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U.S. Draft Boards Preparing For Action

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unsellor trainee, I am acutely aware that we are training for an obsoete process, using 30 year old source material. I am sure that FCNL watches this legislation and is prepared to mobilize its full resources to obtain provisions for COs, in the event that a draft bill is sent to the floors of both houses for immediate passage -- but that is no guarantee of success, especially given the PNAC/NeoCon track record of exploiting acts of terrorism to guarantee the instant, undebated passage of grossly unpopular legislation... legislation prepared in advance of the unexpected "crisis".

What I wonder is this: How would a real CO -- a religious pacifist -- respond if given the choice of conscription, or punitive jail time in a privatized work camp? What are the real options, and how far are Friends, jointly and severally, willing to go?

Peace,

Steve

Oiling up the draft machine?

The Pentagon is quietly moving to fill draft board vacancies nationwide. While officials say there's no cause to worry, some experts aren't so sure.

By Dave Lindorff

Nov. 3, 2003 |

The community draft boards that became notorious for sending reluctant young men off to Vietnam have languished sinced the early 1970s, their membership ebbing and their purpose all but lost when the draft was ended. But a few weeks ago, on an obscure federal Web site devoted to the war on terrorism, the Bush administration quietly began a public campaign to bring the draft boards back to life. Especially for those who were of age to fight in the Vietnam, it is an ominous flashback of a message.

Even floating the idea of a draft in the months before an election would be politically explosive, and the Pentagon last week was adamant that the push to staff up the draft boards is not a portent of things to come. Increasingly, however, military experts and even some influential members of Congress are suggesting that if Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's prediction of a "long, hard slog" in Iraq and Afghanistan proves accurate, the U.S. may have no choice but to consider a draft to fully staff the nation's military in a time of global instability.

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