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Military

Military isn't for 'dumb, ignorant,' Dodd says

Source: 
Des Moines Register
Clip text: 

Democratic presidential candidate Chris Dodd expressed his hope Friday for talented people to join the military, an issue that arose after someone asked him why the military offered recruiting bonuses.

The Connecticut senator said it has become increasingly difficult for the military to retain soldiers, noting it is difficult for families.

"Families can't take it any longer," he said. "I want to see talented people want to make that a career choice. I don't want dumb, ignorant people who are less qualified joining the military."

Dodd said he was bothered by the perception that volunteers who sign up for the military are not "terribly bright or talented."

"We need to be as a nation here respecting those who do it and encouraging talented people and having leadership that won't send them to war as a choice, but will be there to do things out of necessity."

Dodd said that as president, he would begin redeploying troops from Iraq immediately. . . .

public. date: 
August 18, 2007
Clip URL: 
http://desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070818/NEWS09/708180331/-1/BUSINESS04

Presidential candidate Dodd, in shipyard tour, calls for U.S. to build more subs

Source: 
Foster's Daily Democrat
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America needs to step up its submarine production or it risks being overtaken by China, U.S. Sen. Christopher Dodd said on Thursday.

The Democratic senator from Connecticut and presidential candidate toured the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard with union officials as part of a campaign swing through the Granite State.

"By the year 2010, the Chinese will have double the size of the submarines that we have," he told a small gathering of media and onlookers.

Dodd said the Chinese Navy will be larger by 2015. To address the problem, Dodd said he is lobbying the Defense Department to increase the number of submarines being built each year from one to two.

...

public. date: 
February 16, 2007
Clip URL: 
http://www.fosters.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070216/FOSTERS01/102160223

Sen. Dodd Seeks to Strengthen the Defense Production Act

Source: 
American Economic Alert
Clip text: 

Senator Christopher Dodd (D-CT), the new chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, wants to overhaul parts of the Defense Production Act (DPA) to protect industries and jobs that are vital to national security. Dodd told Defense News (January 29) he is “very concerned about whether we are doing everything possible to ensure that our nation’s defense production capabilities are as strong as they should be.” Dodd said the manufacturing sector of the U.S. economy “is hemorrhaging, plain and simple – including jobs in defense manufacturing.”

The Senator is correct and the DPA is the right place to look for a solution, as it gives the government all the authority it needs to draft and implement an industrial policy that can safeguard the American economy in a brutally competitive and politically dangerous world.
The DPA was first enacted in 1950 and drew on the painful lessons the United States had learned in the world wars. On the eve of World War I, the United States was the world’s foremost economic power, with manufacturing output greater than Germany and Great Britain (the number two and three producers) combined. But the war would demonstrate that generic economic size did not smoothly transform into military power if a nation did not invest in defense industries prior to the outbreak of hostilities.

The United States declared war in 1917, but when American troops went into combat in 1918, they did so armed mainly with French machine guns, artillery, tanks and airplanes, supplemented by British equipment. U.S. factories could not shift quickly enough from consumer goods to military hardware, especially for items not built in America before. Manufacturing requires experience, not just a set of blueprints. And in some cases, British and French firms were reluctant to supply American firms with blueprints. This was particularly true in the emerging aircraft industry where European firms wanted to protect the progress they had made during the war from any post-war competition by American firms.

public. date: 
February 2, 2007
Clip URL: 
http://www.americaneconomicalert.org/view_art.asp?Prod_ID=2677


 
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