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Ask a Vet
Author: TriSec    Date: 12/21/2010 11:33:03

Good Morning.

Today is our 2,834th day in Iraq and our 3,362nd day in Afghanistan.

We'll start this morning as we always do; with the latest casualty figures from our ongoing wars, courtesy of antiwar.com:

American Deaths
Since war began (3/19/03): 4429
Since "Mission Accomplished" (5/1/03) 4290
Since Handover (6/29/04): 3570
Since Obama Inauguration (1/20/09): 201
Since Operation New Dawn: 11

Other Coalition Troops - Iraq: 318
US Military Deaths - Afghanistan: 1,438
Other Military Deaths - Afghanistan: 831
Contractor Employee Deaths - Iraq: 1,487
Journalists - Iraq : 348
Academics Killed - Iraq: 448

We find this morning's cost of war passing through:

$1, 124, 479, 100, 000 .00


So "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" is history. While we here in the real world applaud the Senate for finally doing the right thing, as I noted in yesterday's blog, it could still be a purely symbolic move unless the Uniform Code of Military Justice is reformed as well.



Article 125, also known as the "Punitive Articles" addresses many of the practices the military considers abnormal and criminalizes most of them. The way I read it, any military court interpreting the letter of the law could still act on discharging or otherwise punishing gay soldiers if they wanted to. I'd say there's probably still more work to be done.

Speaking of more work, while DADT captured all the headlines, the last session of Congress was productive on the veteran's front in other areas as well. Several of the issues addressed are things we've been following all year.

From our friends at IAVA:


Here’s the breakdown:



Complete: Upgrades to the New GI Bill are headed to the President's desk.

In 2008, historic New GI Bill legislation was signed into law. Since then, IAVA has been fighting for critical upgrades where the benefit was lacking. These upgrades, which were passed last week, will impact 400,000 Iraq and Afghanistan veterans within the first year. These include:

85,000 full-time National Guardsmen who will become eligible for the New GI Bill
58,000 students at private and graduate schools will have increased
tuition benefits
25,000 distance learners will receive a monthly living allowance
21,000 disabled vets using Vocational Rehab will receive additional allowances
19,000 Active Duty service members will receive an annual book stipend
6,000 vocational students will receive tuition/fees and a
monthly living allowance
6,000 On The Job training/Apprenticeship participants will get access to an
expanded program
6,000 schools will receive increased fees for processing vets’ paperwork
180,000 new recruits will not have to pay $1,200 to buy into the old GI Bill



Complete: Congress repeals “Don't Ask, Don't Tell” (DADT).



IAVA was the only major veteran service organization (VSO) that came out in support of DADT repeal. IAVA fought to end this policy, and working with bipartisan allies in Congress, we made it happen. Now, every single member of our military can serve with openness and honesty and be treated with the respect and dignity they deserve, ensuring better military effectiveness.



In July 2010, the House voted to repeal DADT as part of the original 2011 NDAA. However, the Senate repeatedly failed to bring the bill to a vote. After last Friday's failed attempt in the Senate, Senators Collins (R-ME) and Lieberman (I-CT) introduced a stand-alone bill repealing DADT. The Senate voted on the bill over the weekend, which passed with strong bipartisan support, 65-31. On a parallel track in the House, Rep. Hoyer (D, MD-5) and Rep. Patrick Murphy (D, PA-8) introduced an identical bill in the House that was passed last Thursday by a vote of 250-175.

The President is scheduled to sign the historic legislation on Wednesday, December 22nd.




Complete: Extended USERRA protections to veterans employed by Congress.



Twelve years ago, the Veterans Employment Opportunities Act extended veterans preference to hiring for government jobs – including USERRA protection. However, it exempted all legislative branch jobs from this law. Last week, Congress passed a joint resolution to extend USERRA protections to jobs within the Capitol Police Force, the Architect of the Capitol, the Congressional Budget Office, the Office of Compliance and some support positions in the House and Senate. Certain jobs in Congressional offices will remain exempt.



In Progress: Congress resurrects the 2011 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA).



The 2011 NDAA, which initially included the repeal of DADT, failed to get the votes necessary to get through the Senate. The prospect of being the first Congress in 48 years to fail to pass a Defense Authorization Bill, alongside pressure from IAVA, drove the House and Senate Armed Services Committee's to negotiate a bill stripped of all controversial provisions. The New 2011 NDAA passed the House on Sunday and will head to the Senate this week, where it is not expected to meet any resistance.


Included in the NDAA are provisions that:

Increase the number of Mental Health Care Providers in the military by allowing mental health counselors to be covered under TRICARE
Require the military to pre-screen deploying service members in order to have a comparison for post deployment Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) screenings
Improve prevention and response for Military Sexual Trauma (MST).




In Progress: Congress investigates fraud at Arlington

.

Congress overwhelmingly passed a resolution that will require the Army to overhaul procedures surrounding gravesite registration at Arlington National Cemetery. After several graves were found to be mislabeled, Congress is now requiring Arlington to audit the records of all 300,000 graves. Also, there will be a review of several issued and failed contracts to digitize Arlington's records system and an assessment of the feasibility of transferring the administration of Arlington from the Army to the VA, which manages all 132 other national cemeteries.


So as both 2010 and the 111th Congress wind to a close, we can only hope that 2011 and the 112th continue forward.


 

47 comments (Latest Comment: 12/21/2010 22:37:25 by livingonli)
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