SHOULD THE US REINSTATE THE MILITARY DRAFT?
Should the US Reinstate the Military Draft?
Politics & Government · Real arguments from SuperDebate members below
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The case for
In fiscal year 2022, the Army fell 15,000 soldiers short of its recruiting target — the largest shortfall since 1979. As geopolitical competition with China intensifies and war in Europe continues, America may need a much larger force than a voluntary market can supply at current compensation...
Posted by jconnor
Wars become more politically sustainable when only a professional class fights them. The Iraq and Afghanistan wars, fought entirely by volunteers, cost over 7,000 American lives and trillions of dollars with minimal public accountability because most Americans had no personal stake. Universal...
Posted by jconnor
Israel, South Korea, Norway, and Singapore maintain universal conscription as insurance against existential threats. These democracies have found ways to reconcile mandatory service with civil liberties. The US could implement a two-year service requirement with military and civilian options —...
Posted by jconnor
The case against
The all-volunteer force has consistently outperformed every draft-based army the US has fielded in readiness, professionalism, and combat effectiveness. Vietnam — where the draft produced unmotivated, poorly-disciplined units with high attrition rates — is the canonical counterexample. Modern...
Posted by jconnor
Mandatory military service requires the government to compel citizens to risk their lives under pain of imprisonment — the most extreme exercise of state coercion imaginable in a peacetime democracy. The First Amendment protects conscientious objection, but a draft inherently classifies and routes...
Posted by jconnor
The recruiting shortfall the Army faces is solvable without a draft: increasing compensation, improving conditions, and expanding the National Guard can fill gaps. Historically, the US has responded to genuine crises — World War II, Korea — with draft authority invoked only when voluntary...
Posted by jconnor
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What is a strong argument for "Should the US Reinstate the Military Draft?"?
In fiscal year 2022, the Army fell 15,000 soldiers short of its recruiting target — the largest shortfall since 1979. As geopolitical competition with China intensifies and war in Europe continues, America may need a much larger force than a voluntary market can supply at current compensation... (Argued by jconnor on SuperDebate.)
What is a strong argument against "Should the US Reinstate the Military Draft?"?
The all-volunteer force has consistently outperformed every draft-based army the US has fielded in readiness, professionalism, and combat effectiveness. Vietnam — where the draft produced unmotivated, poorly-disciplined units with high attrition rates — is the canonical counterexample. Modern... (Argued by jconnor on SuperDebate.)
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