Posted on Nov 19, 2018
Americans must share the consequences of our wars
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In 2014, I shared the story of an encounter I had on an airplane with a United States military veteran named Tim. He had overheard a fellow passenger suggest that the challenges facing some veterans after 9/11 were “fake news” and unlike during the Vietnam era. “America supports its veterans,” the woman said. Tim then shared his experience after serving in the Marine Corps in Afghanistan. He tried college, but it never stuck. He was battling with Veterans Affairs, and he was unable to find a job.
But then Tim said something that gave me goosebumps. “Worse than all that, now at home, I feel anonymous,” he told told us. Home among the very people who sent him to fight and kill our enemies, Tim feels invisible. For years, our elected leaders have debated strategies to end our wars after 9/11. However, only a brave few have acknowledged that until the costs and consequences of war are equitably shared by all Americans, our wars will drag on, military conflict will remain too painless a pursuit, and the experiment of an all volunteer military will fail us as a nation.
Three truths inform this proposition. First, our wars after 9/11 are not initially funded, at least in part, by taxpayers. Instead, the $5 trillion and growing cost has been largely paid on credit. Second, an exceedingly small number of Americans have directly shouldered the burden, and those who do serve are increasingly not representative of the citizenry. Finally, the assumption we have a ready pool of volunteers is becoming a myth. An estimated 70 percent of American youth are ineligible to volunteer, and the willingness of high school students to consider military service is at a record low. This could explain why the United States Army missed its recruiting goals this year for the first time since 2005.
Most agree that a military composed entirely of volunteers is superior to a conscripted force. However, many also acknowledge that this type of system is beginning to show cracks. Some of those cracks stem from fielding military members separate and apart from those who benefit from a safe and prosperous nation. The worst fears of those who architected the all volunteer military included a concern that because only “some” would shoulder the burdens of war, then war as an instrument of foreign policy would become too easy. They also feared that when those who fight come home, they would be cast as a government problem.
More than four decades and several wars later, I would describe these fears as prophetic. Since 1973, the United States has used military force on more than 220 occasions. Alternatively, in the 45 years prior when a draft was the law of the land, the United States leveraged military force as an instrument of foreign policy on just 24 occasions. Some of this contrast can rightfully be attributed to an complex global security situation, but it is also likely true that when you do not have to pay the bill, and when it is not your child being compelled to fight our battles, war is too easy.
Why do those who volunteer come home and cite lack of connection to civilian society? It is because after 17 years of war, we have discounted the foundational assumption sustaining the all volunteer force that those who benefit from the military service of others incur a moral obligation to those who serve the cause of defending our nation. Today, while a laudable segment of Americans remain committed to the concerns of veterans, the majority is not. Last year, less than 1 percent of charitable contributions in the United States went to veterans organizations. By comparison, Americans gave to animal welfare charities at five times that level. Most Americans are against reinstating the draft. Consequently, it is time to have a conversation focused on mechanisms to equitably share the burden of current and future wars with all members of our society.
I can offer a likely provocative start to that conversation. Congress should enact law requiring companies generating revenue from federal defense contracts to make annual philanthropic contributions to organizations that serve veterans and their families, equal to 1 percent of total operating profit generated from those contracts. Congress should enact law requiring colleges to make financial aid available to veterans, equal to 1 percent of the federal funding received annually by each institution. Those colleges must also admit students connected to the military, equal to or exceeding 1 percent of the total student population. Furthermore, Congress should enact law requiring all households to pay an annual military tax of $15. This would fund a national veterans trust designated to public and private programs serving the needs of military families.
After 17 years in Afghanistan, our elected leaders must demonstrate the courage to introduce policy requiring all Americans to shoulder the costs and consequences of war. In the absence of courage, war as a tool for diplomacy will remain far too easy a pursuit, our battles will drag on without end in sight, and veterans like Tim will remain anonymous.
Michael Haynie is a veteran of the United States Air Force, vice chancellor of Syracuse University, and executive director of the Institute for Veterans and Military Families. The views expressed in this column are his alone and not the views of RallyPoint.
*This article originally appeared on the Hill.
But then Tim said something that gave me goosebumps. “Worse than all that, now at home, I feel anonymous,” he told told us. Home among the very people who sent him to fight and kill our enemies, Tim feels invisible. For years, our elected leaders have debated strategies to end our wars after 9/11. However, only a brave few have acknowledged that until the costs and consequences of war are equitably shared by all Americans, our wars will drag on, military conflict will remain too painless a pursuit, and the experiment of an all volunteer military will fail us as a nation.
Three truths inform this proposition. First, our wars after 9/11 are not initially funded, at least in part, by taxpayers. Instead, the $5 trillion and growing cost has been largely paid on credit. Second, an exceedingly small number of Americans have directly shouldered the burden, and those who do serve are increasingly not representative of the citizenry. Finally, the assumption we have a ready pool of volunteers is becoming a myth. An estimated 70 percent of American youth are ineligible to volunteer, and the willingness of high school students to consider military service is at a record low. This could explain why the United States Army missed its recruiting goals this year for the first time since 2005.
Most agree that a military composed entirely of volunteers is superior to a conscripted force. However, many also acknowledge that this type of system is beginning to show cracks. Some of those cracks stem from fielding military members separate and apart from those who benefit from a safe and prosperous nation. The worst fears of those who architected the all volunteer military included a concern that because only “some” would shoulder the burdens of war, then war as an instrument of foreign policy would become too easy. They also feared that when those who fight come home, they would be cast as a government problem.
More than four decades and several wars later, I would describe these fears as prophetic. Since 1973, the United States has used military force on more than 220 occasions. Alternatively, in the 45 years prior when a draft was the law of the land, the United States leveraged military force as an instrument of foreign policy on just 24 occasions. Some of this contrast can rightfully be attributed to an complex global security situation, but it is also likely true that when you do not have to pay the bill, and when it is not your child being compelled to fight our battles, war is too easy.
Why do those who volunteer come home and cite lack of connection to civilian society? It is because after 17 years of war, we have discounted the foundational assumption sustaining the all volunteer force that those who benefit from the military service of others incur a moral obligation to those who serve the cause of defending our nation. Today, while a laudable segment of Americans remain committed to the concerns of veterans, the majority is not. Last year, less than 1 percent of charitable contributions in the United States went to veterans organizations. By comparison, Americans gave to animal welfare charities at five times that level. Most Americans are against reinstating the draft. Consequently, it is time to have a conversation focused on mechanisms to equitably share the burden of current and future wars with all members of our society.
I can offer a likely provocative start to that conversation. Congress should enact law requiring companies generating revenue from federal defense contracts to make annual philanthropic contributions to organizations that serve veterans and their families, equal to 1 percent of total operating profit generated from those contracts. Congress should enact law requiring colleges to make financial aid available to veterans, equal to 1 percent of the federal funding received annually by each institution. Those colleges must also admit students connected to the military, equal to or exceeding 1 percent of the total student population. Furthermore, Congress should enact law requiring all households to pay an annual military tax of $15. This would fund a national veterans trust designated to public and private programs serving the needs of military families.
After 17 years in Afghanistan, our elected leaders must demonstrate the courage to introduce policy requiring all Americans to shoulder the costs and consequences of war. In the absence of courage, war as a tool for diplomacy will remain far too easy a pursuit, our battles will drag on without end in sight, and veterans like Tim will remain anonymous.
Michael Haynie is a veteran of the United States Air Force, vice chancellor of Syracuse University, and executive director of the Institute for Veterans and Military Families. The views expressed in this column are his alone and not the views of RallyPoint.
*This article originally appeared on the Hill.
Edited 7 y ago
Posted 7 y ago
Responses: 94
Always believe that President Ford should not have abolished the draft and not overly sold on the notion that the soldiers recruited are better than the soldiers that were drafted. Draftees fought in every major war and brought the enemy to the end of hostilities table. Also they came from the same pool as the recruited military. As far as being dragged into long skirmishes for decades on end, it is a costly mistake in human life and money. How often have we heard we are about to defeat the enemy, but months later we are still fighting over the same village. (Would like to hear Sherman's and Patton's thoughts on the matter.)
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CPT Bobby Fields
LTC Ken Connolly President Ford did not "abolish" the draft, he ended it. The Selective Service Act is still a valid law, upheld by the Supreme Court over the years.
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LTC Ken Connolly
Parsing the term abolish vice end is a slight variable, but agree that your wording is more correct. However, in reality is there a difference between abolishing and ending it? Either way there are no longer draftees. Yes, one still has to register for the draft, but there is no national will to call up the draft nor will there ever be. So for all practical purposes it is in my mind abolished.
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I agree in general principle, but there are some modifications... In my view, it would be good if young people should do 1 or 2 years of either military duty or some other duty around the world, where it is needed to help educate the people on how to succeed programs... Funding it with a separate tax is a bad idea in my view, but it could be funded within existing tax law. Of course our Military would still need dedicated long term human resources who would make it a career somewhat like what is done today...and of course it may require more honing as change is required... I am sure others will have other ideas on this subject, so I look forward to reading those comments...
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"An estimated 70 percent of American youth are ineligible to volunteer, and the willingness of high school students to consider military service is at a record low."
IMHO, this reflects the changes the American education system has undergone in the recent years. As schools have been left to deal with issues of over crowding and underfunding, physical education and most art and music programs have been deemphasized in favor of maintaining artificial academic standards. "No student left behind" has morphed into "no student will be allowed to fail at any cost".
Additionally, the rise of "for profit" education, and the misplaced concept that every student should go to college/university to get a degree, has taken away from the importance of "alternative" paths to becoming a productive member of society. There was a time in the not-so-distance past that a high school guidance counselor could and would tell a student that the best path, after a poor or mediocre high school career, was a vocational school, military service, or low-entry-level positions in the job market. (before everyone gets bent out of shape about the suggestion that being a poor student should be mean the military is the best path, IMHO a military atmosphere coupled with military leadership that recognizes individual strengths is just the ticket to for people who can not perform in an academic environment, but may have the ability to perform highly at specific tasks. Usually indicated in the ASVAB.)
High school should go back to the days where it acted as a filter for our society instead of the sieve that it has become to advanced education....
IMHO, this reflects the changes the American education system has undergone in the recent years. As schools have been left to deal with issues of over crowding and underfunding, physical education and most art and music programs have been deemphasized in favor of maintaining artificial academic standards. "No student left behind" has morphed into "no student will be allowed to fail at any cost".
Additionally, the rise of "for profit" education, and the misplaced concept that every student should go to college/university to get a degree, has taken away from the importance of "alternative" paths to becoming a productive member of society. There was a time in the not-so-distance past that a high school guidance counselor could and would tell a student that the best path, after a poor or mediocre high school career, was a vocational school, military service, or low-entry-level positions in the job market. (before everyone gets bent out of shape about the suggestion that being a poor student should be mean the military is the best path, IMHO a military atmosphere coupled with military leadership that recognizes individual strengths is just the ticket to for people who can not perform in an academic environment, but may have the ability to perform highly at specific tasks. Usually indicated in the ASVAB.)
High school should go back to the days where it acted as a filter for our society instead of the sieve that it has become to advanced education....
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I am a Vietnam Veteran. I served in the US Army 02/65-10/68. Vietnam 10/67/-10/68. I used to work with a guy who was a Major in the Army Reserves. We were discussing all the different wars the US has been involved in. He and I agree that there is only one war, in the last 100 years, that we can say we fought for our country. That war is WWII. Korea no. Vietnam no. We cannot save the world. We are involved in something that I don't know how we will get out of it. Anytime you send you valuable military to a conflict; you better have a strategy to win and get out. We don't have that now.
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"I can offer a likely provocative start to that conversation. Congress should enact......"
I am not sure how three taxes that would be silently passed onto the 47% of American public that actually pays federal taxes would fix anything.
I am not sure how three taxes that would be silently passed onto the 47% of American public that actually pays federal taxes would fix anything.
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Suspended Profile
Wow, what a crazy read. Hits pretty hard especially after seeing the numbers of conflicts during the draft era and post draft era. Also the disconnect and ungratefulness. What a powerful article!
THIS IS A WORK OF ART. SHEET OF MUSIC. A COMPLETE MELODIE OF PASSIONATE FRUITY AND SELF SURVIVING.
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Every able bodied Citizen attaining the age of 18 years should have a two year Service Obligation to be fulfilled prior to entry into and institution of higher learning. Anyone found physically unfit for active duty would serve the two years in a Forrest Service work facility, working in upkeep of our National Forrest. The idea being a change of environment and conditions to learn new experiences and consepts totally divorced from their present Experience and shroundings!
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Excellent article, Major! I fully concur with the program ideas put forth. Those institutions and companies who benefit from federal funding and and contracts should definitely be shouldering some of the responsibility for Veterans' needs.
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