*Wrong question, wrong answer: Army chief of staff rejects on-post carry*

By J.E. Dyer <http://libertyunyielding.com/author/rightbrain/> April 9, 2016
<http://libertyunyielding.com/2016/04/09/wrong-question-wrong-answer-army-chief-staff-rejects-post-carry/>

[image: Wrong question, wrong answer: Army chief of staff rejects on-post
carry]

(Image: Screen grab of CSPAN video via YouTube, WFB)

A nice little lesson here in how framing the proposition the wrong way
leads to a biased conclusion.

Jack Heretik reports
<http://freebeacon.com/national-security/army-chief-staff-strongly-guns-bases/>
at the *Washington Free Beacon* on recent Senate testimony given by General
Mark Milley, the Army chief of staff.  Senator Mike Lee 

100%

(R-UT) questioned Milley about personnel security on military facilities,
both bases and off-base recruiting stations.

Milley responded that personnel security for recruiting stations is best
managed by local commanders, who are familiar with the level of risk, local
laws, and other related conditions.  He stipulates the following about the
conditions of carry:

[S]ome of the constraints on that: people have to be trained, it must be a
government owned weapon, can’t carry privately owned weapons, et cetera.

But here is how he responded on the question of individual soldier carry on
bases.  (Video below.)

Note that Senator Lee did not mention *concealed* carry, with all that
implies, in his question.  It’s the general who frames the issue in those
terms:

Milley then answered about larger bases, saying that his preference for
increased security is that it would be better for more police and guards.

“In terms of carrying privately owned weapons on military bases, concealed,
privately owned weapons, that is not authorized. That is a DOD policy. I do
not recommend that it be changed. We have adequate law enforcement on those
bases to respond,” Milley said.

But hang on.  Who’s talking about carrying privately owned weapons,
concealed?

On a military base, the going-in proposition should not be that someone
with a concealed weapon might be ready to respond if an attacker starts
pumping rounds at people.

The going-in proposition should be that a military base is a hard target
because a lot of qualified, trained soldiers (in the case of the Army) are
walking around with regulation sidearms in regulation holsters, out where
everyone can see them.  Deterrence should be the organizing idea, more than
reaction.

Of course there should be rigorous qualifications for this, including (in
my view) a minimum grade, or rank, requirement, and a commanding officer’s
formal permission, granted only after a soldier meets demanding criteria.
This responsibility isn’t for the most junior soldiers in the enlisted
ranks.  It would have to be attended by rules that were part of an
entrenched culture of firearm safety and responsibility.

But that last sentence is the key.  General Milley speaks from the mindset
of an American culture that has come to treat firearms as too dangerous for
the people to be trusted with.  The culture sees the people themselves as
inherently untrustworthy, for a number of important purposes.  One of those
is being armed, and able to defend yourself and defuse situations in which
people’s lives are at risk.

There is a whole world of prejudicial assumptions behind the premise that
all handling of dangerous situations *must* be left to those formally
chartered for law enforcement.  Those assumptions have gone unexamined in
American public discussions for decades now.

But the price we’re beginning to pay for refusing to examine those
assumptions is very high.  It’s costing people their lives, whether they
are formally prohibited from defending themselves (as in some states), or
discouraged from defending themselves by cultural biases and assumptions.

Ultimately, the bias against seeing the people armed – even trained
soldiers on a military base – is a bad trend that works to the advantage of
excessive, improper government.

I have the greatest respect for General Milley, and I understand his
concern about the administrative challenges of allowing soldiers to go
armed on military bases.  The challenges are real.  It’s not like they’ve
never been faced before; keeping everyone disarmed, by default, on a
military base is a relatively recent development.  But changing the culture
back to accepting armed soldiers as a baseline would unquestionably require
effort and adjustment.

What Americans need to understand is that the members of the top military
brass are not going to push for that.  Now that they don’t have to
administer their forces on that basis, it just looks to them like a
headache.

The people themselves have to decide that’s how they want their military to
operate – because it’s how Americans live.  Not everyone has to embrace the
armed life, with its serious responsibilities.  But those who don’t choose
it must not be able to set the limits of fear and ignorance on those who do.

[image: J.E. Dyer]

*J.E. Dyer <http://libertyunyielding.com/author/rightbrain>*



*J.E. Dyer* is a retired Naval Intelligence officer who lives in Southern
California, blogging as The Optimistic Conservative for domestic
tranquility and world peace. Her articles have appeared at Hot Air,
Commentary’s Contentions, Patheos, The Daily Caller, The Jewish Press, and
The Weekly Standard.


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