Feeling a Draft
May / June 2005
By Chuck Terhark,
Utne magazine
Tomorrow's conscientious objectors are getting ready now
Last October, the U.S. House of Representatives considered re-instating a military draft for the first time since the Vietnam War. The bill was soundly defeated, but many activists believe it signaled a disturbing trend. The country's all-volunteer forces are overextended, and the ambiguous long-term goals of the Bush administration's seemingly endless war on terror will require more troops.
Mainstream journalists and progressive pundits continue to speculate that, as the demand for troops in Iraq continues into perpetuity, recruitment numbers promise to keep plummeting. A Washington Monthly editorial (March 2005) seconds that analysis and goes on to advocate for military conscription, arguing that the United States "can be the world's superpower, or it can maintain the current all-volunteer military, but it probably can't do both." Meanwhile, activists in the anti-draft movement are circulating petitions and urging concerned citizens to call elected representatives to register their objections. They're also letting people know that, draft or no draft, the time has come to prepare for the worst.
Helen James, writing in Mothering (Jan./Feb. 2005), urges concerned parents to start compiling a conscientious objector (CO) file for their sons and (who knows?) daughters -- just as she did 13 years ago for her then 9-year-old boy, Adam. "Should
ever want to prove the depth of his convictions," she writes, "he'll already have a scrapbook full of documents tracing his beliefs over his entire life."
In 1971, more than a year before there was a cease-fire in Vietnam, Congress passed sweeping changes to draft law. Most notably, a clause that granted full-time students exemption from service was eliminated. If college students were called up today, they would be allowed to finish the current semester before shipping out, but only conscientious objectors would be able to skirt the selection process.
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