The military draft and a credibility gap:Read More......
Talk of a draft won't be silenced by promises from an administration that can't shoot straight.
House Republicans forced a vote on the military draft Tuesday so they could slam the idea down. President George W. Bush says he's not considering reinstating the draft, and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld says it won't be necessary.
Yet, fear of the draft continues to be the talk of college campuses and Internet blogs. It's as if America's draft-age youth don't believe the nation's leaders. Why would that be?
Let's see, the Bush administration made war on Iraq to keep weapons of mass destruction out of the hands of terrorists, but the weapons did not exist. Evidence of them, Americans learn, was never as strong as they were led to believe.
President Bush said major combat was over in Iraq in May 2003, but many more troops have died in fighting since he declared "Mission Accomplished" than before.
The president insists the U.S. occupation of Iraq is leading inevitably to freedom and democracy even as widespread insurgency thwarts reconstruction and threatens to make a mockery of any election.
And now Bush assures skeptical young adults that, even after our November election, Uncle Sam won't need them badly enough to draft them.
That's what Americans hear from this president. What they see are National Guard members and reservists going to Iraq - more than once - to fill gaps. And they hear from others, including military officers, that the force on the ground is not big enough to pacify Iraq.
And if a crisis arises in Iran or North Korea, the other points on Bush's "axis of evil"?
"A Pentagon-appointed panel," The New York Times reported Wednesday, "recently concluded that the military would lack the forces to handle its current combat and stabilization operation if new crises emerged."
Republicans won't quell fears of a new draft with political stagecraft.
Young people can see that current U.S. forces aren't large enough in this world that the Bush Doctrine has wrought.
They're not assured by Bush's "war president" demeanor. Why would they be?
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