Thursday, June 30, 2016

Feminists weigh in on draft registration for women

A good article about what women are thinking regarding extending draft registration to women:

Feminists weigh in on draft registration for women

by Claire Schaeffer-Duffy

National Catholic Reporter, June 28, 2016

Recent legislative efforts to extend draft registration to young women
have raised an old conundrum for some feminists. Does pursuit of gender
equality include support for universal conscription?

While not all feminists are anti-militarists, opposition to war and
militarism has been a strong current within the women's movement.
Prominent suffragists like Quaker Alice Paul, and Barbara Deming, a
feminist activist and thinker of the 1960s and '70s, were ardent
pacifists. Moreover, feminist critique has often regarded the military as
a hierarchical, male-dominated institution promoting destructive forms of
power.

In late April, the House Armed Services Committee voted for an amendment
to the national defense bill that would extend draft registration --
already a requirement for men -- to women ages 18-26. The amendment was
later dropped, but in mid-June, the Senate approved a similar provision in
its version of the national defense bill.

Among the amendment's staunchest defenders was Armed Services Committee
member Rep. Jackie Speier (D-Calif.).

"If we want equality in this country, if we want women to be treated
precisely like men are treated and that they should not be discriminated
against, then we should support a universal conscription," Speier told the
political website The Hill in April.

Not all feminists agree with Speier's path to equality. Days after the
House Armed Services Committee approved the amendment, 24-year-old Julie
Mastrine, an activist and media professional, authored an online petition
calling on Congress not to force women to register and instead dump the
draft entirely.

Mastrine, a self-described feminist libertarian, argues that draft
registration violates individual choice.

"I can't imagine a more tragic loss of liberty than forcing a citizen,
whether male or female, to fight in a war with which they may disagree.
Equality is a moot point if personal choice and bodily autonomy must first
be eliminated to achieve it," Mastrine said in a statement.

In an online editorial for Playboy, Lucy Steigerwald, a contributing
editor to Antiwar.com, acknowledged that excluding women from draft
registration was "unfair" and "sexist."

"But the solution to the decrepit notion that the young of the country are
communal property is not to remove the sexism, it's to remove the draft,"
she wrote.

Like Mastrine, Steigerwald supports equal access to the military for
women, but opposes conscription. She does not believe, as some have
argued, that the return of the draft would make the U.S. more cautious
about engaging in conflicts.

"You don't stop the runaway truck of U.S. foreign policy by throwing a man
in front of it, and you definitely don't stop it by throwing a man and a
woman, just to make things equal," Steigerwald wrote.

The linking of women's equality to universal conscription dates back to
the early 1980s. Draft registration had ended in 1975 with the conclusion
of the Vietnam War. In 1980, a nervous President Jimmy Carter, alarmed
over the Soviet Union's invasion of Afghanistan, reinstated registration
to demonstrate U.S. war readiness. Carter actually wanted universal draft
registration, but Congress limited the mandate to men.

The male-only system was quickly challenged as sex discrimination. In
1981, a group of men brought a case before the Supreme Court that argued
being singled out for compulsory registration violated their right to
equal protection. A number of women's groups, including the National
Organization for Women (NOW), filed briefs contending that exclusion from
the draft violated the constitutional rights of women.

"Compulsory universal military service is central to the concept of
citizenship in a democracy," the NOW brief asserted. It predicted
"devastating long-term psychological and political repercussions" would
result if women were excluded from "the compulsory involvement in the
community's survival that is perceived as entitling people to lead it and
to derive from it the full rights and privileges of citizenship."

A similar brief filed by 12 other women's organizations, including the
League of Women Voters, argued that exempting women from draft
registration echoed "the stereotypic notions about women's proper place in
society that in the past promoted 'protective' labor laws and the
exclusion of women from juries."

NOW had previously opposed the draft, and its apparent about-face
infuriated its members at the grassroots level, according to Cynthia
Enloe, a research professor of political science and women's studies at
Clark University in Worcester, Mass.

Enloe, who has written extensively on women and the military, said she was
just starting her research at the time, but as she recalls, "The local
chapters were really angry. They were full of women activists who
disagreed, who saw the draft as something to oppose."

So why the switch? Enloe thinks it had more to do with NOW's then-recent
defeat in getting the Equal Rights Amendment passed than it did zeal for
military service. The amendment, which pacifist Alice Paul originally
penned in 1923, simply states, "Equality under the law shall not be denied
or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex." After

Congress passed it in 1972, NOW led the unsuccessful fight for its
ratification at the state level during the 1970s and early 1980s.

Eleanor Smeal, at the time president of NOW, "had just gone through a
terrible defeat," Enloe noted. "When the next thing comes up, you tend to
see it through the lens of what you were defeated by. The people in the
Washington office were terribly affected by the anti-ERA battle."

Speaking in defense of the NOW brief back in 1981, Smeal told The New York
Times that wherever she lobbied for the Equal Rights Amendment, male
legislators frequently said to her, "When you women fight in a war, then
we'll talk about equal rights."

That "argument of entitlement," Smeal said, helped persuade her that
exclusion from the draft hurt the interests of women. Ever since ancient
Egypt, "the secondary class has not been given the right to serve in the
military," she told the newspaper.

Lory Manning, a retired U.S. Navy captain, echoes that thought today,
noting, "Except for taxes, women have had to fight for the right to the
assumption of the duties of citizenship, including jury duty."

A senior researcher at Service Women's Action Network (SWAN), Manning said
she remembers well the anti-war feminism of the Vietnam War era, and
agrees with its critique of the military.

"It is hierarchical," she said. "It is also very powerful. People think
that an organization with that kind of power should not be left to men.
Having women on the ground as peacekeepers has shown to improve the fate
of women on the other side."

Like many feminists, Enloe thinks it is risky to frame any military issue
around just equality. "A lot of feminists were not sure how to articulate
their support for gays in the military," she said. "Those against the ban
found themselves having to promote gay men and lesbians as the perfect
soldier."

It's a dilemma Enloe said her European counterparts do not face.

"While there are many societies which are more militarized than the U.S.,
militarism has sunk its roots down so deep in U.S. popular culture, it's
made a conundrum of how you carve out a space of equality without
embracing military ideals of citizenship," she said.

"The acuteness of this political, cultural dilemma is much sharper in the
U.S. than in Europe," she said. "European feminists have been surprised at
the prevalence of the military's footprint in our civilian settings. Most
soccer games in Europe don't start with fighter jet flyovers."

In 1981, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld a male-only system for draft
registration, arguing that since women were "excluded from combat service"
they were not "similarly situated" as men for the draft or draft
registration. In this instance, the court said, Congress had the authority
to consider "military need" over "equity."

With the removal of combat restrictions for women last December, that
argument no longer applies. Maria Santelli, at the Washington, D.C.-based
Center on Conscience and War, said it is quite likely the courts could
soon strike down the current male-only system of draft registration on
grounds of discrimination. "Before Congress lets that happen, they might
vote for universal conscription," she said.

Santelli thinks improvement in equity and justice within the military is a
good thing, but these improvements are overridden by the "other justice
issue, which is our reliance on war as a means for conflict resolution,"
she said.

She pointed out that men who oppose draft registration for reasons of
conscience face numerous penalties. Under what is commonly known as "the
Solomon Amendment," these penalties include denial of federal student
loans, federal job training, and employment with federal executive
agencies, and denial of citizenship to immigrants. According to the Center
on Conscience and War, there are Solomon-like penalties in 44 states, with
some denying state employment, state student loans, a driver's license, or
photo ID to non-registrants.

"These laws penalize men for the rest of their lives," Santelli said. "Do
we want to put women in that same position?"

How soon women who oppose the draft will face the registration dilemma
remains to be seen. Meanwhile, the ERA has yet to be ratified.

[Claire Schaeffer-Duffy, a freelance writer, lives and works at the Sts.
Francis and Therese Catholic Worker of Worcester, Mass.]


Monday, June 6, 2016

Muhammad Ali and today's Conscientious Objectors to war

Muhammad Ali Photos
It's been good to see the tributes to Muhammad Ali this week including his stand of conscience during the 1960's, when he refused to fight in the Vietnam War.  He took a powerful and principled position as a Conscientious Objector, taking his case all the way to the Supreme Court and winning.  At the time, many were critical of him for that.  Now, he is more admired than criticized for staying true to his beliefs.

The Vietnam War is not the only US war that has, especially in hindsight, proven extremely ill-advised, wasteful, costly, inhumane and very difficult to end.  And Muhammad Ali was one among many men and women who have decided they would not fight in such wars.

It's important to know that, even without a draft, there have been Conscientious Objectors to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.  Soldiers who enlist but later have what is termed a "crystallization of belief" that leads them to decide they can no longer participate in war for reasons of religious belief or personal conscience have the legal right to apply for Conscientious Objector status and seek a CO discharge.  I have come to know a number of veterans who sought CO status after experiencing militarism and war, and our SOY colleague, Hart, is one of them.  

If you are in the military and are having a crisis of conscience, please know that there is a remedy.  Contact the good folks at the Center on Conscience and War, who can listen and discuss options with you.   They are not part of the military.  They are knowledgeable about military regulations and law.  Calls are confidential.  1-800-379-2679.  You have the right to live true to your own beliefs, just as Muhammad Ali proved.