From Military.com:
“Pentagon
Announces Tougher Extremism Screenings for New Military Recruits”
The Defense
Department plans to add questions about current or past extremist behavior to
screening questionnaires given to troops during the accession process, part of
an effort to eliminate radicalism from the ranks. And recruits who provide
demonstrably false answers to the questions could find themselves subject to
punishment for fraudulent enlistment, according to a Friday memo signed by
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin. The review and standardization of accession
screening questionnaires is one of several actions the Pentagon announced
Friday in its anti-extremism effort. Austin's memo also establishes a new
anti-extremism working group, and commissions a study to gauge the scope of how
prevalent extremist behavior is in the force.
The SecDef also
ordered the department to immediately review and update regulations to better
define extremist activities that uniformed troops are prohibited from taking
part in. And service secretaries will update transition checklists for service
members who are retiring or separating, to alert them about how they -- and
their unique and valuable leadership, organizational, weapons and other
military skills -- might be targeted for recruitment by extremist groups. Concerns
about troops possessing extremist views -- such as white supremacist or
anti-government ideologies -- have grown in recent years, and gained fresh
urgency after the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol riot. Arrest records show several accused
rioters had served in the military. In early February, shortly after taking
charge of the Pentagon, Austin ordered all units to hold stand-downs to discuss
extremism in the ranks. Pentagon Press Secretary John Kirby told reporters
Friday that, aside from a few units that needed extensions, those stand-downs
are largely finished. But even as the Pentagon reviews what was learned in
those sessions, the military will take several immediate steps to address
problems, Austin wrote in the memo. The working group will make sure the
changes are put in place and develop additional mid- and long-term
recommendations to keep working on eliminating extremism, Austin added. The
working group will study whether the Uniform Code of Military Justice or other
related DoD policies and regulations need to be updated to properly address
extremist behavior in the ranks. It will study how the services' existing
insider threat programs are handling extremist activity, and find out whether
the department needs to do more to help these programs collect and share
information with law enforcement and security organizations, as well as
commanders and supervisors. The working group will also review the Pentagon's
effort to acquire scalable, cost-effective ways to screen publicly available
information during the accessions and vetting process for national security
positions. And it will examine existing training programs on extremism and
insider threats to see whether any improvements need to be made. The group will
be led by Bishop Garrison, the Defense Department's senior adviser on human
capital and diversity, equity and inclusion. It will have its first meeting on
or around April 14, the memo states, and will issue its recommendations within
90 days.
During the
press conference Friday, Kirby said it became clear during the stand-down
process that troops want better guidance about what extremist activity is. That
is one reason Austin stood up the working group and put other changes in place.
"A consistent theme that he heard was a hunger for more information and
context about what we're talking about here," Kirby said. But the memo
does not go so far as to ban troops from simply belonging to extremist
organizations. Currently, troops are not barred from membership in such groups,
but active participation -- such as taking a leadership role or fundraising --
could result in separation or other punishment. Kirby said Austin wants the
working group to study whether such a change needs to be made. However, because
these groups are so malleable and change so quickly, and because radicalization
happens in so many different ways, outlawing membership won't be as simple as
changing a few words in regulations "with a stroke of a pen," he
added. Kirby stressed that the military is interested in stopping unacceptable
behavior and conduct motivated or influenced by ideology, not singling out
troops for their religious or other beliefs. "This is not about being the
thought police," he said. "It's not about identifying you as an
individual and what's in between your ears. It's about what you do with what's
between your ears. It's about the behavior and the conduct that is inspired by
or influenced by this kind of ideology." Kirby said that training
departing service members, as part of the transition process, about potential
recruitment by extremist groups will prepare them to watch out for such efforts
-- "to know what it looks like and what it feels like, what it sounds like
when these groups are trying to recruit them." "When you get ready to
leave the service, [we make sure you know] what your medical benefits are, what
your educational benefits are, how to buy a new house. There's a whole
list," Kirby said. "In some cases, when you retire, they even tell
you how to pick a suit and a tie. But there's nothing in there -- not
consistently, anyway -- about this particular [extremist recruiting]
problem." Austin also wants the working group to see whether it's possible
to better track when troops are kicked out for extremist behavior. And the
working group will look at how much and how consistently the insider threat
programs are addressing extremism, Kirby said. "It is an issue ... that
the secretary believes we need a little bit more clarity on, and that's going to
take some time," he said.
^ Sadly, this vetting
needs to be done (for both new Military recruits as well as on Current
Soldiers. I am a Military Brat whose Grandfather, Great-Uncles and Father
served in the US Military and whose Brother and Nephew currently serve in the
US Military and so do not take this lightly. ^
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