Re: The 2012 Presidential Election Part I - The guns of August
My nephew, in fact 2 of my nephews are in the military, told me once that the funding is gone if they don't spend it, even if they don't need it. This kind of wasteful spending adds up. That aside, how long can we be the world policemen? Our defense spending is killing us and not many other countries are willing to spend to help police the world. Why should they? They have the US to do this and we seem to be willing to spend the money even if it hurts us economically when the cold war is gone and we don't have a full blown war going. Why not stand down a bit? Do we need all those carrier task forces and new hardware like the next generation hardware? We can keep the structure in place and even put back the draft if we need to if there is manpower need and a new world crises, like another world war. We can still train pilots, tank drivers, etc. but maybe have a system like Israel. Everyone is available and no exemptions unless you have medical problems or some other problem that restricts you from serving.
Every unit has a TDY ("temporary duty") account. And the pressure to spend rather than save the money is predicated on the idea that in the next fiscal year the amount allocated will be cut if you didnt spend what we gave you last year. Although it's silly, the amouint of money involved in overall defense spending is barely noticable.
Absolutely the last thing we need is a draft. I really, truly wish anti-military types would make up their d*mn minds on this one. We had a draft. And the lefty anti-war types went absolutely apesh*t about it (possibly because they might wind up with their noses in the dirt at Ft. Leonard Wood or facing Charlie in a ride paddy). General Hershey, who headed Selective Service, was as hated a figure as there was (at least on college campuses) there were several mocking posters of Hershey that decorated dorm rooms from coast to coast.
Why a future president of the United States vigorously dodged the draft, by telling the ROTC commander at the University of Arkansas of his intention to go to law school there and join ROTC. Based on that assurance, Col. Holmes saw to it this future president got his 2-S deferrment. Subsequently, when this future president's lottery number was high enough to insure he would never be drafted, his plans changed. He didn't join ROTC and didn't attend the Arkansas law school But he did write a pompous Kepleresque letter to Colonel Holmes thanking him for "saving me from the draft."
We have zero need for a draft. And the military has zero desire for it to be reinstated. And comparisons with Israel fall somewhere between ignorant and moronic. Israel is a regional military power, while the United States is a global power. Their mission and ours are overwhelmingly different. Besides, why not emulate Andorra? Pete Seeger used to sing a song about Andorra spending $4.90 "on armaments for their defense, did you ever hear of such confidence, Andorra hip hoorah?"
All of these "experts" on the military are apparantly unaware that draftees were generally used for skut details, KP, picking up butts outside of Base Ops, etc. Because, as draftees, they had very low retainability and were going to leave after their time was up. So why waste the money and time training people who weren't going to stick around? The pay scales even reflected it. In terms of percentage, the largest pay raise anyone would ever get was when he went "over two." Regardless of his rank, a guy's pay would nearly double when his Time In Service exceeded two years, the term of service for draftees. Nowdays, most of these functions are performed by civilians, because we need the GI's to be doing something else.
Besides, reinstating the draft, or some sort of Israeli ready reserve model would be enormously expensive. You don't figure we'd just give these people M-16s and point them in the direction of the bad guys, do you? And modern combat is a shade different than it was in say, Vietnam. The weapons are light years more sophisticated. And it takes training to learn how to employ them. And training takes money. And non coms. And bases. And chow halls. Most of which we no longer have. Now, if you want to talk mandatory national service, of which one option would be the military, I could go for that. Sam Nunn offered such a plan. For young people facing mandatory service (including women, of course) there could be incentives for choosing the military instead of working in retirement homes or national parks or on infrastructure projects. This, too, would be enormously expensive, because these people would have to be trained, paid, clothed, fed, housed, transported and have their health needs provided for. But it's worth discusing, I think.
Worries about another "world war" also fall on that continuum between ignorant and moronic. There won't be another world war, at least not like the first two. Where millions of men are drawn into the military, trained, shipped off somewhere and eventually engage an enemy. That thinking is about 60 years out of date. We have developed weapons of unbelievable destructive power and accuracy. We have ballistic missile submarines on duty 24/7 and they carry Trident missiles with advanced, highly accurate, MIRVed warheads. Just one of those boats can shower an enemy with nearly 200 warheads. Do you suppose that capability might have something to do with North Korea being mostly talk? If they wanted to commit national suicide, nuking someone would be the quickest way to assure it.
While it is certainly true that many nations are protected by the military umbrella we provide, that protection also benefits us as well. Stable markets, economies, trading partners, access to the sea, etc. None of which would be true if we dismantled our military and all those nasty carrier battle groups and waited for the opportunity to become the "arsenal of democracy" once again. Honestly, some folks should be forbidden from watching "The World at War."
We are currently developing a capability called Prompt Global Strike, which would give a future POTUS the ability to strike any target, anywhere on the planet, with a non-nuclear device within an hour. Faster, please. We have recently announced that the MOP, a 30,000 pound penetrator of enormous destructive potential, has gone operational. Nobody is quite certain whether this device can obliterate Iran's underground nuclear facilities. But they can't be quite certain that it won't. Since they'll be carried by B2s and are "smart," if the first one doesn't do the job, we can lob a second one right behind it. I wouldn't want to be in the breakroom at Natanz when one of those bad boys hit.
Thank your nephews for all of us, won't you?