No Slave Armies
by
Murray Polner
by Murray Polner
DIGG THIS
Philip
Gold's The
Coming Draft: The Crisis in Our Military and Why Selective Service
is Wrong for America (Ballantine Books).
"To many
politicians," explained Rep. Ron Paul, the Republican Texan
libertarian congressional loner, "the American government is
America," thus explaining why every war or national "emergency"
creates a national fervor for a draft. "Conscription is wrongly
associated with patriotism," said Paul after Rep. Charles Rangel
tried recently to reintroduce a draft, "when really it represents
collectivism and involuntary servitude." For whatever reasons,
including opposition to the Iraq death trap, most Americans have
for now turned against a draft and its illegitimate child, compulsory
national service for all eighteen year olds (girls and gays too?)
which Gold correctly described in a 2004 article in Washington Law
& Politics as a "kind of allegedly desirable work done
via the creation of a monstrous new teenager-herding bureaucracy."
When Jimmy
Carter, intimidated by neoconservatives for being soft on Communism,
foolishly reintroduced draft registration to "send a signal"
to the Russians after their invasion of Afghanistan it had no effect
on Moscow. Within ten years the Soviet Union would collapse of its
own incompetence and corruption, none of which had anything to do
with draft registration (which because of bureaucratic lethargy
and governmental stupidity, still continues wasting taxpayer money).
To those in out of Washington still promoting a draft in the hope
of deterring other "axis of evil" nations, the suggestion,
Gold believes, is highly debatable.
No draft is
fair. Nor will many want to serve in Iraq, Iran, North Korea or
anywhere else without knowing why. No dove, Gold a onetime Marine
officer (and "disaffected conservative") who earned a
Ph.D. in history from Georgetown and writes about national security
issues, recognizes the serious problems whenever America has resorted
to conscription.
Four million
Americans turn eighteen every year. Should the current lottery system
ever be utilized, how could a draft of say, 50,000 annually, be
justified when all the rest are free to go about their civilian
lives? No congressional son was drafted during Vietnam and virtually
none of their kids – as well as in the executive branch – are in
the active military today. The same favoritism and deference to
influence and wealth will certainly prevail in any future draft.
Anyone with political contacts and family connections will always
be able to avoid active military duty, or if not, receive plum jobs.
What a draft does is simply encourage Washington’s homebound hawks.
For too many
conservatives another draft means recapturing the mythical ethos
of WWII and the pre-sixties. In that imaginary Eden, there was no
racial or religious discrimination, women knew their place, support
for tyrants abroad was justified in the name of fighting Communism
and young men called to the colors went willingly and patriotically
(I went when drafted, but neither willingly nor patriotically, nor
did any draftee with whom I served). People, Gold acutely comments,
need a "good enough reason" to go to serve in the military.
In his 2004
article he argued against a draft "save in extremis,"
though that phrase is too vague. The way to avoid conscription is
to avoid unnecessary wars and think twice about sending our men
and women into battle in the name of "freedom and democracy"
or another "war to end all wars." Interventionists falsely
call this "isolationism" but is it not a willingness to
adopt a sane foreign policy that encourages peaceful, live and let
live relations, while courting and finding common ground culturally,
economically and diplomatically with potential rivals? It may not
always work but it can’t be worse than America’s historic addiction
to war and intervention. Philip Gold is right. Another draft is
a mindless idea in a very troubled time.
December
12, 2006
Murray
Polner [send
him mail] co-authored
Disarmed
and Dangerous, a biography of Daniel and Philip Berrigan
and wrote No
Victory Parades: The Return of the Vietnam Veteran. This
article originally appeared on the History
News Network.
Copyright
© 2006 History News Network
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Polner Archives
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