Tuesday November 04 2003
The Guardian

Appeal for draft board volunteers revives memories of Vietnam era
Suzanne Goldenberg in Washington

The Pentagon has begun recruiting for local draft boards, dredging up
painful memories of Vietnam era conscription at a time of deepening
misgiving about America's occupation of Iraq.

In a notice posted on the defence department's Defend America website,
Americans over the age of 18 and with no criminal record are invited to
"serve your community and the nation" by volunteering for the boards,
which decide which recruits should be sent to war.

Thirty years have passed since the draft boards last exerted their hold on
America, deciding which soldiers would be sent to Vietnam. After Congress
ended the draft in 1973, they have become largely dormant.

However, recruitment for the boards suggests that in some parts of the
Pentagon all options are being explored in response to concerns that the
US military has been stretched too thin in its occupations of Afghanistan
and Iraq.

Although Pentagon officials denied any move to reinstitute the draft, the
defence department website does not shirk at outlining the potential
duties for a new crop of volunteers to the draft boards.

"If a military draft becomes necessary, approximately 2,000 local and
appeal boards throughout America would decide which young men who submit a
claim receive deferments, postponements or exemptions from military
service, based on federal guidelines," it said.

Pentagon officials were adamant that there were no plans to bring back the
draft.

"That would require action from Congress and the president and they are
not likely to do that unless there was something of the magnitude of the
second world war that required it," said Dan Amon, a spokesman for the
selective service department.

Bringing back conscription would be catastrophic for George Bush in an
election year, and at a time when parallels are increasingly being drawn
between Iraq and Vietnam.

However, officials were not immediately able to explain how the
advertisement appeared on the site. Mr Amon said the notices were a
response to the natural attrition in the ranks of the draft board, where
some 80% of 11,000 places are now vacant. "It is the routine cycle of
things," he said.

But it was unclear why the Pentagon decided at this time it was necessary
to fill staff bodies which had played no function since the early 1980s.

The idea of a draft has never entirely disappeared, and is contemplated by
Democrats and some military experts.

In the run-up to the war, the New York congressman Charles Rangel argued
for a draft on the grounds that the US military was disproportionately
made up of poor and black soldiers, and that it was unfair for America's
underclass to go off and die in wars.

In recent weeks, there has been growing concern within the defence
department about relying too heavily on members of the National Guard and
army reservists.

Some 60,000 of the 130,000 US soldiers in Iraq are members of the National
Guard or the reserves. An opinion poll last month in the Pentagon-funded
Stars and Stripes newspaper, showed 49% threatening not to re-enlist.

The families of reservists have become increasingly vocal in their
complaints after the Pentagon's decision to extend duty tours to up to 15
months.

Copyright Guardian Newspapers Limited

Reply via email to