The Political Costs of Filling the Ranks
By Michael S. Foley History News Service
In this season of quagmire war and political campaigning,
President Bush has a manpower problem. The Pentagon has
announced that troop levels in Iraq will remain at 135,000
until the end of 2005. Thus, with the American military
stretched to unprecedented limits, one of the most pressing
questions in the presidential campaign will be the riddle of
who will fill out the ranks of those stationed in Iraq and
fighting the ongoing war on terror.
Once again, we feel the lingering shadow of the Vietnam
War. Over the last few weeks, against the backdrop of the
Iraq war's heaviest fighting and as images of flag-draped
coffins and tortured prisoners remind us of Vietnam, we have
also heard the first sustained discussion of the price being
paid by reservists and National Guard troops in Iraq.
Observing that 40 percent of the American force in Iraq
is made up of middle-class and working-class "weekend
warriors," Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.) has raised the prospect
of bringing back the draft. Calling the war on terror a
"generational challenge," Hagel called for a long-term
strategy in which the burden of fighting the war would be
distributed across all segments of American society.
Presidents Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon understood
this dilemma. In 1965, when Americans had been living with a
"peacetime" draft for nearly 20 years, Johnson mobilized
manpower for the escalating Vietnam War by dramatically
increasing monthly draft calls. Unlike Bush, he chose not to
call on huge numbers of reservists and Guard troops for fear
of the political fallout. Americans accustomed to the draft
as a seemingly permanent part of Cold War American life were
more likely to protest mobilizing middle-aged men with jobs
and families than younger, single draftees.
But the Vietnam era draft produced tremendous resistance
because it allowed deferments and exemptions to the
privileged while channeling the poor and minorities into
service in Vietnam. In short, the draft did not redistribute
the burden of service any better than today's reliance on
reservists and Guard troops. As a result, thousands of men
openly defied draft laws and welcomed prosecution. And tens
of thousands evaded the draft by leaving the country, faking
illness or using connections to get appointments in . . .
the reserves or National Guard.
Consequently, when Richard Nixon took office in 1969, he
recognized the political costs both of the draft and of
mobilizing reserve units. He first moved toward a more
equitable draft lottery and then eliminated conscription
altogether in favor of the current all-volunteer force.
The difficulty today, however, is that in the multi-front
war on terror, the all-volunteer force is stretched so thin
that the Bush administration is now extending the tours of
Guard and reserve units in Iraq -- sometimes notifying them
days before they are to come home that they'll have to stay
another three or six months. Morale, by all accounts, is
slipping. According to one Illinois National Guard soldier
in Iraq, the uncertainty of when troops will rotate our of
Iraq "is killing us . . . It's like checking on a turkey in
the oven 24 hours a day."
Yet Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld insists that the
administration is not even considering reviving the draft.
No doubt he understands the political costs of such a step.
Continued reliance on unprecedented numbers of reservists
and Guard troops carries political costs, too. The Vietnam
War showed that resistance within the military is sure to
develop, particularly if the war's objectives are not
altogether clear to those fighting it.
By 1968, civilian peace activists increasingly allied
themselves with dissenting GIs and returning veterans,
sometimes by granting sanctuary to AWOL servicemen in
churches. Later, GIs and veterans became the most common and
reputable face of the antiwar movement.
What should concern the Bush administration is that,
today, a movement among military families and GIs against
the Iraq war is growing. As tours get extended, as the
strain grows on reservists' families and employers, this is
sure to become a political problem for both presidential
candidates. All over the Internet -- at the web sites for
Bring Them Home Now, Military Families Speak Out, and the
Vietnam Veterans Against the War -- there are dozens of
stories from disillusioned servicemen and women and their
families. And in recent weeks such stories have often
appeared in the mainstream press.
The timing of this growing manpower crisis could not be
worse for George W. Bush and the presumptive Democratic
nominee, John Kerry. As each tries to look tough on national
security, both must be aware that there's no appealing
manpower option: either keep using alienated reservists and
Guard troops, or institute conscription on a population of
draft-age men who, unlike their 1960s counterparts, have not
been conditioned for the possibility of military service.
It's a losing proposition. Whether or not Bush and Kerry
face the issue in the campaign, whoever wins will have to
make an unpopular choice after the election.
Michael S. Foley is an assistant professor of history at
the City University of New York's College of Staten Island
and author of "Confronting the War Machine: Draft Resistance
During the Vietnam War" (2003).
[Michael S. Foley, College of Staten Island, City
University of New York 2800 Victory Blvd., Staten Island, NY
10314. Telephone: (718)982-2865; fax: (718) 982-2864;
e-mail: foley@postbox.csi.cuny.edu]
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This article was posted on May 14, 2004.
Pictured at top (left to right): Julius Caesar,
Stonehenge, James Monroe, Japanese general Hideki Tojo, The
Beatles.
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