Abcarian: Why should women be exempt from the draft? – Boston Herald

The question of whether women should serve in front-line combat roles was settled years ago, when the Obama administration officially rescinded a long-standing ban on such duty.

So why do we still require only men to register with the Selective Service System when they turn 18? Why has the struggle for gender equality stopped at the door of the draft board?

Or why, on Monday, did the Supreme Court turn down the chance to bring the countrys military traditions into the 21st century? It did so by opting not to hear a case brought by the National Coalition for Men, which argued the male-only registration rule violates the 5th Amendments protection against discrimination based on gender.

Male-only military conscription is not just sexist, its unconstitutional.

It would have been so simple for the court to overturn its 40-year-old precedent that women should be exempt from registration.

Instead, the court punted.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor, joined by Justices Stephen Breyer and Brett M. Kavanaugh, acknowledged in a statement that thousands of women have served with distinction in a wide range of combat roles, from operating military aircraft and naval vessels to participating in boots-on-the-ground infantry missions.

However, she wrote, the court has traditionally deferred to lawmakers when it comes to matters of national defense and military affairs, and the issue is currently pending before Congress.

In 2016, Congress created the National Commission on Military, National and Public Service to study, among other things, whether Selective Service registration should be required of both men and women.

In 2020, the commission released its final report, and to no ones surprise, urged Congress to eliminate male-only registration and make registration with the Selective Service mandatory by all citizens and residents regardless of sex.

Male-only registration, said the commission, sends a message to women not only that they are not vital to the defense of the country but also that they are not expected to participate in defending it.

The report was released mid-pandemic, so it probably didnt get as much attention as it should have.

But Rhode Island Sen. Jack Reed, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said recently he intends to take up the question in next years National Defense Authorization Act.

At this moment, a draft is theoretical. The United States has not compelled citizens to serve in the armed forces for nearly 50 years.

During the Trump years, the presidents posturing against North Korea and Iraq led some to wonder about the possibility of yet another military conflict.

In February 2020, after a high-ranking Iranian military official, Qassem Suleimani, was killed by a U.S. airstrike and Iran threatened to retaliate, the hashtag #WorldWarIII trended on social media along with rumors about a draft. The Selective Services website briefly crashed from all the traffic.

Perhaps the more interesting question is whether there should be military registration at all.

In 2019, a bipartisan bill was introduced in Congress that would abolish the Selective Service System entirely, and repeal all state and federal sanctions for failing to register, which include denial of federal student aid and job training as well as federal jobs. Also, at least on paper, violators face fines of up to $250,000 and/or five years in jail, but no one has been indicted for failing to register since 1986 and that case was dismissed before trial.

No young person, regardless of gender, should be subject to a military draft or be forced to register for a draft in the United States, said one of the House bills sponsors, Democratic U.S. Rep. Peter A. DeFazio of Oregon. We should be abolishing military draft registration altogether, not expanding it.

Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, a sponsor of the Senates version of the bill, makes a good point: Ive long stated, he said, that if a war is worth fighting, Congress will vote to declare it and people will volunteer.

Robin Abcarian is a syndicated columnist.

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Abcarian: Why should women be exempt from the draft? - Boston Herald

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