No, You Can’t Have My Daughter
by
Laurence
M. Vance
by Laurence M. Vance
DIGG THIS
The military
is getting desperate. Morale is at an all time low, enlistments
are way down, casualties are way up, more U.S. soldiers have been
killed in Iraq than people were killed in the September 11th
attacks, and there is no end to the war in sight.
My
daughter, a high school senior, was just sent in the mail a slick
advertisement from the Army National Guard "introducing up
to 20,000 new reasons to join the National Guard."
Every one of
them is a dollar bill.
In addition
to the pictures of U.S. currency on the front of the envelope, there
are pictures of six smiling Guard members on the back. Inside is
a reply card, some information on what the Guard has to offer, and
a letter from a colonel who is the Guard’s chief recruiter.
On the reply
card is a redemption code to get a free iTunes music download and
the promise of a free Army National Guard t-shirt and an American
Soldier DVD. Inside the envelope there is an information card about
the National Guard’s College First Enlistment Option:
- Have the
time and money to focus on college
- Up to two
years of non-deployment following completion of Initial Active
Duty Training
- Up to a
$20,000 Enlistment Bonus
- 100% Tuition
Assistance
- $20,000
Student Loan Repayment for Pre-existing Loans
- Additional
Educational Assistance of up to $350 per month
Sounds like
an impressive package, but I afraid that I will have to say no,
you can’t have my daughter.
Call me old-fashioned,
call me traditional, call me chauvinistic, call me over-protective,
call me misogynic, but the National Guard is no place for a young
woman. I will not waste my time saying that men and women are different
and that women have no business being in any branch of the military,
but I will say this. I previously wrote about the fifty-four
female American soldiers who have been killed in Iraq. Nine
of them were in the National Guard. That number is now up to sixty,
including a member of the National Guard, Sgt. Denise A. Lannaman,
46, of Bayside, N.Y., who died on October 1 from a non-combat related
incident. Of all the places for a young American woman to die, a
battlefield in Iraq certainly shouldn’t be one of them. In my previous
article I said: "What kind of military do we have that sends
women to die overseas? What kind of society do we have that would
accept a woman with children flying a military helicopter in Iraq
or anywhere else?" I stand behind those two statements. Women
now comprise about 16 percent of the enlisted ranks and 19 percent
of the officer corps, and those numbers are getting higher.
Another reason
the National Guard can’t have my daughter is that the Guard is being
used as cannon fodder. The opening paragraphs of the letter from
the Guard’s chief recruiter say about the Guard:
For nearly
370 years, America has relied on its National Guard to defend
our shores and serve our citizens in times of need.
In the wake
of Hurricane Katrina, over 41,000 National Guard members
from 42 states across America rushed to storm-ravaged areas to
save lives, maintain law and order and support recovery efforts.
But
is this what the National Guard is being used for? An increasing
number of Guard members are being sent to the quagmire in Iraq.
After the Army recently
announced that it would keep the current level of troops in
Iraq – about 120,000 – through 2010, the Army chief of staff, Gen.
Peter J. Schoomaker, said that "the Army will have to rely
on the National Guard and Reserves to maintain the current level
of deployments." According to Defense Department, the number
of members of the Guard and Reserve that have been placed on active
duty in support of the partial mobilization for the Army National
Guard and Army Reserve is 80,234. The total number of National Guard
and Reserve personnel from all branches of the military is now up
to 100,694. A cumulative roster of all National Guard and Reserve
personnel who are currently mobilized can
be seen here. Military analyst William
Lind has stated about this misuse of the National Guard:
One of the
likely effects of the disastrous war in Iraq will be the destruction
of an old American institution, the National Guard. Desperate
for troops as the situation in Iraq deteriorates, Secretary of
Defense Rumsfeld is using the National Guard in a mission for
which it was never intended: carrying on a "war of choice"
halfway around the world. Most Guardsmen enlisted expecting to
help their neighbors in natural disasters, or perhaps maintain
order locally in the event of rioting. They never signed up for
Vietnam II.
Over one third
of the U.S. troops in Iraq are National Guard members. And more
than half of the U.S. casualties there were members of either the
Guard or Reserve.
Still another
reason the National Guard can’t have my daughter is because of the
number of sexual assaults involving members of the military. An
Associated
Press investigation in August revealed that "more than
100 young women who expressed interest in joining the military in
the past year were preyed upon sexually by their recruiters."
The AP found that "more than 80 military recruiters were disciplined
last year for sexual misconduct with potential enlistees. The cases
occurred across all branches of the military and in all regions
of the country." According to the DOD’s Sexual
Assault Report for 2005: "The Services received 2,374 reports
of alleged cases of sexual assault involving members of the Armed
Forces." Restricted reports were filed in 327 cases, which
means that although victims are allowed "to receive services
from sexual assault program staff, healthcare, providers, and chaplains,"
no investigation is conducted and no notification is given to command
authorities or military criminal investigative organizations. Out
of the remaining 2,047 cases that were subject to investigation,
661 were still pending at the end of the year. The number of sexual
assaults involving military personnel is evidently a significant
problem. The Sexual Assault Report informs us that
the military
services established sexual assault program offices at all major
installations and collaborated with DoD to train more than 1,000
Sexual Assault Response Coordinators and Victim Advocates to conduct
those programs. They have also trained more than 1,000,000 service
members and have integrated sexual assault awareness instruction
into initial entry training and professional military education.
All of the
time and money wasted on this training was only necessary because
of the feminization
of the military.
It
is certainly true that any young woman over the age of eighteen
has a perfect legal right to enlist in the National Guard. And it
is certainly true that those who join do so of their own free will.
It is up to us fathers to teach them about the true nature of this
war and the U.S. military. And if not fathers, then mothers, brothers,
sisters, clergymen, or friends. Someone must look out for these
young women. The military recruiters certainly won’t.
October
18, 2006
Laurence
M. Vance [send him mail]
is a freelance writer and an adjunct instructor in accounting at
Pensacola Junior College in Pensacola, FL. He is also the director
of the Francis Wayland
Institute. He is the author of Christianity
and War and Other Essays Against the Warfare State. His latest
book is King
James, His Bible, and Its Translators. Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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