Columbia University War Memorial

I wanted to ensure that you all knew of the war memorial unveiling next week and hope that you will all attend.  Please RSVP directly with the Alumni Affairs office by MONDAY. If you have any questions or comments please feel free to contact me at anytime. http://www.college.columbia.edu/cct/nov_dec08/around_the_quads14

The Office of the Provost at Columbia University, the Columbia Alumni Association, and Columbia University Libraries cordially invite you to the unveiling of a memorial honoring alumni and students who gave their lives in service to the United States.

Friday, December 12, 2008
6:00 – 7:30 p.m.
Butler Library
Morningside Campus
New York City

R.S.V.P. by December 8 to Erich H. Erving at (212) 870-2284 or ehe2001@columbia.edu.

Semper Fidelis,
Peter

Veterans’ Week Kickoff – Free Theater Tickets for Black Watch

Currently on at St. Ann’s Warehouse, DUMBO, Brooklyn is the celebrated National Theatre of Scotland’s Black Watch, an extraordinary play about the Iraq War that runs now until Nov. 30.   (See description below.)  Black Watch has been a huge success everywhere it has toured over the last two years and has been showered with praise by critics and audiences alike.

Over the last few months St., Ann’s has solicited underwriting so that veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan could see this play for free.  To date we’ve received enough support to cover tickets for some 230 vets.  St. Ann’s will hold 40 tickets for Columbia students.  Please RSVP with Peter Kim at milvets@gmail.com.  To learn more about Black Watch and St. Ann’s Warehouse visit www.stannswarehouse.org.

About Black Watch

Written by Scottish playwright Gregory Burke, Black Watch takes audiences to the battlefield with a poetic power beyond the grasp of journalism, film or television.  Based on interviews with soldiers from the 300 year old Black Watch regiment, upon their return from a tour of duty in Iraq, it is an exuberant, mixed-media play, making inspired use of docudrama, video sequences, song, dance, panoramic historical sequences and an extraordinary sound score to portray how members of the Black Watch regiment (formed under George II in 1723) dealt with intense fighting in Iraq as well as the dissolution of their beloved Black Watch regiment.  Black Watch acquaints the audience with the soldiers as young men with a sense of pride in their military service, a profound loyalty to one another and their regiment, and the time they spent together which haunts them long after they return home.

About St. Ann’s Warehouse

Located on the Brooklyn Waterfront in DUMBO, Brooklyn, St. Ann’s Warehouse is an award winning presenting, producing arts organization that each season presents an array of contemporary music and theater by some of the most talented artists working today.

ROTC Statement of Professor Silver

When and Why ROTC Should Return to Columbia

Position and Discussion Paper

Allan Silver

Professor

Department of Sociology

October 17, 2008

I know first hand the passions that drove ROTC out of Columbia. During mounting tensions that exploded into the Columbia crisis of 1968, I was among faculty alerted to intervene in fistfights between students opposing and participating in the Reserve Officers Training Corps. Students faced conscription and faculty debated whether to send grades to draft boards. It was an inflamed and desperate, sometimes a violent time.  Four decades later, the atmosphere is very different. It often appears that that objection to “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell” [DADT], the law prohibiting military service by open homosexuals, is the sole principled obstacle to ROTC’s restoration. A Spectator editorial last January made a strong case for the exceptional status of ROTC, and its return to Columbia, despite the university’s policy against discrimination. Together with others, I have argued for this position. However, ROTC is unlikely to be granted an exceptional status and, if it were, might lack adequate legitimation on campus.

DADT is not the only principled cause for objection to an ROTC program at Columbia. In 1969, a faculty-student committee unanimously articulated another in a report accepted by faculties and other governing bodies. It recommended that the “…administration… terminate the present arrangements…for the NROTC program and seek instead a relationship in which…any course offered…shall carry credit…only if it is also listed in the offerings of a regular academic department… [and in which] instructors…not hold academic rank unless appointed according to regular procedures.” Other selective, private institutions, among them Yale and Stanford, sought similar changes. In all such cases, the Department of Defense withdrew ROTC programs.

Provisions of the ROTC Revitalization Act of 1964 prohibited these changes and continue to do so. This legislation states that “No unit may be established or maintained at an institution unless (1) the senior commissioned officer of the armed force concerned…is given the academic rank of professor… [and] (2) the institution adopts, as part of its curriculum… [a program] which the Secretary of the military department concerned prescribes and conducts…” Despite this explicit language, it may well be administratively possible, with good will by both parties, to create an ROTC program consistent with faculty control of curricula and appointments. Modification of the statute’s language, however, would respect the intellectual self-government of universities and facilitate a positive response by Columbia and other institutions.

Contrary to a prevailing impression, Columbia and other private universities never “banned” ROTC. Half the Columbia committee’s members interpreted its recommendations as canceling “…exceptions from normal [academic] procedures which were granted to the Navy during or immediately after World War II. We regret that we did not take such action before the present mood on campus…but we cannot refuse to take steps to correct an academically irregular situation merely because that mood arose.” This “irregular” situation largely dated from a deeply consensual, total war ending in definitive victory over six decades ago. In effect, private universities – not required, like land-grant institutions, to have ROTC programs – decided that World War II did not offer a long-term model. Faculty authority over curricula and appointments is to be maintained during times both of peace and of military engagements open to democratic political contestation. This is the second principled concern about ROTC.

DADT is not the military’s policy. It is legislation, and its reform rests with the presidency and Congress. Stupid and cruel discharges of homosexual service members continue. Many ignore the third, neglected element of the legislation’s informal name — Don’t Ask-Don’t Tell-Don’t Pursue. However, a new administration and Congress open new political opportunities for reform. In addition, military perspectives are changing. Veterans studying at Columbia report that in practice open homosexuals in military service are widely accepted.  My conversations with mid-rank officers confirm this and also suggest that resistance to reform will decline with the retirement of high-level officers whose careers began in the Vietnam War and its sour aftermath. Pressing needs for manpower encourages the recruitment and retention of all competent personnel. Added to public trends favoring equality for homosexuals, these developments offer realistic hope that DADT will be reformed in an approaching future.

On campus, student initiatives and strong statements by both presidential candidates have created a valuable opportunity for public debate. Columbia’s administration rightly observes that the Department of Defense [DOD] has not indicated interest in restoring ROTC at Columbia. However, this requires interpretation in light of the “Solomon Amendment”, enacted by Congress in 1996. It states that “No funds…may be provided…to an institution of higher education…if the Secretary of Defense determines that such institution… has a policy or practice … that either prohibits, or in effect prevents…the Secretary of a military department from maintaining, establishing or operating a unit of the Senior Reserve Officer Training Corps…at that institution…” No Secretary of Defense has made such a request. Nevertheless, the Solomon Amendment is not a dead letter. When law schools recently sought to deny entrance to military recruiters because of DADT, the prospect that federal funds would be denied to their universities under other provisions of this statute was very much in play. These law schools, including Columbia’s, admit military recruiters for the Judge Advocate General’s Corps on equal terms with others. Pending a reform of the Solomon Amendment, delicate tact is required in contacts about ROTC between the DOD and universities.

As President Bollinger has pointed out  “…the Department of Defense [DOD] has, for its own fiscal reasons, instituted a policy of aggregating small numbers of ROTC students in urban areas into pooled programs on a limited number of campuses.” He rightly suggests that even were Columbia open to an ROTC program, one might well not be established (“Statement Regarding ROTC and the Campus”, September 25, 2008). Budgetary constraints have indeed led to the consolidation of urban ROTC programs. They have also driven a shift towards large land-grant universities, where economies of scale mean that more officers are recruited at lower cost. There was also been a shift to smaller schools, mostly in the South and Midwest, at which military officials have also felt more at ease and which, in some cases, actively sought ROTC programs as they moved from the Northeast.

Resource limitations do not entirely account for the long-term thinning out of ROTC programs in large cities and the Northeast region. Many in the military are not at ease in urban settings, in part because the social composition of the officer corps has become less diverse and officials underestimate the potential of ROTC in large, heterogeneous cities. ROTC programs in urban areas and the Northeast were withdrawn, thinned out or consolidated after the end of conscription and Vietnam War. These trends continued in the 1980s and during the decade-long drawdown following the end of the Cold War. To illustrate: “There is no Army ROTC program in the Detroit area, with its large middle-class Muslim population, and only one in Miami and Chicago. In New York City, which produced more than 500 military officers a year in the 1950s and early 1960s, the two remaining ROTC programs last year yielded 34 Army officers” (Greg Jaffe, “A Retreat from Big Cities Hurts ROTC Recruiting”, Wall Street Journal, February 22, 2007, p. 1).

With a population of over 7,500,000 Virginia has twelve Army ROTC programs while New York City, with a population of about 8,500,000, has two. Alabama, with a student population a quarter of New York State’s, has ten programs compared with New York’s thirteen. The Navy has one NROTC program in New York and none in New Jersey, Rhode Island and Connecticut, though the last three states have active duty naval installations. The Air Force has one program in New York State, but five in North Carolina. (I draw most of these illustrations from material provided by Stephen Trynosky, currently a fellow at the Truman National Security Project). Overall, Southern states have recently produced about forty percent of all Army officers.

According to research by Victor P. Corona, currently writing a doctoral dissertation in Columbia’s Department of Sociology, “Of Army officers who received commissions in 1979-82, graduates of West Point and of ROTC scholarship programs each constituted between 30% and 40% of those who have since attained senior rank in the infantry. If the situation in other branches of the Army and the other services approximates this finding, ROTC scholarship programs produce a significant portion of the military’s top leadership.” ROTC programs are responsible for a large part of the military’s leadership elite. Responsible citizenship requires attention to the relationship between a democratic polity and its military.

The lingering, faded stereotype of “elitist” colleges that “ban” ROTC and “hate” the military obscures the military’s very large contribution to gap between the social imbalance in the recruitment and education of future officers. A passage from the history of the Army ROTC applies broadly to the other services:

…Abolition of ROTC at elite institutions along the eastern

seaboard was more than offset, quantitatively at least, by

the creation of additional detachments at state institutions in

the South and West. The trend away from elite schools, however,

worried some DoD officials. They feared that the average quality

of ROTC students would drop and that the social balance of

the Army officer corps would be upset… [Others] were glad

to see the Army sever relations with the schools which, in their

opinion had never been avid supporters of the military…

(Arthur T. Coumbe and Lee S. Harford, US Army Cadet Command,

extracts, p. 20, n.d., http://academic.udayton.edu/rotc/hist-rotc.htm

accessed October 6, 2008).

Some in the military continue to view with resentment and suspicion the institutions from which ROTC programs departed four decades ago in highly inflamed circumstances.

Consider, illustratively a research report to the United States Army Accessions Command, “On Campus Market Potential Study: 2001-2007 Overview. It finds that “The more prestigious the school, the less chance that anyone in the student’s family had military experience. Since family military experience is linked to knowledge [of] and propensity [to enter ROTC], the higher the prestige of the university the more difficult to find those who would participate” (p. 7). Yet the top range of academic prestige examined in this report is far short of highly selective schools, of which Columbia is an instance,

The report contributes to a regional and cultural imbalance in the armed forces that is unhealthy for the relationship between a democratic polity and its military.

This research built on a base-line report — “On-Campus Market Potential Study 2002 Edition” – that continues to influence policy. It recommends that ROTC’s recruitment focus on students who

…seek adventurous physical activity. They may have rafted

canoed, rock climbed or sky dived. They would probably be first

in line at a bungee jump. At an amusement park… [they] would

probably seek out the most extreme rides (p. 92).

Of course, physical strength, dexterity and adventurousness are great virtues in themselves and vital resources in military service. Surely, intelligence, judgment and a well-rounded education are also valuable for military leadership, both for the complex military missions of today and future positions of command at the highest levels. This influential policy document stresses the former, without mention of the latter.

Military leadership has long been concerned to socially diversify the officer corps. It has been said that in no civilian institution do blacks exercise authority over whites to the extent they do in military service. Emerging military leaders are increasingly concerned that the social composition of the officer corps reflect the nation’s diversity and that officers acquire the cultural and intellectual resources required for the responsibilities of the future. Illustratively, West Point cadets in the academy’s Social Sciences Department spend three days each year in Jersey City meeting residents, including Muslims, Hindus and Egyptian Coptic Christians (Wall Street Journal, ibid.) However well-intentioned, such initiatives can hardly replace extended experiences of diverse cultures. Another illustration is the ROTC Language and Culture Program, which this year awarded grants for the study of “less commonly taught languages in college curricula.” This year and last grants went to twelve universities – eight in the South, four in the Midwest and West (DOD News Release 417-08, May 14, 2008

(http://www.defenselink.mil/releases/release.aspx?releaseid=11924

accessed October 6, 2008). Columbia, despite its great strengths in non-western languages and cultures, cannot now contribute to righting this regional imbalance and to the education of future military leaders.

Columbia should take a central place among the “pooled programs on a limited number of campuses” to which President Bollinger has referred. There should be an official and institutionalized place for ROTC on this campus — if not before DADT is reformed, then as soon as possible afterward. Today, an ROTC presence would not resemble that existing until 1969, a full-fledged NROTC program. Interested Columbia students are unlikely to approach in numbers of those who participated in the very different circumstances of decades past. In any case, ROTC program would not imply the “militarization” of the campus. Students in ROTC are not in military service until they are commissioned upon graduation. They are fellow-students, oriented towards military service as others are to law, business, medicine, teaching and other pursuits of civil society. These students should be more fully part of the Columbia community and their commitment should be reflected in ROTC’s institutional presence on campus.

To start with, this might consist of at least one officer to be a resource for Columbia students in ROTC programs and to form a part of the campus community. ROTC should be eager to provide sophisticated officers with strong academic qualifications. It enhances our campus culture to be in contact with the military profession as we are with the many pursuits of civilian society. Whatever our perspectives on the military, they will be more informed and authentic if we are in touch with qualified serving officers taking a proper role in campus life. America cannot afford the extent of mutual ignorance and stereotyping that presently exists between students at institutions like Columbia and the nation’s armed forces. The time is coming when Columbia must decide if it will help to solve this problem or to perpetuate it. Similarly, the government and the military must decide if they are willing to pay for a more diversified and educationally qualified officer corps and strive for a better cultural and regional balance among the military’s future leadership.

The strongest case for an ROTC presence at Columbia is based on a long historical view and a sense of civic obligation in the present historical moment. Unlike European historical experience, the United States enjoyed an “inheritance of free security.” Protected by vast oceans and not threatened on its borders, America had no large, standing military. In its three biggest wars — the Civil War and two world wars – America created huge, temporary militaries of citizen-soldiers in which about 12% of the population served. In the Vietnam War the comparable figure was 4%. Today the figure is 1%. Conscription is a policy of the past, both for political and military reasons. When military service is neither broadly shared nor socially representative, we must guard against the military becoming isolated from the national society and, equally, against the isolation of civilian society from those who serve it under arms. Selective, private universities like Columbia, not legally obligated to have ROTC programs, are properly called upon to address this civic and educational responsibility.

That the military is voluntary and relatively small means that many citizens no longer face first hand, and in their personal circles of friends, family and neighbors, the military consequences of national policies. Current recruitment policies at both commissioned and non-commissioned ranks, tend to increase the proportion of serving military whose parents, close relatives and neighbors also served. It is not good for a democracy that smaller proportion of its population are concentrated in military service while others, particularly its professional and economic elites, pursue their lives at a personal and psychological distance from the nation’s armed forces.

At Columbia, how many Columbia students know fellow citizens in military service? How many have talked seriously with fellow students who are veterans or in an ROTC program? How many have a first-hand sense of one of the nation’s most important institutions? Columbia should seek to lessen the distance and incomprehension between its students, many of whom will become leaders in American society, and fellow citizens in military service. Shared experience with other students, both in agreement and controversy, is at the core of education for life. As matters stand, Columbia abets the most insulated tendencies in the military, contributing to a mutual incomprehension that damages the civic health of American democracy.

American social, professional and economic elites prefer to have other people’s children in military service. The egregious under-representation of the privileged and their children in the armed forces is a civic scandal. Today, when military service is voluntary, superior social position and prospects imply distance from the consequences of the nation’s strategic choices, be they wise or foolish. e. It is distasteful in a democracy that its social, professional and economic elite is so largely absent from the military which the American polity asks to serve it. Should Columbia adopt the same posture toward military service as do privileged elites and their institutions in general – namely, take a free ride, while cheering or deploring from a safe and vicarious distance? Or will it enter into an educational relationship with the military profession as it does with others?

Obvious and intrinsic differences between military and academic cultures  encourage the righteousness with which some reject an ROTC program at Columbia. However, this position is not civically virtuous. Questions of war and peace, and of military enterprises of varying scope and substance, are central for the indefinite future. The clear distinctions between peace and war prevailing in the American past have eroded. For better or worse, America is likely over the long term to be in some kind of “war” while also remaining in some sort of “peace.” The nation requires broadly educated military leaders and, equally, citizens whose understanding of the military is based not in stereotypes but authentic knowledge.

Among reasons offered for rejecting ROTC are hatred of war and opposition to national policies. Hatred of war is a noble virtue but, principled pacifism apart, American citizenship requires serious engagement with military issues. There have been, and will be, “good wars” and “bad wars.” It is not appropriate for the university as an institution to endorse or oppose particular strategic choices. Rather, Columbia must decide if ROTC is properly among its enduring educational purposes – not temporarily during “bad” or “good” wars, but continuously. Military institutions are a central feature of the American polity and will continue to be so for an indefinite future. We may wish it otherwise, and as citizens we differ sharply on the nation’s strategic choices and the role of military force. These are urgent matters for public debate, but the question of ROTC bears on us in terms specific to the university.

As citizens, we are summoned to sound our voices on matters of war and peace, and listen to those of others. As students and faculty we have obligations distinctive to an academic community. Given Columbia’s place in the national academic system and in a great and diverse city, the quality and cultural variety of our students, and our intellectual and technical resources, we should feel obligated to welcome the return of ROTC. Site of a great upheaval during the receding 1960s, Columbia is well placed symbolically, superbly located geographically, and excellently equipped intellectually, to make this great educational and civic contribution to the nation.

Elections for Secretary and Events for Week of 10/13/08

1.  Secretary Election ~ Candidacy Declaration – 10/17
2.  Veterans Day Parade Sign Up – 10/16
3.  SIWP Event – 10/16
4.  Law School Information Session for Milvets Only – 10/16
5.  Making Strides Cancer Walk at Central Park – 10/19


1.  Secretary Election ~ Candidacy Declaration DEADLINE is Friday, October 17th at Noon.

Candidacy declaration is taking place right now.  You can nominate yourself or someone else.  All nominations will be seconded and added to the ballot by the electoral committee.  Only written nominations sent via email to milvets@gmail.com will be considered and validated.  Nominations will close on Friday at noon.  NO EXCEPTIONS WILL BE MADE, so get your nominations in early!
Secretary will be responsible for taking minutes at all GB meetings and e-board meetings.  Additionally the secretary will work with the President and Director of Communications to send weekly email updates as well as keeping the milvets blog up to date with events and minutes.  Secretary will serve on the executive board as the 3rd voting member of the board.
If you have any questions or wish to nominate a candidate please email us at milvets@gmail.com.

2.  Veterans Day Parade Sign Up – 10/16

We have been invited by the UWVC to March in the parade and/or be part of the Intrepid for the Presidential Address..
Info for those wanting to march only.
Parade begins with Mayors opening ceremony at 1000AM-1115AM, then march begins at 11:30-3:30 PM from 26th-56th ST…. see www.unitedwarveterans.org for more march info…You will be in the back of the formation with the IRAQ/AFGHANISTAN group. We need a group POC for those Marching as well as register MILVETS on their website with a headcount.
Intrepid Info:
For those wanting to be part of the presidential address at the Intrepid here is the info:
ALL must arrive NLT 0930, go through security (NO bags and have to go through metal detector) then await on the pier (Address will be on the pier in fron of Intrepid.) HMX-1 will land on the Intrepid then ceremony will begin at 11:30am (Dress for this is Business Attire/ unless you’re there with your Military unit for some members).
* After the ceremony is over, ALL Intrepid participants will March across 42nd st. and catch up with the tail end of Parade march in progress. So you will have a chance to march part of it. However, all Intrepid participants will NOT make the Mayor’s opening ceremony at 1000hrs due to Security screening at Intrepid at 0930.
** Suspense for ALL MILVETS participants/info will be due NLT 1700hrs 16 OCT 08 (I need a headcount of who wants to do what). We have a lot of planning commitments and need to start finalizing the seating arrangements  & Line of March. Please email me direct with any questions/concerns ASAP.
*** Also, as previously mentioned we have been asked to provide one person to sign the Presidential proclamation on behalf of Milvets and be part of the group on the Intrepid to present it to him..Criteria for this is still TBD… however, let the us know whose interested in this as well as willing to put in volunteer hours on behalf of the UWVC.
*** Don’t forget we also need to recruit Volunteers to work this gig as parade Marshals!

3.  SIWP Event – 10/16
The Arnold A. Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies, Columbia
University, presents:

KYLE LONGLEY
Chair of the Department of History, Arizona State University

“THE VIETNAM GRUNT”

Thursday, October 16, 2008
12:15pm – 2:00pm
Room 1302, 13th Floor
School of International and Public Affairs
420 W. 118th Street
New York City

Dr. Kyle Longley received his Ph.D. at the University of Kentucky in history in December of 1993.  Since 1995, Longley has taught at Arizona State University as an associate professor of history where he is the Snell Family Dean’s Distinguished Professor and director of graduate studies. Longley has been awarded the Faculty Development Grant (1995), Moody Fellowship, Lyndon B. Johnson Foundation (1995), College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Research Grant (1996), Franklin D. Roosevelt Foundation travel grant (1996), College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Travel Grant (1997), College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Research Award (1999), Lyndon B. Johnson Foundation Grant (2001), and the A.B. Thomas Book Award for outstanding book published in 1997 on Latin American Studies by the Southeastern Council on Latin American Studies.

Currently, he serves as the chair for the department of history, Carnegie Initiative on the Doctorate, Chair of the Department Seven-Year Review Committee, Chair of Department of History Undergraduate Curriculum Committee, and is a member of the Department of History Graduate Admissions

4.  Law School Information Session for Milvets Only – 10/16
Columbia Law School Information Session
When: Thursday, 16 Oct 2008 from 7:00 – 8:00 PM
Where West Ramp Lounge in Lerner

Some student veterans at Columbia Law School will be holding an information session for CU MilVets regarding everything that is involved with applying to law school. They should have some good information regarding studying for the LSAT, writing your personal statement, and what to expect in law school.

5.  Making Strides Cancer Walk at Central Park – 10/19

Date: Sunday, October 19, 2008
Time: Registration and a rolling start – 9 am to 11 am
Location: Central Park – 72nd Street Bandshell
Maps: 2008 Route Map |  2008 Site Map

Important Walk Day Information

EVENT DETAILS

  • Making Strides Against Breast Cancer of Central Park is a 5-mile non-competitive walk.
  • There is no registration fee or fundraising minimum.
  • Everyone is welcome!
  • Central Park 72nd Street Bandshell may be accessed from 72nd Street and Fifth Avenue or Central Park West.
  • The event will be held rain or shine.
  • The walk route is handicap and stroller friendly.
  • There is an alternate route of 4 miles.  Click here for a map of the route.
  • For the safety of our participants, we request that pets are kept on a short leash.
  • Hand-held signs only: Distribution or display of promotional materials of any kind is not allowed. Only hand-held team signage is allowed.
  • It is highly suggested to meet your team outside of the park and walk in together. Click here for suggestions.
  • A snack bag will be given to all participants at the end of the walk.
  • Smoking and alcohol are prohibited at all American Cancer Society events.

Come join our team or participate by making a donation to our team.

As always if you have any questions or comments please feel free to contact me at anytime.

Cheers,
Peter


Peter S. Kim
President
U.S. Military Veterans of Columbia University

Upcoming Events: The Arnold A. Saltzman Institute Of War And Peace Studies

“Choosing Enemies and Friends

in the Middle East”

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Sir Lawrence Freedman

King’s College London

Sir Lawrence Freedman has been Professor of War Studies at King’s College London since 1982. In 2002 he became Head of the School of Social Sciences and Public Policy at King’s College London. He has written extensively on nuclear strategy and the Cold War, as well as commentating regularly on contemporary security issues. His books include an Adelphi Paper on The Revolution in Strategic Affairs, an edited book on Strategic Coercion, an illustrated book on The Cold War, a collection of essays on British defense policy and Kennedy’s Wars that covers the major crises of the early 1960s over Berlin, Cuba and Vietnam. In addition a book on deterrence was published in 2004 and the Official History of the Falklands Campaign was published in the summer of 2005. Before joining King’s, he held research appointments at Nuffield College Oxford, the International Institute for Strategic Studies, London, and the Royal Institute of International Affairs, London. Elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 1995, he was appointed Official Historian of the Falklands Campaign in 1997.

Moderated by Professor Robert Jervis

Adlai E. Stevenson Professor of International Politics

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

2:15pm – 4:00pm
Room 1512, 15th Floor
School of International and Public Affairs
420 W. 118th Street
New York City

“The Vietnam Grunt”

Your browser may not support display of this image.Kyle Longley

Snell Family Dean’s Distinguished Professor, Chair of the Department of History
Arizona State University

Dr. Kyle Longley received his Ph.D. at the University of Kentucky in history in December of 1993.  Since 1995, Longley has taught at Arizona State University as an associate professor of history where he is the Snell Family Dean’s Distinguished Professor and director of graduate studies. Longley has been awarded the Faculty Development Grant (1995), Moody Fellowship, Lyndon B. Johnson Foundation (1995), College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Research Grant (1996), Franklin D. Roosevelt Foundation travel grant (1996), College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Travel Grant (1997), College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Research Award (1999), Lyndon B. Johnson Foundation Grant (2001), and the A.B. Thomas Book Award for outstanding book published in 1997 on Latin American Studies by the Southeastern Council on Latin American Studies.

Currently, he serves as the chair for the department of history, Carnegie Initiative on the Doctorate, Chair of the Department Seven-Year Review Committee, Chair of Department of History Undergraduate Curriculum Committee, and is a member of the Department of History Graduate Admissions

Thursday, October 16, 2008

12:15pm – 2:00pm
Room 1302, 13thth Floor
School of International and Public Affairs
420 West 118th Street
New York City

“Suicide Bombers:

A Path to Paradise”

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Anat Berko     Farhana Ali

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Anat Berko is lecturer at the International Center for Counter-Terrorism in Herzilya Israel, as well as a consultant to the Israeli National Security Council and for the academic year 2008-2009 is a Visiting Professor at George Washington, University. Previously Dr. Berko served in the Israeli Defense Forces for over 20 years and was a senior member of Israel’s intelligence services.  She is widely recognized as an authority on radical Islam and suicide bombers, having conducted extensive personal interviews with captured terrorists over some two decades.  Her most recent book, The Path to Paradise: The Inner World of Suicide Bombers and Their Dispatchers, published in English in 2008 was based on her extensive interviews with terrorists and suicide bombers held in Israel, including the founder of Hamas and other key figures.

Farhana Ali has been a policy analyst with the RAND Corporation since 2005, and a Senior Research Fellow with the Center for Advanced Studies on Terrorism (CAST) since 2007.  Prior to joining RAND, she worked at the Central Intelligence Agency where she was the first American-Muslim woman to be hired into the Counter-Terrorism Department.  For her unique understanding of conflicts in the Muslim world as well as Islamic doctrine and related issues she received several Meritorious Service Awards.  Her research is focused on the evolution of global terrorism, political trends in key Muslim countries such as Pakistan, and Muslim female bombers. For nearly a decade, she has examined terrorist groups in Pakistan and the emerging trend of women’s role in al-Qaida and local jihadi groups. Ms. Ali has published several articles on the strategic U.S.-Pakistan alliance and presented her work to the National Defense University (Islamabad), and Pakistan Institute of International Affairs (Karachi), as well as numerous U.S. audiences. She frequently visits Pakistan in support of her ongoing research, which includes evaluating the terrorist threat in the tribal region and interviews with ex-mujahideen in Kashmir.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

12:10pm – 2:00pm
Room 1501, 15
th Floor
School of International and Public Affairs
420 W. 118th Street
New York City

China Policy Issues”

Thomas Christensen

Professor of Politics and International Affairs, Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs

Princeton University

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Thomas J. Christensen’s research and teaching focus on international relations theory, the international relations of East Asia, and China’s foreign relations. He has published a book, Useful Adversaries: Grand Strategy, Domestic Mobilization, and SinoAmerican Conflict, 1947-1958, and many articles, including “Theater Missile Defense and Taiwan’s Security” (Orbis); “China: Getting the Questions Right,” with Richard K. Betts (The National Interest); “Posing Problems without Catching Up” (International Security); and “Deterring a Taiwan Conflict: The Contemporary Security Dilemma” (Washington Quarterly). He is currently working on projects relating to alliances in East Asia, the growth of Chinese power, and U.S. strategy toward East Asia. He consults often for the U.S. government and in 2002 was presented with a Distinguished Public Service Award by the United States Department of State. A graduate of Haverford College, Christensen earned his M.A. from the University of Pennsylvania and his Ph.D. from Columbia University.

Thursday, November 13, 2008

12:15pm – 2:00pm
Room 707, 7th Floor
School of International and Public Affairs
420 West 118th Street
New York City

U.S. Military Veterans of Columbia University & Making Strides

Join U.S. Military Veterans of Columbia University and thousands of other caring New Yorkers by participating this Sunday, October 19th, 2008 at the annual Making Strides Against Breast Cancer Walk in Central Park.

2008 Making Strides Against Breast Cancer of Central Park, NY
Sunday, October 19, 2008
Central Park – 72nd Street Bandshell
Registration and a rolling start – 9 am to 11 am

If you can’t come and walk, you can participate by making a donation to this great cause.  For more information please follow the link below.  Hope to see you all there!

http://main.acsevents.org/site/TR/MakingStridesAgainstBreastCancer/MSABCFY09Eastern/1509481788?pg=team&fr_id=11618&team_id=347531

Columbia University War Memorial

The Office of the Provost is creating a digital and searchable Columbia War Memorial which will exist on line and in a fixed kiosk on campus which will be unveiled this year in mid-December. We are attempting to include images and information about those alumni who died in the service of their country in wars in which the United States participated in an official capacity: that includes World War I, World War II, Korea, Vietnam, the Gulf War, Afghanistan and Iraq.

We would appreciate any information that any alumnus can supply regarding members of any school under Columbia University who passed away in the service of their country. If possible, please include the person’s name, year they received or would have received the degree (class), date of death, war, and an image or a letter or any other similar materials–and any other information you may have about the circumstances in which they died.  Please contact Vivian Ducat (vsd2001@columbia.edu) if you have any information.

General Body Meeting 09/18/08

Ladies and Gents,

This Thursday MilVets will be holding our first general body meeting since orientation week to discuss several important issues and objective for this semester. The information is as follows-

What: First the meeting will start with an overview on subject that we as veterans need to be aware of. Issues like military conduct in academic environments and issues that are presented to veterans when transferring from military to academia/civilian life. Secondly, I’m not sure if you have been to http://www.columbia.edu/cu/usmilvetscu/ recently, but the website sucks. We are looking for anyone with computer skills to help make a new site for MilVets so that new students can access information and employers can seek out veteran Columbia students. Third, we still need help with our biggest project to date. This December MilVets will be hosting a Black Tie event for Columbia Veterans.  As you can assume, this will not be an easy event to pull off and we need all the help we can get.

Where: Board Room 503 in Lerner (It is on the 5th floor toward the southeast of the building)

When: 18th September 2008 from 7~8:30 pm

As always, if there are any issues regarding your GI benefits, ideas for projects that the MilVets can work on, or questions you may have being a veteran here at Columbia, this is the time to bring it up.

Sean O’Keefe

408-218-2602

The Post 9/11 GI Bill

As many of you know, President Bush has signed the Post-9/11 GI Bill into law. Attached to this email, you will find a copy of the VA’s FAQ regarding the new program.

Importantly, the Post 9/11 GI Bill will only cover approved education related expenses incurred after 31 July 2009. This program is not retroactive. If you have already used some or all of your MGIB benefits, you’re out of luck. Any unused benefits can be transfered to the new program. Moreover, it appears that if you choose to use your MGIB benefits for the 2008 – 2009 academic year, you will NOT be compensated at the new rates for that period. You should consider the following information before you decide to use your benefits under the old MGIB:

1. The current E-5 BAH rate for New York City is 2244.00 per month. For a 9 month academic year, this portion of the benefit is approximately $20,196.00.

2. Under the new program, your tuition benefits are capped at the tuition for the most expensive public undergraduate program within the state in which you attend. To the best of my knowledge, the most expensive school in NY is SUNY College of Technology – Alfred, meaning the tuition cap will be $9,678.00.

3. In cases where these benefits do not fully cover the cost of an education, the the Post 9/11 GI Bill contains a provision that provides additional benefits to vets who attend private universities that have elected to participate in a public – private fund matching program. Essentially, the federal government will match the contributions that private universities make to help cover the remaining cost of tuition and fees.

Clearly, using your MGIB benefits for the 2008-2009 academic year represents a significant opportunity cost. However, you may still want to check out the following link for a comparison between the MGIB and the Post 9/11 GI Bill to further inform your decision:

http://education.military.com/money-for-school/gi-bill/new-gi-bill-overview

If you have any further questions, please feel free to email me at ata2107@columbia.edu

Best,

Aaron T. Alfson
U.S. Military Veterans of Columbia University
Director of Legislative Affairs
SVA Representative

A word from SVA

GI Bill Vote in Senate within Next Few Days

All,

As of the events of last week, and the passage of the GI Bill through the house, I’ve come down to D.C. for a last minute, “emergency” lobbying trip. The GI Bill will be voted on within the next few days in the senate and we need your help. We have the near 60 votes required to override a veto (which the President has promised), but nothing is for sure. So far SVA has been extremely successful in advocating and garnering support from members of senate, such as with SVA’s Regional Director John Powers and the whole Northeastern region getting Senator’s Reed and Specter to sign on as cosponsors.

Is what we need is for you to contact your senators D.C. offices and if they are already cosponsoring the S.22 to thank them for their continued support of veterans and for them to vote for the S.22; and if they are not, tell them they need to vote for the S.22 and that this bill is the only veterans educational reform which will adequetely take care of vets when they return from war. Please ask your friends, family, and anyone you know willing to make a call to make it.
Here is the url to find the number to your senators D.C. office:
http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/senators_cfm.cfm

You can also use the action center on www.newgibill.org to send a quick email. It literally takes less than a minute and can make a huge difference.

Also, use the following arguments to help in convincing the legislative aid you are speaking with, be sure when you call to ask to speak with the veterans legislative aid. The bill has bipartisan support, is supported by Collin Powell, as well as Tom Ridge (one of Senator McCain’s advisors). And is THE ONLY BILL THAT WILL PAY FOR YOUR (OR ANOTHER VETERANS) EDUCATION. If the people calling are vets make sure they tell him where and how many times they deployed, and how they feel this bill is an absolute necessity to your and other veterans futures. If you have any stories of difficulties with GI Bill be sure to share them as well.

Finally, if they are not sponsoring the bill let them know that after last weeks successes, it WILL pass and you would like to see them supporting the bill when it does.

Thanks again for all of your hardwork, and again please take a few minutes to make a phone call to your senator’s D.C. office, it really could make the difference. Hope to hear from you soon.

-Derek

Derek Blumke
President
Student Veterans of America
derek.blumke@studentveterans.org