[ISN] 'Special skills draft' on drawing board - Computer experts, foreign language specialists lead list of military's needs

From: InfoSec News (isn@private)
Date: Sun Mar 14 2004 - 23:02:58 PST

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    http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2004/03/13/MNG905K1BC1.DTL
    
    Eric Rosenberg, 
    Hearst Newspapers
    March 13, 2004 
    
    Washington -- The government is taking the first steps toward a 
    targeted military draft of Americans with special skills in computers 
    and foreign languages. 
    
    The Selective Service System 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. 
    
    Richard Flahavan, a spokesman for the Selective Service System, said 
    planning for a possible draft of linguists and computer experts had 
    begun last fall after Pentagon personnel officials said the military 
    needed more people with skills in those areas. 
    
    "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," Flahavan said. "But 
    they thought that if we have any kind of a draft, it will probably be 
    a special skills draft." 
    
    Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has said he would 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 
    likely far off. 
    
    A targeted registration and draft is "is strictly in the planning 
    stage," said Flahavan, 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. 
    
    "We want to gear up and make sure we are capable of providing (those 
    types of draftees) since that's the more likely need," the spokesman 
    said, adding that it could take about two years to "to have all the 
    kinks worked out. " 
    
    The agency already has in place 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 had received no request from the Pentagon to do so. 
    
    The issue of a renewed draft has gained attention because of concerns 
    that U.S. military forces are over-extended. Since the Sept. 11, 2001, 
    terrorist strikes, U.S. forces have fought two wars, established a 
    major military presence in Afghanistan and Iraq and are now taking on 
    peacekeeping duties in Haiti. But Congress, which would have to 
    authorize a draft, has so far shown no interest in renewing the draft. 
    
    Legislation to reinstitute the draft, introduced by Rep. Charles 
    Rangel, D-N.Y., has minimal support with only 13 House lawmakers 
    signing on as co- sponsors. A corresponding bill in the Senate 
    introduced by Sen. Fritz Hollings, D-S.C., has no co-sponsors. 
    
    The military draft ended in 1973 as the American commitment in Vietnam 
    waned, beginning the era of the all-volunteer force. Mandatory 
    registration for the draft was suspended in 1975 but resumed in 1980 
    by President Jimmy Carter after the Soviets invaded Afghanistan. About 
    13.5 million men, ages 18 to 25, are registered with the Selective 
    Service. 
    
    But 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 underway 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 were against any form of conscription but acknowledged 
    the groundwork already underway at the Selective Service System. 
    
    "We understand that Selective Service has been reviewing existing 
    organizational mission statements to confirm their relevance for the 
    future," the official said. "Some form of 'special skills' 
    registration, not draft, has been a part of its review." 
    
    
    
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