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Nader tells youths to brace for draft By Steve Miller
Presidential candidate Ralph Nader this weekend warned his constituents
that a military draft is pending, and asked younger voters to prepare.
The independent candidate noted that the federal government is filling
seats on local draft boards as preparation for a reinstatement of the draft,
which was eliminated in 1973.
"The Pentagon is quietly recruiting new members to fill local draft
boards, as the machinery for drafting a new generation of young Americans
is being quietly put into place," Mr. Nader said in a press release sent
out to constituents and posted on his Web site during the weekend.
"Young Americans need to know that a train is coming, and it could
run over their generation in the same way that the Vietnam War devastated
the lives of those who came of age in the sixties."
Kevin Zeese, a spokesman for the Nader campaign, said draft boards
are being rebuilt "right now" and that the demands on the U.S. military
are growing.
"I don't think that Ralph feels that the draft is imminent, but we
are looking at the shortage of troops in Iraq and the calls from [Senator
John] Kerry for 40,000 more troops. What Ralph is saying is that if students
don't start to organize right now, it will be too late," Mr. Zeese said.
Rumors of a draft reinstatement emerged in the fall when the Selective
Service announced that it was recruiting members for the nation's 2,000
local draft and appeals boards. A Selective Service spokesman said yesterday
that the announcement was made to help fill spots on the boards, as many
members' 20-year terms ended.
"It was misread then," said the spokesman, Pat Schuback. "Their
terms are expiring right now, and that's what is going on."
"We're prepared to do our jobs here if needed," he said. "And it
is important for us to be ready. The administration has been very clear
about wanting to keep this volunteer, and we understand that. We let the
politicians do the politics."
He noted that Selective Service, a branch of the Justice Department,
has seen personnel numbers drop recently. The agency went from 166 full-time
staffers in fiscal 2003 to 156 this year.
Another third-party candidate, Libertarian Aaron Russo, has joined
Mr. Nader in warning Americans that a draft is a real possibility, despite
denials from all quarters of the Bush administration.
Mr. Russo, one of three front-runners vying for the Libertarian
nomination, said at a party forum in Virginia last month that "the draft
is a bipartisan effort between Republicans and Democrats that will start
after the 2004 presidential election, for obvious reasons," a prediction
he repeats on his campaign Web site.
It would take legislative action by Congress to reinstate the draft,
which was ended in 1973, about two months before the last U.S. troops were
withdrawn from Vietnam. Registration with the Selective Service was halted
from 1975 to 1980, but was reinstated under President Carter after Russia
invaded Afghanistan.
A bill was drafted by South Carolina Sen. Ernest F. Hollings in
January 2003, putting in place the parameters for a draft. Its House companion
legislation was introduced simultaneously by New York Rep. Charles B. Rangel.
Both lawmakers are Democrats.
The bills have gone nowhere, though, and nothing is expected to
come from them.
Young men today are still required to register with the Selective
Service within 30 days of their 18th birthdays. There are 15 million men
ages 18 to 25 registered with the agency.
Copyright © 2004 News World Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.
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