Draft lottery (1969)
On December 1, 1969 the Selective
Service System of the United States conducted two lotteries to determine the
order of call to military service in the Vietnam War for men born from January
1, 1944 to December 31, 1950. These lotteries occurred during a period of
conscription in the United States that lasted from 1947 to 1973. It was the
first time a lottery system had been used to select men for military service
since 1942.
Origins
The reason for the lottery of
1969 was to address perceived inequities in the draft system as it existed
previously, and to add more military personnel towards the Vietnam War. The Vietnam War had arisen from a series of
conflicts dating back to the early stages of French colonialism and Japanese
occupation of Vietnam in World War II. More recently in the conflict, in 1963,
South Vietnamese generals seized power in Saigon in a coup. President Lyndon B.
Johnson increased the number of U.S. personnel in South Vietnam due to the
political instability in the country. More active US involvement in the war
began in August 1964, when two U.S. warships were alleged to have been attacked
by North Vietnamese torpedo boats. Johnson condemned North Vietnam, and
Congress passed a motion which gave him more authority over military decisions.
By the end of 1965, President Johnson had sent 82,000 troops to Vietnam, and
his military advisors wanted another 175,000. Due to the heavy demand for
military personnel, the United States increased the number of men the draft
provided each month.
In the 1960s anti-war movements
started to occur in the U.S., mainly among students on college campuses and in
more leftist circles, especially those who embraced the "hippie"
lifestyle. College students were entitled to a deferment (2-S status) but were
subject to the draft if they dropped out, stopped making "normal
progress" in community college (i.e., started a fifth semester before
transferring to a four-year college) or graduated. In 1967, the number of U.S.
military personnel in Vietnam was around 500,000. The war was costing the U.S.
$25 billion a year, and many of the young men drafted were being sent to a war
they wanted no part of. Martin Luther King Jr. also started to support the
anti-war movement, believing the war to be immoral and expressing alarm at the
number of African-American soldiers that were being killed.
November 15, 1969 marked the
largest anti-war protest in the history of the United States. It featured many
anti-war political speakers and popular singers of the time. Many critics at
the time saw Richard Nixon as a liar; when he took office, he claimed that he
would begin to withdraw American troops from Vietnam. After ten months of being
in office, the president had yet to start withdrawals, and U.S. citizens felt
he had lied. Later, President Nixon claimed to have been watching sports as the
anti-war demonstration took place outside the White House. After much debate
within the Nixon administration and Congress, Congress decided that a gradual
transition to an all-volunteer force was affordable, feasible, and would
enhance the nation's security. On November 26, 1969, Congress abolished a
provision in the Military Selective Service Act of 1967 which prevented the
president from modifying the selection procedure ("... the President in establishing
the order of induction for registrants within the various age groups found
qualified for induction shall not effect any change in the method of
determining the relative order of induction for such registrants within such
age groups as has been heretofore established ..."), and President Richard
Nixon issued an executive order prescribing a process of random selection.
Method:
The 366 days of the year
(including February 29) were printed on slips of paper. These pieces of paper
were then each placed in opaque plastic capsules, which were then mixed in a
shoebox and then dumped into a deep glass jar. Capsules were drawn from the jar
one at a time and opened. The first number drawn was 258
(September 14), so all registrants with that birthday were assigned lottery
number 1. The second number drawn corresponded to April 24, and so forth. All
men of draft age (born January 1, 1944 to December 31, 1950) who shared a birth
date would be called to serve at once. The first 195 birthdates drawn were
later called to serve in the order they were drawn; the last of these was
September 24. Also on December 1, 1969, a
second lottery, identical in process to the first, was held with the 26 letters
of the alphabet. The first letter drawn was "J", which was assigned
number 1. The second letter was "G", and so on, until all 26 letters
were assigned numbers. Among men with the same birthdate, the order of
induction was determined by the ranks of the first letters of their last,
first, and middle names. Anyone with
initials "JJJ" would have been first within the shared birthdate,
followed by "JGJ", "JDJ", and "JXJ"; anyone with
initials "VVV" would have been last. A random procedure will not
distribute the lottery numbers uniformly over the months of the year, but this
was what some people expected. It happened that, November and December births,
or numbers 306 to 366, were assigned mainly to lower draft order numbers
representing earlier calls to serve. This led to complaints that the lottery
was not truly random as the legislation required. Only five days in
December—December 2, 12, 15, 17, and 19—were higher than the last call number
of 195. Had the days been evenly distributed (which would NOT be the result of
a random process), 14 days in December would have been expected to remain
uncalled. From January to December, the rank of the average draft pick numbers
were 5, 4, 1, 3, 2, 6, 8, 9, 10, 7, 11, and 12. A Monte Carlo simulation found
that the probability of a random order of months being this close to the 1–12
sequence expected for unsorted slips was 0.09%. .An analysis of the procedure
suggested that "The capsules were put in a box month by month, January
through December, and subsequent mixing efforts were insufficient to overcome
this sequencing".
Aftermath and modificatio
The draft lottery had social and
economic consequences because it generated further resistance to military
service. Those who resisted were generally young, well-educated, healthy men.
The fear of service in Vietnam influenced many young men to join the National
Guard. They were aware that the National Guard would be unlikely to send its
soldiers to Vietnam. Many men were unable to join the National Guard even
though they had passed their physicals, because many state National Guards had
long waiting lists to enlist. Still others chose legal sanctions such as
imprisonment, showing their disapproval by illegally burning their draft cards
or draft letters, or simply not presenting themselves for military service.
Others left the country, commonly moving to Canada. The 1970s were a time of turmoil in the United
States, beginning with the civil rights movement which set the standards for
practices by the anti-war movement. The 1969 draft lottery only encouraged
resentment of the Vietnam War and the draft. It strengthened the anti-war
movement, and all over the United States, people decried discrimination by the
draft system "against low-education, low-income, underprivileged members
of society". The lottery procedure was improved the next year although
public discontent continued to grow.
For the draft lottery held on
July 1, 1970 (which covered 1951 birthdates for use during 1971, and is
sometimes called the 1971 draft), scientists at the National Bureau of
Standards prepared 78 random permutations of the numbers 1 to 366 using random
numbers selected from published tables. From the 78 permutations, 25 were
selected at random and transcribed to calendars using 1 = January 1, 2 =
January 2, ... 365 = December 31. Those calendars were sealed in envelopes. 25
more permutations were selected and sealed in 25 more envelopes without
transcription to calendars. The two sets of 25 envelopes were furnished to the
Selective Service System. On June 2, an official picked two envelopes, thus one
calendar and one raw permutation. The 365 birthdates (for 1951) were written
down, placed in capsules, and put in a drum in the order dictated by the
selected calendar. Similarly, the numbers from 1 to 365 were written down and
placed into capsules in the order dictated by the raw permutation.
On July 1, the drawing date, one
drum was rotated for an hour and the other for a half-hour (its rotating
mechanism failed). Pairs of capsules were then drawn, one from each drum, one
with a 1951 birthdate and one with a number 1 to 366. The first date and number
drawn were September 16 and 139, so all men born September 16, 1951, were
assigned draft number 139. The 11th draws were the date July 9 and the number
1, so men born July 9 were assigned draft number 1 and drafted first.
Draft lotteries were conducted
again from 1971 to 1975 (for 1952 to 1956 births). The draft numbers issued
from 1972 to 1975 were not used to call any men into service as the last draft
call was on December 7, and authority to induct expired July 1, 1973. They were
used, however, to call some men born from 1953 to 1956 for armed forces
physical examinations. The highest number called for a physical was 215 (for
tables 1970 through 1976). Between 1965 and 1972 the draft provided 2,215,000
service members to the U.S. military.
Present day use
In the present, not much has
changed regarding how the draft would be conducted if it were required in the
future. The Selective Service Committee, which presides over draft procedures,
has stored the large tumbler that holds all the numbers and dates that would be
drawn to select candidates, and the only obvious change between the method of
the past and the present is that instead of using pieces of paper in blue
capsules, the SSC now uses ping-pong balls with the dates and numbers on them.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Draft_lottery_%281969%29
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.