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Thursday, August 30, 2012

VFW at the RNC: Defense Issues Take Center Stage Wednesday

The Amputee Veterans of America Support Team set the tone for day two of the Republican National Convention when they took center stage Wednesday to present our nation’s colors with Ayla Brown, daughter of National Guardsman and Massachusetts Sen. Scott Brown, singing the Star-Spangled Banner.

Jeanine McDonnell, a veteran of Operation Iraqi Freedom and daughter of Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell, spoke as one of the 212,000 service women who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan over the past decade. Her central message: “We need leaders who don’t play chicken with our nation’s defense.”

She was not alone in referencing the military and veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. Many of the speakers last night, including Arizona Sen. John McCain and former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, made foreign policy and our military and veterans’ communities the cornerstone of their remarks.

McCain struck hard at President Obama for his handling of the situation in Libya and Syria, and for the pending cuts to the Department of Defense that the senator claimed were substituting military strategy with a political timetable.

Rice connected with the crowd early in her speech by recognizing we are “fortunate to have men and women who volunteer – they volunteer to defend us on the front lines of freedom,” and urged everyone to remember that “we owe them our eternal gratitude.” She also spoke of the challenges the previous administration faced as well as the ongoing sacrifices of those who continue to serve on our behalf.

These comments came on the heels of Mitt Romney’s remarks yesterday afternoon at the American Legion national convention, where he pledged to not increase fees on TRICARE; however, back here in Tampa, the remarks of his vice presidential running-mate, Paul Ryan, were noticeably devoid of words about our military or our veterans.

Though Ryan did publicly thank veterans in the context of sacrifices made by the “founding generation,” our leaders must also be attuned to the needs of those serving today, who are living with physical and emotional scars from more recent conflicts in our nation’s history.

Last night’s speakers were all a prologue for Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney, who speaks tonight to officially accepting his party’s nomination. Will he deliver for veterans, service members and their families? Stay tuned.

(Image: Vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan and his family wave to the crowd last night during the Republican National Convention. Photo by Shane Barker.)

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