ROTC Debate Rages at Stanford - By Brian Bolduc - The Corner

Despite the recent repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” the drive to
reinstate the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps at Stanford University is
facing resistance.

In March 2010, the Faculty Senate appointed a committee to investigate
whether to allow ROTC back on campus after an almost 40-year absence.
The committee will report back in May 2011.

In the meantime, anti-ROTC groups have been making their opposition
known. One group, Stanford Says No to War, created a website at the
misleading domain name http://rotc.stanford.edu to air its displeasure.
(Earlier this month, the university revoked the domain name to avoid
further confusion.) Unsurprisingly, the anti-war group believes ROTC’s
presence is antithetical to the university’s purpose. It cites Professor
Cecilia Ridgeway, who once said in Reading Eagle: “Universities are
about solving problems through discussion, not military approaches.”

Other criticisms include the military’s ban on transgender individuals.
At a debate hosted by the Undergraduate Senate last month, the Stanford
Students for Queer Liberation voiced their objections. “We feel that
bringing back ROTC, a program that specifically says transgender people
are not allowed, is a violation of [the university’s] non-discrimination
policy,” one member said.

Even some faculty members are worried that ROTC will infringe on
academic freedom. In January, Professor Stephen Zunes of the University
of San Francisco warned that a recent memo to ROTC cadets forbade them
from “using the classified information found on WikiLeaks for research
papers, presentations, etc.” The op-ed led the ROTC-committee chairman,
Professor Ewart Thomas, to tell the Undergraduate Senate, “This, I
think, would be problematic.”

Yet the program has its defenders. In a recent letter to the editor of
the Stanford Daily, Tristan Abbey scoffs at complaints over the
exclusion of transgender individuals. “It’s . . . a canard,” he writes.
“Even if the transgender ban were removed, ROTC opponents would still
find an objection. They might insist that ROTC stay banned until the
first female is appointed chairman of the Joint Chiefs, for example, or
until nuclear weapons are eliminated.”

In another letter, Jonathan Margolick, a law student, argues that
banning ROTC does not cut the university off from the military. “Like it
or not, the actions of our armed men and women are, and will remain, our
actions, and a boycott would neither sever our ties with nor end our
support for the American military.” As a result, Margolick concludes,
“We are confronted with incompatible moral goals, necessitating a
difficult choice. How great is the injustice done by the policy against
transgendered recruits, and how great an injustice would we commit if,
in service to country, to civic discourse and, possibly, to equality, we
allowed them on campus anyway?”

This morning, however, proponents of ROTC on campus added former
secretaries of state Condoleezza Rice and George Shultz to their
numbers. In a letter to the ROTC committee, Rice and Shultz endorsed
reinstatement of the program. “Given the complexities of the threats we
face and the missions we demand of our military in the twenty-first
century, this is an appropriate and necessary time for the Faculty
Senate to restore ROTC programs to Stanford’s campus,” they wrote. “We
can think of no better way to prepare future servicemen and women—many
of whom will become national leaders—than by enriching them with a
Stanford education.”

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http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/258859/rotc-debate-rages-stanford-brian-bolduc
Via InstaFetch

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