A Fresh Look at the Draft
By George Friedman
New York Democrat Charles Rangel, the new chairman of the House Armed Services
Committee, has called for the reinstatement of the draft. This is not new for
him; he has argued for it for several years. Nor does Rangel -- or anyone else
-- expect a proposal for conscription to pass. However, whether this is
political posturing or a sincere attempt to start a conversation about America's
military, Rangel is making an important point that should be considered. This is
doubly true at a time when future strategies are being considered in Iraq and
Afghanistan, and the available force is being strained to its limits.
The United States has practiced conscription in all major wars since the Civil
War. During the Cold War, the United States practiced conscription continually,
using it to fight both the Korean and Vietnam wars, but also to maintain the
peacetime army. Conscription ended in 1973 as the U.S. role in Vietnam declined
and as political opposition to the draft surged. From that point on, the United
States shifted to a volunteer force.
Rangel's core criticism of the volunteer force is social. He argues that the
burden of manning the military and fighting the war has fallen, both during
Vietnam War conscription and in the volunteer army, for different reasons, on
the lower and middle-lower classes. Apart from other arguments -- such as the
view that if the rich were being drafted, the Vietnam and Iraq wars would have
ended sooner -- Rangel's essential point is that the way the United States has
manned the military since World War II is inherently unjust. It puts the lower
classes at risk in fighting wars, leaving the upper classes free to pursue their
lives and careers.
The problem with this argument is not the moral point, which is that the burden
of national defense should be borne by all classes, but rather the argument that
a draft would be more equitable. Rangel's view of the military and the draft was
shaped by Vietnam -- and during Vietnam, there was conscription. But it was an
inherently inequitable conscription, in the sense that during most of the war,
deferments were given for students. That deferment, earlier in the war, extended
to graduate school. As a result, by definition, the less-educated were more
vulnerable to conscription than the more-educated. There were a host of
deferments, including medical deferments, and the sophisticated could game the
system easily. A draft, by itself, does not in any way guarantee equity.
During the final years of the Vietnam-era draft, the deferment system was
replaced by a lottery. This was intended to (and, to some extent, did) reduce
the inequities of the system, although sophisticated college students with low
numbers continued to find ways to avoid conscription using the complex rules of
the Selective Service system -- ways that the less-educated still couldn't use.
The lottery system was an improvement, but in the end, it still meant that some
would go into harm's way while others would stay home and carry on their lives.
Basing the draft on a lottery might have mitigated social injustice, but basing
life-and-death matters such as going to war on the luck of the draw still
strikes us as inappropriate.
The switch from deferments to the lottery points out one of the key problems of
conscription. The United States does not need, and cannot afford, a military
that would consist of all of the men (and now, we assume, women) aged 19-21.
That would create a force far too large and far too inexperienced. The lottery
was designed to deal with a reality in which the United States needed
conscription, but could not cope with universal conscription. Some method had to
be found to determine who would and would not serve -- and any such method would
be either unfair or arbitrary.
Americans remember World War II as, in many ways, the morally perfect war: the
right enemy, the right spirit and the right military. But World War II was
unique in that the United States had to field an enormous military. While some
had to man truly essential industries, and some were medically disqualified,
World War II was a case in which universal conscription was absolutely needed
because the size of the force had to be equal to the size of the total pool of
available and qualified manpower, minus essential workers. Unless it suited the
needs of the military, no one was deferred. Married men with children, brilliant
graduate students, the children of the rich and famous -- all went. There were
still inequities in the kinds of assignments people got and the pull that was
sometimes used. But what made the World War II conscription system work well was
that everyone was needed and everyone was called.
Not everyone is needed in today's military. You might make the case for
universal service -- people helping teachers and cleaning playgrounds. But there
is a fundamental difference between these jobs and, at least in principle, the
military. In the military, you might be called on to risk your life and die. For
the most part, that isn't expected from teacher's aides. Thus, even if there
were universal service, you would still be left with the dilemma of who gets to
teach arts and crafts and who goes on patrol in Baghdad. Universal conscription
does not solve the problem inherent in military conscription.
And there is an even more fundamental issue. During World War II, conscription,
for just about everyone, meant service until the end of the war. During the Cold
War, there was no clear end in sight. Since not everyone was conscripted, having
conscripts serve until the end of the war could mean a lifetime of service. The
decision was made that draftees would serve for two years and remain part of the
reserve for a period of time thereafter.
Training during World War II took weeks for most combat specialties, with
further training undertaken with soldiers' units or through combat. In World War
II, the United States had a mass-produced army with plenty of time to mature
after training. During Vietnam, conscripts went through basic training and
advanced training, leaving a year for deployment in Vietnam and some months left
over after the tour of duty. Jobs that required more complex training, from
Special Forces to pilots to computer programmers, were handled by volunteers who
served at least three years and, in many cases, longer. The draftee was used to
provide the mass. The complexities of the war were still handled by a volunteer
force.
The Battle of the Bulge took place 62 years ago. The Tet Offensive was nearly 39
years ago. The 90-day-wonder officers served well in World War II, and the
draftee riflemen were valiant in Vietnam, but military requirements have changed
dramatically. Now the military depends on highly trained specialists and groups
of specialists, whose specialties -- from rifleman to warehouse worker -- have
become more and more complex and sophisticated. On the whole, the contemporary
Army, which historically has absorbed most draftees, needs more than two years
in order to train draftees in their specialties, integrate them with their units
and deploy them to combat.
Today, a two-year draft would be impractical because, on the whole, it would
result in spending huge amounts of money on training, with very little time in
actual service to show for it. Conscription could, of course, be extended to a
three- or even four-year term, but with only selective service -- meaning that
only a fraction of those eligible would be called -- that extension would only
intensify the unfairness. Some would spend three or four years in the military,
while others would be moving ahead with schools and careers. In effect, it would
be a huge tax on the draftees for years of earnings lost.
A new U.S. draft might force the children of the wealthy into the military, but
only at the price of creating other inequities and a highly inefficient Army.
The training cycle and retention rate of a two-year draft would swamp the Army.
In Iraq, the Army needs Special Forces, Civil Affairs specialists, linguists,
intelligence analysts, unmanned aerial vehicle operators and so on. You can
draft for that, we suppose, but it is hard to imagine building a force that way.
A volunteer force is a much more efficient way to field an Army. There is more
time for training, there is a higher probability of retention and there are far
fewer morale problems. Rangel is wrong in comparing the social base of this Army
with that of Vietnam. But the basic point he is trying to make is true: The
makeup of the U.S. Army is skewed toward the middle and lower-middle class. But
then, so are many professions. Few children of the wealthy get jobs in the
Social Security Administration or become professional boxers. The fact that the
Army does not reflect the full social spectrum of the country doesn't mean very
much. Hardly anything reflects that well.
Still, Rangel is making an important point, even if his argument for the draft
does not work. War is a special activity of society. It is one of the few in
which the citizen is expected -- at least in principle -- to fight and, if
necessary, die for his country. It is more than a career. It is an existential
commitment, a willingness to place oneself at risk for one's country. The fact
that children of the upper classes, on the whole, do not make that existential
commitment represents a tremendous weakness in American society. When those who
benefit most from a society feel no obligation to defend it, there is a deep and
significant malaise in that society.
However, we have been speaking consistently here about the children of the rich,
and not of the rich themselves. Combat used to be for the young. It required
stamina and strength. That is still needed. However, there are two points to be
made. First, many -- perhaps most -- jobs in today's military that do not
require the stamina of youth, as proven by all the contractors doing essentially
military work in Iraq. Second, 18- to 22-year-olds are far from the most
physically robust age group. Given modern diet and health regimens, there are
people who are substantially older who have the stamina and strength for combat
duty. If you can play tennis as well as you claim to for as long as you say, you
can patrol a village in the Sunni Triangle.
We do not expect to be taken seriously on this proposal, but we will make it
anyway: There is no inherent reason why enlistment -- or conscription -- should
be targeted toward those in late adolescence. And there is no reason why the
rich themselves, rather than the children of the rich, should not go to war. Or,
for that matter, why older people with established skills should not be drawn
into the military. That happened in World War II, and it could happen now. The
military's stove-pipe approach to military careers, and the fact that it allows
almost no lateral movement into service for 40- to 60-year-olds, is irrational.
Even if we exclude combat arms, other specialties could be well-served by such a
method -- which also would reduce the need for viciously expensive contractors.
Traditionally, the draft has fallen on those who were barely adults, who had not
yet had a chance to live, who were the least equipped to fight a complex war.
Other age groups were safe. Rangel is talking about drafting the children of the
rich. It would be much more interesting, if the United States were to introduce
the draft, to impose it in a different way, on entirely different age groups.
Let the young get on with starting their lives. Let those who have really
benefited from society, who have already lived, ante up.
Modern war does not require the service of 19-year-olds. In the field, you need
the strong, agile and smart, but we know several graying types who still could
hack that. And in the offices that proliferate in the military, experienced
businesspeople would do even better at modernizing the system. If they were
drafted, and went into harm's way, they would know exactly what they were
fighting for and why -- something we hardly think most 19-year-olds really know
yet.
Obviously, no one is going to adopt this crackpot proposal, even though we are
quite serious about it. But we ask that you take seriously two points. Rangel is
correct in saying that the upper classes in American society are not pulling
their weight. But if the parents haven't served, we cannot reasonably expect the
children to do so. If Americans are serious about dealing with the crisis of
lack of service among the wealthiest, then they should look to the wealthiest
first, rather than their children.
Return to The Vietnam War.
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