From Military.com:
“How All the Remaining
Presidential Candidates Avoided Service in Vietnam”
After just 18 states’ primaries
or caucuses, the field has already narrowed to five presidential candidates,
including three Democrats and two Republicans. And even though it's 2020, we're
still faced with questions about our next president's choices when it came to
service in Vietnam. That's right: Vietnam service is an issue for the EIGHTH
consecutive presidential election (1992-2020). Granted, World War II veterans
were on the ballot in 10 consecutive elections (1960-1996), but back then we
were considering only guys who served and not anyone who figured out a way to
skip the war. We've got five candidates who didn't serve in the Vietnam War
running for president in 2020. How did each of them miss out on Uncle Sam's
tour of southeast Asia?
Sen. Bernie Sanders (Independent
running as a Democrat): Remember
when everyone thought Sen. Robert Dole was positively geriatric when he was the
Republican nominee in 1996? Bob had just turned 73 the July before Election
Day. Sanders will be 79 years old on Election Day. That's older than Ronald
Reagan was when he left office, and lots of folks thought Ronnie was ancient. Bernie's
relationship with the military and Vietnam is complicated. He applied for
conscientious objector status and once said he wouldn't have served in the
military if drafted. But Bernie turned 26 before his draft number came up, and
didn't have to decide whether to serve in Vietnam because he was TOO OLD.
That's right, America. We're eight elections into what we'll call the
"Vietnam Cycle," and we've got a guy who didn't have to avoid the
draft because he was a relative fossil.
Former Vice President Joe Biden
(Democrat): Also old? Joe Biden. On
the plus side, he's more than a year younger than Sanders. Biden got five
student deferments during the Vietnam era (a distinction he shares with fellow
former Vice President Dick Cheney). His teenage asthma attacks landed him a
Selective Service classification of 1-Y in 1968, ending the question of whether
he'd ever be drafted.
Former Gov. Bill Weld
(Republican): The former
Massachusetts governor has positioned himself as the last, best hope for
Republican Never-Trumpers. Weld is a relative youngster in the field at age 74.
Some families have long histories of military service. The Welds do their time
at Harvard, with the first graduating in 1650 (not a typo). There's even a dorm
named after the family on campus. Bill employed some positively (Bill)
Clinton-esque gyrations to stay out of the military. He was certified 1-A four
years in a row and passed at least two Army physicals. He was declared eligible
for the draft in 1968 and launched a series of unsuccessful appeals. In 1969,
Weld was drafted anyway. He somehow got his records transferred from his
hometown of Smithtown, New York, to Cambridge, Massachusetts (the town with
buildings named after his family) and remembered some back problems. Poof! No
more draft concerns.
President Donald Trump
(Republican): Compared to the other
three men on this list, President Trump came the closest to actual military
service during his high school years at the New York Military Academy. During
his college years, Trump received four student deferments. After being
classified 1-A in July 1968, the future president obtained a medical deferment
in October and was classified 1-Y. He finally got a 4-F classification for bone
spurs in 1972.
Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (Democrat): Gabbard hasn't yet scored a win (or a
place or even a show) in any of the primaries or caucuses so far, but she seems
determined to ride out her campaign for as long as she can keep things going. The
congressional rep from Hawaii used a novel ruse to avoid the Vietnam draft: She
avoided being born for almost 16 years after the last helicopter took off from
the embassy roof in Saigon. What better way is there to avoid service in an
(allegedly) unpopular war? Gabbard stands out from the pack in one important
regard: She's served in the United States military and seen action in a war
zone. She served in a field medical unit of the Hawaii Army National Guard in
Iraq from 2004 to 2005. Gabbard was also deployed to Kuwait from 2008 to 2009
as an Army Military Police platoon leader.
Thus concludes our 2020 Vietnam
War service voting guide. Unless an ancient President Sanders or Biden is
running for re-election in 2024, this is probably our last opportunity to go
deep on the Vietnam-era draft.
^ It is interesting to see that
every single 2020 Presidential Candidate left as of today found a convenient way
to avoid being Drafted during Vietnam. The only person who served (as a
volunteer since even if she was alive during the Vietnam War women weren’t
Drafted and still can’t be today) is Tulsi Gabbard. The President is the Commander and Chief of the Military and anyone who holds that office - male or female - should at least have some experience in it even if just passing Basic Training. I wasn’t alive during Vietnam
and the closest I came to the Draft is registering for the Selective Service
and updating my home address until I aged-out so I don’t know for sure what I
would have done if the threat of being Drafted to fight came up. I know what I
would like to think I would have done, but believing and doing aren’t always
the same thing. ^
https://www.military.com/off-duty/2020/03/05/how-all-remaining-presidential-candidates-avoided-service-vietnam.html
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