Houston Chronicle

Obama orders review of soldier bonuses

- By David S. Cloud

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama has told the Defense Department to expedite its review of nearly 10,000 California National Guard soldiers who have been ordered to repay enlistment bonuses improperly given a decade ago, but he is not backing growing calls for Congress to waive the debts, the White House said Tuesday.

The comments by White House spokesman Josh Earnest suggest the administra­tion is running into legal and policy roadblocks as it struggles to handle a public relations headache for the Pentagon, the National Guard and members of Congress who were caught off guard by the scope of the problem.

Appeals filed by some solders to waive repayment of the bonuses, which frequently exceeded $15,000 per soldier, have “dragged on for too long,” Earnest told reporters in Beverly Hills, Calif., while Obama attended a fundraiser for Senate Democrats.

“We’re not going to nickeland-dime them when they get back, and we’re not going to hold service members responsibl­e unfairly for unethical conduct or fraud perpetrate­d by someone else,” Earnest said.

But he said the president was not yet backing bipartisan calls in Congress to fully forgive the overpaymen­ts of an estimated $70 million total that recruiters awarded to meet their enlistment quotas.

“His first priority is making sure that our men and women in uniform who signed up to fight for our safety overseas are treated fairly when they come home,” he said. “When we make a promise to our men and women in the military, we need to keep it.”

Responding to report

The White House response came after a Los Angeles Times report on Saturday said the Pentagon was demanding repayment of enlistment bonuses given to about 9,700 soldiers between 2007 to 2009 as the military was scrambling to fill its ranks. Many troops served multiple combat tours in Iraq and Afghanista­n.

Defense Secretary Ash Carter said Tuesday that the repayment program “has got its complexiti­es to it,” but that the Pentagon was “going to look into it and resolve it.”

“Anybody who volunteers to serve in the armed forces of the United States deserves our gratitude and respect, period,” Carter told reporters in Paris on the sidelines of a meeting of counterIsl­amic State coalition countries.

Deputy Defense Secretary Robert Work, the second-ranking official at the Defense Department, convened a senior-level meeting at the Pentagon early Tuesday morning to examine the repayments, officials said.

The Defense Department is looking at ways appeals “can be expedited” for soldiers “on an individual basis,” but it cannot issue blanket forgivenes­s of the debts, said Laura Ochoa, a Pentagon spokeswoma­n.

That may require action by Congress, which engaged in a bout of fierce finger-pointing Tuesday.

Members of the California delegation blamed California Guard officials in Sacramento for not alerting them to the scale of the problem in 2014 when the GOPled House considered — but did not pass — a provision that would have allowed the Defense secretary to waive the repayments.

Guard officials did not make clear the vast scale of the repayments sought from soldiers, and did not make waiving the debts a congressio­nal priority, several lawmakers said.

“If they would have come and said, ‘You’re going to have thousands of combat veterans having their wages garnished and tax liens being put on them, we would have been all over this,” said Rep. Duncan Hunter, RCalif. “That was never communicat­ed to us.”

Received complaints

Rep. Tony Cardenas, D-Calif., said neither the Pentagon nor State Guard officials told him about the large number of soldiers ordered to repay bonuses, though his office had received complaints from individual soldiers.

“I have no record of receiving any formal notice of this widespread issue from any department— federal or state. The only record I have is of individual cases of service members who approached my office to get help, and we are working with these individual­s who have served our country to make sure they are treated fairly,” he said.

California Guard officials say they informed California lawmakers about the scale of the debts in 2014, telling them in a list of legislativ­e priorities sent to each House office and the House Armed Services Committee that “thousands of soldiers have inadverten­tly incurred debt, through no fault of their own because of faulty Army recruiting or accounting practices.”

“Unfortunat­ely, no official process exists to adjudicate debt relief for Army National Guard soldiers, which has caused years of hardship for them and their families,” the document said.

The California Guard also sent members of Congress a draft provision to be included in the 2015 defense authorizat­ion bill to allow debt waivers for the affected soldiers. Reps. Paul Cook and Jeff Denham, both Republican­s, initially pushed the provision but later abandoned the effort, and it didn’t appear in the final bill.

Why the provision was not put into the bill was a subject of dispute Tuesday. Cook said he abandoned the effort after being told the Pentagon already had the power to waive the debts.

“I co-introduced an amendment that would specifical­ly provide the authority for the Secretary of the Army to waive debt payments,’ Cook said in a statement. “During this process, it was made clear that the Secretary already has this authority.”

But Guard officials said they were told that the provision was discarded because waiving the debt would have cost the Pentagon money, requiring the estimated costs to be offset with cuts elsewhere in the defense budget.

Denham declined to comment on why the provision was dropped in 2014.

“Our office has assisted every veteran who has called in requesting help,” said Jessica McFaul, Denham’s spokeswoma­n. “It is a protracted process, and we have one success story so far of the debt being forgiven, and another story in progress that is going well. The congressma­n is committed to follow through for every constituen­t who needs his help.”

 ?? Al Seib / Los Angeles Times ?? Robert D’Andrea, a retired Army major and Iraq war veteran, is among nearly 10,000 California National Guard soldiers who have been ordered to repay huge enlistment bonuses from a decade ago.
Al Seib / Los Angeles Times Robert D’Andrea, a retired Army major and Iraq war veteran, is among nearly 10,000 California National Guard soldiers who have been ordered to repay huge enlistment bonuses from a decade ago.

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