Michael Dorosh
Army.ca Veteran
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logau, Canada had the draft beginning in 1940, which was not "late in the war" at all.
logau said:We may have had legislation but we didn't seem to get any ground troops out of the deal until later in the war
Two Naval VCs came from Nelson - Roland Bourke who ran a PT boat at Ostend in 1918 and Hampton Grey who sank a Jap Cruiser and gave his life in the attempt.
Young Republicans support Iraq war, but not all are willing to join the fight
By Adam Smeltz
Knight Ridder Newspapers
NEW YORK - Young Republicans gathered here for their party's national convention are united in applauding the war in Iraq, supporting the U.S. troops there and calling the U.S. mission a noble cause.
But there's no such unanimity when they're asked a more personal question: Would you be willing to put on the uniform and go to fight in Iraq?
In more than a dozen interviews, Republicans in their teens and 20s offered a range of answers. Some have friends in the military in Iraq and are considering enlisting; others said they can better support the war by working politically in the United States; and still others said they think the military doesn't need them because the U.S. presence in Iraq is sufficient.
"Frankly, I want to be a politician. I'd like to survive to see that," said Vivian Lee, 17, a war supporter visiting the convention from Los Angeles,
Lee said she supports the war but would volunteer only if the United States faced a dire troop shortage or "if there's another Sept. 11."
"As long as there's a steady stream of volunteers, I don't see why I necessarily should volunteer," said Lee, who has a cousin deployed in the Middle East.
In an election season overwhelmed by memories of the Vietnam War, the U.S. military's newest war ranks supreme among the worries confronting much of Generation Y'ers. Iraq is their war.
"If there was a need presented, I would go," said Chris Cusmano, a 21-year-old member of the College Republicans organization from Rocky Point, N.Y. But he said he hasn't really considered volunteering.
At age 16, Chase Carpenter has.
"It's always in the back of my mind - to enlist," Carpenter, a self-described moderate Republican visiting Manhattan this week from Santa Monica, Calif., said Wednesday on the convention floor. He said he's torn over whether he'd join the military if he were 18.
Others said they could contribute on the home front.
"I physically probably couldn't do a whole lot" in Iraq, said Tiffanee Hokel, 18, of Webster City, Iowa, who called the war a moral imperative. She knows people posted in Iraq, but she didn't flinch when asked why she wouldn't go.
"I think I could do more here," Hokel said, adding that she's focusing on political action that supports the war and the troops.
"We don't have to be there physically to fight it," she said.
Similarly, 20-year-old Jeff Shafer, a University of Pennsylvania student, said vital work needs to be done in the United States. There are Republican policies to maintain and protect and an economy to sustain, Shafer said.
Then there's Paula Villescaz, a 15-year-old from Carmichael, Calif. who supports Bush and was all ears Wednesday afternoon at the GOP's Youth Convention in Madison Square Garden. She doesn't support the war, but she supports the troops and thinks the United States "needs to stay the course" now that it's immersed.
If Iraq is still a U.S. issue when she's 18, Villescaz added, she'll give serious thought to volunteering.
"I'm in college right now, but who knows?" said Matthew Vail, a 25-year-old from Huntsville, Ala., who works with Students for Bush. He said he might consider enlisting after he finishes his degree at the University of North Carolina, but not until then.
"The bug may get me after college," he said.
logau said:We are probably all looking at the same references and getting a different spin.
and did not implement a draft until late in the war
Michael Dorosh said:I certainly don't think a memorial is due, but it does take a certain bravery to oppose something as unpopular as the Vietnam War. You're assuming that all the "draft dodgers" were simply cowards. Probably true in many cases, but many of them also acted on deeply held convictions
logau said:Michael
if we look at this from a political level and the receivers being the Army - the draft act in Canada does not seem to have been a benefit to the Army.
As for the large numbers of drafted troops serving in Canada -- not in the danger zone were they? So how much benefit do you think they were to the operational commanders?
Thats my point.
logau said:Don't water down your arguments
Ah! Kiska in the Aleutians see http://warmuseum.ca/cwm/newspapers/operations/aleutian_e.html
The Aleutian campaign was no help (in my view) to the Pro-conscription argument since it did not help generating combat power of the Canadian Army in Sicily in July 1943. Garrison forces outside of the European Theatre did not add to combat power. In addition, it appears others looking back at this operation feel the same way - Think of it this way - the pipeline was open in July 1943 and where were the Kiska troops? At the other end of the world. And then they stayed there for 3 months. See http://www.multipointproductions.com/heroes/henri/henri2.htm
The government did need soldiers and certainly had lots but we have to ask. Where were they? Guard duty in Canada and chasing non-existent Japanese Forces. No one can argue with the past efforts except that until they went into Sicily it may have made no sense to send more troops overseas. A more likely reason is England was full of troops and more troops overseas until Sicily might have not added value. Experience is experience â “ but that attitude got the Dieppe troops lots of experience they may have been better off without.
As to the effectiveness of the 16,000 troops you mention - those who finally made it to the front were quite small
"In the end a total of 9,667 NRMA (National Resources Mobilization Act) men reached the front as conscripts...of that number 2,463 saw duty in operational units, 69 were killed, 232 wounded and 13 taken prisoner." Without them many battalions would have been short of men in the last phase of the war." See http://www.legionmagazine.com/features/canadianmilitaryhistory/03-09.asp
Now the Army needed troops in more places than the infantry - so I cannot say that they did not fill the gap but it seems fair to say that this was not a lot of troops for the front given the total they enrolled.
Mismanaged for the trouble it caused them â “ the Airforce had the manpower the Army could have used
You presume that was their motives. In many cases that presumption is false, hence your definition doesn't apply.sdimock said:If the Draft Dodgers said â Å“I morally object and will not fight.â Å“ and faced the consequences, then agree or not I would say â Å“they've got ballsâ ?.
History then could have judged them on their actions and decided if they merited some acknowledgement or recognition.
Running away to dodge the consequences of your actions, or to save your own skin certainly deserves no â Å“acknowledgementâ ? and should be recognized for what it is.
From Dictionary.com
Cowardice
\Cow"ard*ice\ (-[i^]s), n. [F. couardise, fr. couard. See Coward.] Want of courage to face danger; extreme timidity; pusillanimity; base fear of danger or hurt; lack of spirit.