Wednesday, June 02, 2004

Do I feel a draft?

When Ashcroft and company scare the bejesus out of the American people over Labor Day without raising the chromatography of the threat level, I look for things that the news folks are missing.

I found it in the Guardian, of course, with an article on how extensive plans have become for reinstating the draft shortly after the election.

Of bills S89 and HR163, one admits to conscientious objectors and one does not. Neither admits higher ed deferrments. Both close the NAFTA borders to draft dodgers.


There is pending legislation in the American House of Representatives and Senate in the form of twin bills - S89 and HR163. These measures (currently approved and sitting in the committee for armed services) project legislation for spring 2005, with the draft to become operational as early as June 15.

There already exists a Selective Service System (SSS). All young Americans are obliged to "register for the draft". It has been a mere formality since conscription was abolished three decades ago, after Vietnam, together with the loathed (and much burned) draft card. SSS will be reactivated imminently. A $28m implementation fund has been added to the SSS budget. The Pentagon is discreetly recruiting for 10,350 draft board officers and 11,070 appeals board members nationwide.

Draft-dodging will be harder than in the 1960s. In December 2001, Canada and the US signed a "smart border declaration", which, among other things, will prevent conscientious objectors (and cowards) from finding sanctuary across the northern border. There will be no deferment on higher-education grounds. Mexico does not appeal.

All this has been pushed ahead with an amazing lack of publicity. One can guess why. American newspapers are in a state of meltdown, distracted by war-reporting scandals at USA Today and the New York Times. There is an awareness in the press at large that the "embedding" system was just that - getting into bed with the military and reporting their pillow talk as "news from the frontline". The fourth estate has failed the American public and continues not to do its job.

The American public just wants the war to go away. One thing that would get their attention (but not their votes) would be their children being sent off to die in foreign lands. Best not disturb the electorate until after November, seems to be the thinking. There are, after all, more important things than wars: getting your man into the White House, for example. Kerry has clearly calculated that, as president, he too may have to bring in the draft. So his lips are also sealed.


I will be looking for a reaction from the Kerry campaign in the next short while. This is a shot over the bow! I would still vote for Kerry over Bush, but I would encourage him to enstate incentives to the volunteer forces rather than a draft.

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