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Ask a Vet
Author: TriSec    Date: 01/04/2011 11:33:57

Good Morning.

Today is our 2,848th day in Iraq and our 3,364th 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): 4432
Since "Mission Accomplished" (5/1/03): 4293
Since Handover (6/29/04): 3573
Since Obama Inauguration (1/20/09): 204
Since Operation New Dawn: 14

Other Coalition Troops - Iraq: 318
US Military Deaths - Afghanistan: 1,446
Other Military Deaths - Afghanistan: 838
Contractor Employee Deaths - Iraq: 1,487
Journalists - Iraq : 348
Academics Killed - Iraq: 448


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

$ 1, 132, 713, 100, 000 .00





With a new Congress heading back to work, there will be new opportunities to work on veteran's issues.. Unfortunately, there is a decline in the number of veterans taking their seats in the legislature. While there are some new Iraq veterans heading in, they are all Republicans. Veterans always talk a good game; that their service brethren and fellow vets always come ahead of partisan politics. Time will tell if that is true.


WASHINGTON — When the new Congress is seated later this month, it will boast the largest number of Iraq War veterans ever, but will have a lower overall number of members who’ve served in the military.

Veterans groups and the new slate of lawmakers hope that the influx of younger veterans — eight House members and two Senators, all Republicans, have served in Iraq — will help bring a new perspective to the legislative session, helping keep the focus on Iraq and Afghanistan even as financial reform issues dominate the headlines.

“I think you’ll see the House Armed Services Committee become more of a war committee than it has been in the last few years,” said Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Calif., who served with the Marines in both the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.

“We need to be more focused on Iraq and Afghanistan. And we need to make the military a leaner, meaner fighting machine.”

Hunter and Colorado Republican Rep. Mike Coffman are the only two returning Iraq veterans in the House, but they’ll be joined by six freshman lawmakers with current war experience, including three who’ve been appointed to the House Armed Services Committee.

“If you’ve been in the military, you can take policy proposals and think about how that change is going to play out, not from an academic standpoint but from an experience standpoint,” said Rep. Tim Griffin, R-Ark., one of those three newcomers and a major in the Army Reserve.

“It helps to understand what troops go through, what families go through on deployment. As someone who is still talking to those troops, that’s a perspective that can help across the board.”

Fellow freshman committee member Florida Rep. Allen West, a retired Army lieutenant colonel, said he hopes to spearhead efforts to review the military’s rules of engagement in Afghanistan as soon as the new legislative session begins, calling some of the restrictions on battlefield troops unfair and unsafe.

“With some of the rules we’ve placed on them, we might as well start handing out traffic tickets at the Daytona 500,” he said. “I’ll push for oversight hearings on that right away, because we need to listen to the complaints of the troops on the ground.”

Griffin, a former U.S. attorney and White House aide, said he doesn’t have immediate plans for new legislation or specific topics on the committee, but instead hopes to study the process and see where his background can help guide the debate.

The percentage of veterans in the House of Representatives has dropped steadily since the 1970s, and only 87 of the chamber’s 435 lawmakers for the 112th Congress have served on active-duty or in the reserves.

West said those statistics make it even more important to “have people there who have been on the ground, and can bring that technical knowledge back to Congress.”


So once again, it falls to all of us to keep up the pressure on our congresscritters.

We've had two years of opportunity, but as it always seems to happen, veteran's issues slip further down the priority list as we go from crisis to crisis. Given the likelihood of partisan politics in the new Congress...we'll have to hope for the best as we go through the next two years.











 

27 comments (Latest Comment: 01/05/2011 02:38:41 by velveeta jones)
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