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Home Front: WoT
Selective Service Starts To Get Selective?...
2004-03-15
..From the Seattle PI, slightly EFL?d - but the details do sound plausible.
The government is taking the first steps toward a targeted military draft of Americans with special skills in computers and foreign languages. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld is adamant that he will not ask Congress to authorize a draft, and officials at the Selective Service System, the independent federal agency that would organize any conscription, stress that the possibility of a so-called "special skills draft" is remote.

Nonetheless, the agency has begun the process of creating the procedures and policies to conduct such a targeted draft in case military officials ask Congress to authorize it and the lawmakers agree to such a request. "Talking to the manpower folks at the Department of Defense and others, what came up was that nobody foresees a need for a large conventional draft such as we had in Vietnam," said Richard Flahavan, a spokesman for the Selective Service System. "But they thought that if we have any kind of a draft, it will probably be a special skills draft." Flahavan said Selective Service planning for a possible draft of linguists and computer experts began last fall after Pentagon personnel officials said the military needed more people with skills in those areas.

A targeted registration and draft "is strictly in the planning stage," he said, adding that "the whole thing is driven by what appears to be the more pressing and relevant need today" -- the deficit in language and computer experts. The spokesman said it could take about two years to "to have all the kinks worked out." The agency already has a special system to register and draft health care personnel ages 20 to 44 in more than 60 specialties if necessary in a crisis. According to Flahavan, the agency will expand this system to be able to rapidly register and draft computer specialists and linguists, should the need ever arise. But he stressed that the agency has received no request from the Pentagon to do so.

Congress, which would have to authorize a draft, has shown no interest in taking such a step. Kathleen Long, a spokeswoman for Sen. Carl Levin, the senior Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee, said a draft has little support among lawmakers. A spokesman for Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Calif., chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, agreed. "There are massive operations under way to retrain soldiers" for more pressing duties and to recruit specialties in demand such as language experts, said Harald Stavenas, Hunter?s spokesman. About 13.5 million men, ages 18 to 25, are currently registered with the Selective Service.

The military has had particular difficulty attracting and retaining language experts, especially people knowledgeable about Arabic and various Afghan dialects. To address this need, the Army has a new pilot program under way to recruit Arabic speakers into the service's Ready Reserves. The service has signed up about 150 people into the training program. A Pentagon official familiar with personnel issues stressed that the armed forces are against any form of conscription but acknowledged that the groundwork is already under way at the Selective Service System. On Capitol Hill, Rep. Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., has introduced a bill that would reinstate the draft. The legislation has minimal support with only 13 House lawmakers signing on as co-sponsors. A corresponding bill in the Senate introduced by Sen. Fritz Hollings, the outgoing South Carolina Democrat, has no co-sponsors.
..A little backstory that may help put this into perspective: I was a USAF recruiter during Desert Storm, when there were daily denials from DOD that a draft was planned, intended, or anticipated. Imagine my surprise one morning when an Army Major walks in and we start going over the Selective Service checklist for my office to be used as an emergency induction center. Based on what he told me then, I'm going to stick my neck out a little bit and say that if the preparatory work and paperwork is being done, somebody fairly high in DOD gave the word, and did it with Rummy's approval, tacit or otherwise.
Posted by:Mike Kozlowski

#14  Ooooh! Ooooh! *waves frantically* PICK ME! PICK ME!
Posted by: Ptah   2004-3-15 7:07:59 PM  

#13  Good post, Mike.
My own guess is that this is a contingency for the shiite really hitting the fan, nuclear terrorism or post-nuclear recovery in the ME, that sort of thing.
Posted by: Atomic Conspiracy   2004-3-15 5:38:35 PM  

#12  I know I could pass as pub hound in the UK. I'd hang around listening for clues.
Posted by: Lucky   2004-3-15 4:41:20 PM  

#11  Pretty please with sugar on top AND a direct commission? Works for me, guys!
Posted by: Sgt. Mom   2004-3-15 4:11:19 PM  

#10  I'm with you Mike. But it better be a direct commission, I already know how to march and salute.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge (VRWC CA Chapter)   2004-3-15 3:07:34 PM  

#9  Sgt Mom-
I can't say as I blame you, believe me. I'll HAPPILY go if called back, but it better be pretty please with sugar on top. And after some more reflection, now that I have my bachelor's degree, maybe I should hold out for a commission next time?*S*

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski   2004-3-15 2:04:34 PM  

#8  Didn't we see this article yesterday?

Anyway, call me a market idealist, but why not just pay more for these skills?
Posted by: someone   2004-3-15 2:00:45 PM  

#7  Well, if they are after any plumpish, fifty-ish PA/Broadcaster types, they still have three years to come after me as a Retired Reserve resource. I'm afraid it would take Mr. Rumsfeld on my doorstep with my orders in his hand to get me to believe it, though.
Posted by: Sgt. Mom   2004-3-15 1:30:24 PM  

#6  So, any call for computer types with Japanese language who are in their *ahem* "extremely late 30's" ?

Posted by: Carl in N.H   2004-3-15 12:55:10 PM  

#5  I went to college while I was on active duty and received my BS in Information Technologies. Prior to gaining my degree and retirement I BEGGED the Air Force to let me cross-train into computers/communications and they refused every time. This is a curse when you are in a ‘chronic critically manned specialty’ and not E1- E4. Since I retired four years ago I have go many letters asking if I would like to come back (enlisted). It would certainly be a kick in the head if they forced me to come back in! Oh the pay cut!
Posted by: Cyber Sarge (VRWC CA Chapter)   2004-3-15 12:54:19 PM  

#4  OP-
Same here sir - ex-USAF Ammo. I can still build an IED with the best of 'em.*S*

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski   2004-3-15 12:39:14 PM  

#3  JAF you've outed yourself as a quick-learner with pior experience. I'll be in touch. I'm keeping an eye on M4D since I'm also in the market for disinformation specialists.
Posted by: Unca Sam   2004-3-15 12:35:21 PM  

#2  SHIT,
I was an interrogator for the US Army, and now Im working as a computer security specialist. Thank God my language was russian and not goat-spewing arabic.

Oh well, if the call comes.... Off I go. No complaints. I support Bush and the WOT and Im willing to put my money where my mouth is.
Posted by: JackAssFestival   2004-3-15 11:56:33 AM  

#1  This doesn't surprise me. We're in a war for the long haul - perhaps 20 years or more. If the right people can't be found in the service, I could see the US drafting those it needed. I've also heard rumors (no substantiation) that the Pentagon has also developed plans for selective call-up of portions of the Retired Reserve, if necessary. I could even see it happening if we had another massive terrorist attack, or one using WMD. I'd go, even with all my medical problems. I'm sure most other retirees would, too.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2004-3-15 11:44:34 AM  

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