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The state of Louisiana has 35 percent of its National Guard units fighting in an unnecessary, optional war, with no end in sight. It has help perpetuate the slow response to the disaster in NO.
This policy of extending NG units in this manner is damaging to Homeland Security, and disastrous in the case of NOLA.
Now, in order to make up for the depletion of the LA NG, the state has to get commitments from other state's guard forces. What if those other states, already depleted by Iraq and Katrina, have a security problem? They're screwed.
Now, in Montana, for example, nearly 50 percent of the NG are in Iraq and they have a relatively troublesome fire season. Fires in MT this summer were a nagging problem, more so than usual, because of this foolish deployment policy. Bush and the Pentagon have steadfastly refused to rotate MT NG so that they could be in MT during fire season. They also refuse to allow Governor Brian Schweitzer to go over to Iraq and visit his own NG troops. That's off topic, however.
The issue here is, besides Iraq being a dumb and even evil action, the deployment policy of NG troops make states vulnerable to disasters. And, in the event of one, it makes other states even weaker because they have to further deplete their Troops in order to make up for the disaster stricken state not being able to handle the effort on its own. It's stupid. Dumb. And, detrimental to national security. Only a few governors, starting with Schweitzer, have criticized the administration on this. Now, you'll see some more of it, you probably already have. But, every governor - party shouldn't matter because safety goes beyond politics - should be concerned about and vocal on this issue. It is important.
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