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DelMarVa Survival Trainings
Daily Features |
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October 7, 2007
National Guard Troops Denied
Benefits After Longest Deployment of
Iraq War
Rhonda Erskine
MINNEAPOLIS,
MN (NBC) -- When they came home from
Iraq, 2,600 members of the Minnesota
National Guard had been deployed
longer than any other ground combat
unit. The tour lasted 22 months and
had been extended as part of
President Bush's surge.
1st Lt. Jon
Anderson said he never expected to
come home to this: A government
refusing to pay education benefits
he says he should have earned under
the GI bill.
"It's pretty
much a slap in the face," Anderson
said. "I think it was a scheme to
save money, personally. I think it
was a leadership failure by the
senior Washington leadership... once
again failing the soldiers."
Anderson's
orders, and the orders of 1,161
other Minnesota guard members, were
written for 729 days.
Had they
been written for 730 days, just one
day more, the soldiers would receive
those benefits to pay for school.
"Which would
be allowing the soldiers an extra
$500 to $800 a month," Anderson
said.
That money
would help him pay for his master's
degree in public administration. It
would help Anderson's fellow platoon
leader, John Hobot, pay for a degree
in law enforcement.
"I would
assume, and I would hope, that when
I get back from a deployment of 22
months, my senior leadership in
Washington, the leadership that
extended us in the first place,
would take care of us once we got
home," Hobot said.
Both Hobot
and Anderson believe the Pentagon
deliberately wrote orders for 729
days instead of 730. Now, six of
Minnesota's members of the House of
Representatives have asked the
Secretary of the Army to look into
it -- So have Senators Amy Klobuchar
and Norm Coleman.
Klobuchar
said the GI money "shouldn't be tied
up in red tape," and Coleman said
it's "simply irresponsible to deny
education benefits to those soldiers
who just completed the longest tour
of duty of any unit in Iraq."
Anderson
said the soldiers he oversaw in his
platoon expected that money to be
here when they come home.
"I had 23
guys under my command," Anderson
said. "I promised to take care of
them. And I'm not going to end
taking care of them when this
deployment is over, and it's not
over until this is solved."
The Army did
not respond questions Tuesday
afternoon.
Senators
Klobuchar and Coleman released a
joint statement saying the Army
secretary, Pete Geren, is looking
into this personally, and they say
Geren asked a review board to
expedite its review so the matter
could be solved by next semester.
Minnesota
National Guard spokesman Lt. Col.
Kevin Olson said the soldiers are
"victims of a significant
injustice."
DelMarVa
Survival Training Site requests that
our visitors contact their
representatives in support of our
American fighting men. Senators web
sites.
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