Pentagon should end 'woke' hunt for military extremism, says fmr Green Beret
[FoxNews] Senate Armed Services Committee recommended the Pentagon halt its programs countering military extremism
A former Green Beret is calling on the Department of Defense to end its hunt for military extremism following a ‘fruitless’ investigation and recommendation from the Senate Armed Services Committee.
"I hope that the DOD and the Biden administration take the recommendation so that our service members can get back to the war-fighting functions that they're supposed to be training on," Derrick Anderson, a retired Green Beret and former congressional candidate in Virginia told Fox News.
The Senate Armed Services Committee submitted its 2023 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) to the DOD last month, which included a recommendation to halt its programs countering extremism in the ranks.
The report accompanying the bill was approved by narrow margins, 14-12, and states, "the vast majority of service members serve with honor and distinction, and that the narrative surrounding systemic extremism in the military besmirches the men and women in uniform."
"The committee believes that spending additional time and resources to combat exceptionally rare instances of extremism in the military is an inappropriate use of taxpayer funds and should be discontinued by the Department of Defense immediately," the report continues.
Disappointed by the committee's Democrats voting against the recommendation, Anderson said, "as we've seen with the Democrats over and over again, they're digging their heels in on these types of woke policies instead of just coming to the table and saying, ‘hey, maybe we were wrong on this.’"
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin ordered a military-wide "stand down" to address extremism in February of 2021, after some defendants charged in connection with the January 6, 2021, breach of the U.S. Capitol were found to have had military ties.
On January 2, 2022, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff detailed the number of hours and dollars spent on fighting this alleged extremism in the ranks. Chairman Milley's letter to the committee indicated that there were 5,359,000 hours and over $500,000 spent on the stand down, not including the cost of compiling the CEAWG report.
"The Senate Armed Services Committee has essentially said that it's a waste of taxpayer dollars to be conducting this training when our service members should be otherwise training for combat," Anderson said of the committee’s recommendation to halt anti-extremism programs.
The Pentagon’s Countering Extremist Activity Working Group (CEAWG), established in April 2021, identified fewer than 100 instances of confirmed extremist activity in 2021, the Pentagon reported in December.
With roughly 2.1 million active and reserve personnel in the U.S. military, 100 cases is roughly .005% of the force.
An internal Defense Department survey found that only 9% of Americans ages 17-24 eligible to serve in the military had any inclination to do so, the lowest number since 2007, according to NBC.
Ret. Lt. Gen. Thomas Spoehr of the Heritage Foundation said this is the most trouble the military has had recruiting since 1973, after the U.S. left Vietnam and ended the draft.
Posted by: Skidmark 2022-07-23 |