September 15, 2008 • Vol. 14, No. 1 Download Now! (pdf)

 

EDITORIAL
Thanks, Guys
by William Kristol

SCRAPBOOK
Sarah Palin's Foreign Policy Team

ARTICLES
McCain Finds the Right Wingman
by Stephen F. Hayes

A Party of Mavericks
by Fred Barnes

Axis of Honor
by Noemie Emery

Punishing Russia
by Gary Schmitt

Biden's One Accomplishment
by Eli Lehrer

Tax Cuts, Real and Imaginary
by Newt Gingrich & Peter Ferrara

FEATURES
Game Changer
by Jessica Gavora

Among the Paultards
by Matt Labash

Why They Hate Her
by Jeffrey Bell

BOOKS & ARTS
Who Gets In
by Peter Skerry

Alien Nation
by Shawn Macomber

Founders Afloat
by Joseph F. Callo

Poet of Reason
by Wyatt Prunty

Dearly Beloved
by Erin Montgomery

CASUAL
Down in the Boondocks
by Philip Terzian

CORRESPONDENCE
Campaign finance and more

PARODY
'US Weekly' Salutes Stalin


« Is This the Worst Case? | Main | Richelieu: Lucky McCain »

McCain Opposed to Improved GI Benefits?

So says ABC News:

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, seemed to give a thumbs down to bipartisan legislation that would greatly expand educational benefits for members of the military returning from Iraq and Afghanistan under the GI Bill.

McCain indicated he would offer some sort of alternative to the legislation to address concerns that expanding the GI Bill could lead more members of the military to get out of the service.

Fair enough. But the Army, the service that has struggled most with retention, is already on top of things

In an effort to encourage more mid-grade officers to remain in service, the Army is again offering a "menu of incentives" for active-component captains that includes options for a cash bonus, attendance at graduate school or the Defense Language Institute.

So while improved GI benefits may hurt retention, it's important to remember that they do wonders to boost recruitment. I pinged an Army buddy for his reaction to the whole benefits/retention issue, and his response was classic soldier: "If the Army wants to boost retention, they can start by unf**king themselves!"

Taking the above story into account, I'd say that the Army has done just that.

As for Senator McCain, there's nothing stopping Congress from having their cake and eating it too. They can do the right thing by knocking veterans' benefits up to a level commensurate with the 21st century, while also kicking the services a little extra cash for retention benefits. It's the least we can do after tasking our military members with 7 long years of fighting.

Of course neither story addresses the most critical issue in the quest to improve retention: proper force size. When we have enough troops to end the year-on, year-off deployment cycle, retention issues will slowly fade away.

Email the article McCain Opposed to Improved GI Benefits? to a friend:

Send this article to:


Your email address:


Message (optional):


 
Contributors
Editor (on leave):
Michael Goldfarb

Deputy Editors:
John McCormack
Samantha Sault

Contributors:
Dean Barnett
Jennifer Chou
Brian Faughnan
Ulf Gartzke
Reuben F. Johnson
Thomas Joscelyn
Stuart Koehl
John Noonan
Bill Roggio
Jaime Sneider
Search
Archives
Contact
wws@weeklystandard.com
Categories
Feeds: Atom | RSS
[What is this?]
Powered by
Movable Type 3.2