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THE CANDIDATES: McCAIN AND OBAMA BOTH AGAINST
MANDATORY VA FUNDING -- VFW Magazine interview
sheds interesting light on veterans' and military
issues.

Sen. John McCain (R-AZ)
Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL)
Be sure to read the answers carefully. You
will see that neither candidate supports mandatory funding for VA
healthcare. Also, neither candidate would do away with user fees and
co-pays.
For more information on the candidates, go to the
Presidential Candidates Page... click here...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/08/nf08/PRE
SIDENTIALCANDIDATES.htm
For a look at the presidential debates, and your
opinions, click here...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/08/nf08/nfo
ct08/nf101708-1.htm
Thanks to the VFW Magazine for this information.
Story here...
http://www.vfw.org/in
dex.cfm?fa=news.magDtl&dtl=1&mid=4774
Story below:
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JOIN THE DEBATE
Comment on this story and interact
with other readers... below... |
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McCain vs. Obama on Veterans Issues
VFW magazine found out directly from Senators John McCain and Barack Obama
where they stand on vital veterans issues. These are their responses,
which have been edited for clarity and preciseness.
by Tim Dyhouse and Jaime Netzer
The Candidates
Sen. John McCain
U.S. Senate, Arizona, 1986-present
U.S. House of Representatives, 1982-85
Military Service—U.S. Navy, 1958-81; USS Forrestal, 1967; USS Oriskany,
1967 (Vietnam POW 1967-73)
Sen. Barack Obama
U.S. Senate, Illinois, 2004-present
Illinois State Legislature, 1997-2004
Law Professor, University of Chicago Law School, 1991-2003
VETERANS ISSUES
Do you support mandatory funding for the VA
budget, and if so, where would the funds come from?
McCain: We will not need mandatory funding. I will work with Congress from
both sides of the aisle to see that responsible legislation is passed in a
timely fashion.
Obama: I support full funding for VA health care—$4.5 billion over last
year’s level and an additional $3.5 billion for medical services. The
funds would come from a portion of the savings of responsibly ending the
war in Iraq.
What is your stand on VA user fees and increasing pharmacy co-payments?
McCain: A small fee for non-service connected and higher- income vets is
an appropriate means to ensure VA’s resources are available to treat the
highest- priority veterans and to support VA services in localities that
might otherwise go unserved.
Obama: I am opposed to unreasonable increases to user fees and pharmacy
co-payments.
Would you permit Category 8 patients (non-service connected and higher
income veterans) to enroll in the VA medical system? What would be the
source of funds to accommodate this influx of patients?
McCain: I believe that the 2003 decision to exclude them from VA health
care made sense at the time and continues to make sense today. The vast
majority of Priority 8 veterans have access to health insurance through
other sources.
Obama: One of my first acts will be signing an executive order reversing
this ban. The funds would come from a portion of the savings of
responsibly ending the war in Iraq.
Will you add more personnel to the Veterans Benefits Administration to
reduce the backlog of claims? If so, where would the funding come from?
McCain:
I will add personnel as required and the money will come from savings
gained by reforming the budget process and eliminating earmarks and other
unnecessary spending. My plan for reform includes training,
accountability, automation, partnerships with veterans service
organizations, simplification of disability evaluations, compensation for
loss of quality of life, emphasis on restorative care and concurrent
receipt.
Obama: I will hire additional claims workers and convene our nation’s
leading veterans groups, employees and managers to develop an updated
training and management model that will ensure that VA benefit decisions
are rated fairly and consistently, and stem from adequate training and
accountability for each claims adjudicator. The funds would come from a
portion of the savings of responsibly ending the war in Iraq.
In light of the high rate of PTSD among Afghanistan and Iraq veterans,
what changes in mental health services would you implement?
McCain: Enhanced screening, before and after deployment, as well as more
effective treatments, and greater cooperation between DoD and VA—a
seamless set of services.
Obama: At the recruitment stage, I will recruit more mental health
professionals and improve screening. During active duty, training and
deployment, I will place more mental health professionals with troops,
fight the stigma of psychological injury by enhancing training, and offer
more counseling to military families. At the return to civilian life, I
will require individual, face-to-face post-deployment mental health
screenings, increase the VA budget to recruit and retain more mental
health professionals, provide better training and guidance to personnel
regarding PTSD claims, and expand Vet Centers in rural areas.Obama: At the
recruitment stage, I will recruit more mental health professionals and
improve screening. During active duty, training and deployment, I will
place more mental health professionals with troops, fight the stigma of
psychological injury by enhancing training, and offer more counseling to
military families. At the return to civilian life, I will require
individual, face-to-face post-deployment mental health screenings,
increase the VA budget to recruit and retain more mental health
professionals, provide better training and guidance to personnel regarding
PTSD claims, and expand Vet Centers in rural areas.
Considering the high incidence of traumatic brain injury (TBI) among this
latest generation of war veterans, are you willing to make a substantial
investment in related research and treatment?
McCain: Absolutely. I will see that we make sustained investments in
medical research, screening, training of health care providers and access
to treatment—including therapies proven beneficial to victims of severe
TBI. Support and training for family caregivers also is a must.
Obama: Yes. I will establish standards of care for TBI treatment, require
pre- and post-deployment screenings and improve case management so that
service members get the best possible care.
What measures would your Admini¬stration take to preserve and strengthen
veterans preference in hiring for civil service jobs?
McCain: Ensure the U.S. government operates as a model employer regarding
preference in federal hiring and contracting with veteran-owned small
businesses. We also need better enforcement of government contractors’
obligations to hire disabled vets.
Obama: I will work with the Office of Personnel Management to ensure
federal agencies are following the letter and spirit of the law in giving
veterans greater access to civil service jobs, and better enforce rules
that require federal contractors to take affirmative action to hire and
promote qualified categories of veterans.
DEFENSE/FOREIGN POLICY ISSUES
What specific steps would you take to achieve a
definable victory in the Iraq War?
McCain: Success in Iraq is the establishment of a generally peaceful,
stable, prosperous, democratic state that poses no threat to its neighbors
and contributes to the defeat of terrorists. It is an Iraq where Iraqi
forces have the responsibility for enforcing security in their country,
and where American troops can return home. I will bring the wars we are
fighting to a successful conclusion by putting the best possible teams of
political, economic and military leadership in place, provide them the
resources they say they need, and then hold them accountable for results.
Obama: I will implement a phased redeployment of our combat brigades from
Iraq, directed by military commanders on the ground and done in
consultation with the Iraqi government over 16 months, pressuring the
Iraqi government to work toward reconciliation and accommodation. I would
maintain a residual force in Iraq and the region to conduct
counter-terrorism missions, and to protect American diplomatic and
civilian personnel. If Iraqi political leaders make progress, I would
continue to train and support Iraqi forces.
What specific steps would you take to achieve a definable victory in the
Afghanistan War?
McCain: Add three brigades and reduce restrictions on the use of coalition
forces. We also need: a comprehensive strategy for victory, unity of
command, to double the size of the Afghan National Army and to appoint a
presidential envoy empowered to bring countries in the region, such as
Pakistan, and countries contributing in Afghanistan into better
cooperation.
Obama: Send two additional combat brigades and additional helicopters and
surveillance platforms to Afghanistan, seek greater contributions from our
NATO allies, focus on training Afghan security forces, support an Afghan
judiciary with more resources and provide an additional $1 billion in
non-military assistance each year.
What approach do you advocate in dealing with Iran?
McCain: The U.N. Security Council should impose progressively tougher
political and economic sanctions. The U.S. must lead in imposing
multilateral sanctions outside the U.N. A severe limit on Iranian imports
of gasoline would create immediate pressure. Regional and European allies
can help by imposing targeted sanctions, including the denial of visas and
freezing of assets. The U.S. should impose financial sanctions on the
Central Bank of Iran and prevent business dealings with Iran’s
Revolutionary Guard Corps. Privatize sanctions against Iran by launching a
worldwide divestment campaign.
Obama: Aggressive, principled and direct diplomacy—diplomacy backed with
strong sanctions and without preconditions. This could include meeting
with the appropriate Iranian leader at a time and place of my choosing and
meaningful incentives. If necessary, stronger unilateral sanctions;
stronger multilateral sanctions in the Security Council; and sustained
action outside the U.N. to isolate the Iranian regime.
Do you see protected borders as an integral part of homeland security?
McCain: I will make it a top priority to deploy the infrastructure and
manpower necessary to secure our borders in a timely manner. This is an
essential part of defending our country.
Obama: Yes. I voted to transfer $367.6 million to add an additional 1,000
border agents and for overall border protection efforts. I would increase
use of technology on the border and federal attention to water and air
entry points, and support comprehensive immigration reform.
What is the appropriate use of Reserve and National Guard troops overseas?
McCain: Fighting the nation’s wars, training the forces of our partners in
the fight against terrorism, folding into rotation schedules when the
active component is overstretched. Make them full partners in our force
and mission planning, including homeland defense, and change pay and
benefits to ensure recruiting, morale and quality of life.
Obama: Homeland defense as a primary mission—not repeated and continual
overseas deployments.
How would you improve the quality of life (pay, health care and housing)
for active-duty troops?
McCain: Reduce their deployment times by increasing the size of the Army
and Marine Corps from the currently planned level of roughly 750,000 to
900,000.
Obama: Pay parity measured by the employment cost index (ECI). End
stop-loss policies. Add 65,000 soldiers and 27,000 Marines. Deploy forces
predictably. Create a military families advisory board to provide an
institutionalized conduit to senior policy-makers.
Would you fully fund the Joint POW/MIA Account¬ing Command in order to
achieve the fullest possible accounting of missing Americans from all
wars?
McCain: Yes.
Obama: We need to do everything we can to bring them home.
Would you repeal or retain Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell?
McCain: I would retain the current “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy.
Obama: We need to revisit the current policy on gays in the military to
ensure it helps accomplish national defense goals.
To properly honor the Americans killed in Iraq and Afghanistan, would you
use the influence of your office to promote the idea of erecting a
national memorial in the near future?
McCain: They deserve a tribute. It would be appropriate to consider
erecting a memorial.
Obama: I would consider proposals and work hard to honor those who made
the ultimate sacrifice.
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-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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