the military," says Rep. Adam Smith, D-Wash., an Armed Services Committee member, "and reduce the reliance on the Guard and Reserve for those functions that will be needed for the war on terrorism."  The CBO estimates another two Army divisions might cover it -- which also raises the question of whether the Army could raise two more divisions of volunteers.Sarasohn, The Oregonian, 11/7/03


Why Would Bush Bring Back the Draft (after the election)?

"The shoot-down of a Chinook helicopter earlier this week, causing the death of 15 soldiers and the wounding of another 21, is a good example of the problem. It turns out this military disaster was, in large part, the direct result of a shortage of troops on the ground. With the military's 134,000 troops in Iraq spread so thin, there was nobody available to secure the area around the helicopter landing zone in what is acknowledged to be a high-risk area. Because helicopters are particularly vulnerable to attack during their slow landings and ascents, it is standard procedure to secure the perimeter of landing areas, but in this instance, the military had to abandon standard practice and take a chance. There were no soldiers available to protect the area."  from A Draft in the Forcast?, Dave Lindroff, CounterPunch 11/5/03


Why Would Bush Bring Back the Draft (after the election)?

"The shoot-down of a Chinook helicopter earlier this week, causing the death of 15 soldiers and the wounding of another 21, is a good example of the problem. It turns out this military disaster was, in large part, the direct result of a shortage of troops on the ground. With the military's 134,000 troops in Iraq spread so thin, there was nobody available to secure the area around the helicopter landing zone in what is acknowledged to be a high-risk area. Because helicopters are particularly vulnerable to attack during their slow landings and ascents, it is standard procedure to secure the perimeter of landing areas, but in this instance, the military had to abandon standard practice and take a chance. There were no soldiers available to protect the area."  from A Draft in the Forcast?, Dave Lindroff, CounterPunch 11/5/03


Will U.S. bring back the draft?

A number of analysts said yesterday that while any public suggestion of a draft would be politically suicidal for U.S. President George W. Bush in an election year, he could find himself with few other options if he is returned for a second term and the fighting in Iraq is still raging.

Bush, touring fire-ravaged regions of California yesterday, again vowed troops will never cut and run in Iraq, even as attacks on Americans escalate.

The draft was abolished here three decades ago as the Vietnam War wound down, and the defence department notice about draft boards is on an obscure link on its Web site.
TIM HARPER, Toronto Star, 11/5/03


Appeal for draft board volunteers revives memories of Vietnam era