Pubdate: Sat, 15 Nov 2003 Source: Des Moines Register (IA) Copyright: 2003 The Des Moines Register. Contact: http://DesMoinesRegister.com/help/letter.html Website: http://desmoinesregister.com/index.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/123 Author: Bert Dalmer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/National+Guard Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) GUARD COMMAND IN TOUGH SPOT OVER DRUG TESTS National Guard commanders across the country face the excruciating decision of whether to discipline soldiers returning from Iraq who failed drug tests before they left the United States. Thirty-seven Iowa Army National Guard troops, briefed months in advance on the possibility of war in the Middle East, tested positive for illegal drugs on the eve of their deployment earlier this year, Army records show. Despite a "zero-tolerance" policy that initiates discharge papers against every Army soldier who uses drugs, 21 of the Iowa Guard violators were sent by the U.S. Army to assist military operations in Iraq and the Persian Gulf. Officials at one of the troops' assembly points, Fort McCoy, Wis., said Friday that some of the soldiers used the drugs intending to be caught and sent home. Others were deemed by medical officials to be infrequent users who posed no risk to themselves or their fellow soldiers in the field, said Fort McCoy spokeswoman Linda Fournier. "On a certain level, it would be perverse to throw people out because of their misconduct, when other people who did not engage in that misconduct are having to put their lives on the line," said Eugene Fidell, a military law expert with the National Institute of Military Justice. The Iowa troops who tested positive and proceeded to Iraq included two methamphetamine users, two cocaine users and a sergeant in the 1133rd Transportation Company who used both methamphetamines and amphetamines, records show. For now, the Army says it will overlook the unsightly details. "A positive on their drug test is not going to keep them here, unless there's a dependency issue," Fournier said. "These units have to have so many people to go overseas. As far as the disciplinary action, that will be dealt with when they come back." The specter of punishing troops who return from months of service under battle conditions has attorneys at Army bases pacing the hallways. "Everybody acknowledges that we're going to have to have a plan," said Maj. Michael Kuehn, state judge advocate for the Iowa National Guard. "There's a number of things like this that cannot be addressed by one state at a time. They have to be addressed by the big guns." Spokesmen for the U.S. Army and the U.S. Department of Defense said this week that they were unaware of the problem and could not provide any national incident rates on drug use by Guard soldiers in the Iraq theater. Under the Army's current drug policy, soldiers, especially those with three or more years of service, are often discharged for drug-positives as a matter of course. Younger soldiers, who can sometimes opt for rehabilitation at the discretion of their commanders, will no longer get so much leeway under a proposed tightening of the rules. "The official policy is, you don't have a whole lot of latitude," said Mark O'Hara, a 31-year Coast Guard veteran and spokesman for the Judge Advocates Association in Washington, D.C. "Maybe it's going to be tough if the guy comes back a hero." Officials at Fort McCoy, which serves as a jumping-off point for Reserve and Guard troops from Iowa, New York, New Jersey, Ohio, Idaho and other states, have sent roughly 20 soldiers to Iraq who tested positive in pre-deployment drug tests. Seven of the troops were from Iowa. All of the soldiers in question were tested in their home states, while they were still designated as state troops. But because of unusually quick deployment schedules, the test results in many cases were not known until the soldiers arrived at Fort McCoy - as federal troops. The jurisdictional distinction left National Guard commanders in the home states powerless to immediately discipline the soldiers. While some Army officials acknowledge a disconnect in the drug policy, which is designed to minimize mistakes in battle, they said other safeguards are in place. Fort McCoy officials said they were informed of all the states' drug-test results and kept a close eye on offending soldiers during several weeks of training and physical examinations. "Basically, if this person's a drug addict, it would come out during that period of time," Fournier said. "He would not be able to hide it, even if his commander were trying to cover it up." Less than 2 percent of the 2,158 drug tests administered by the Iowa Army National Guard since operations began in Iraq yielded positive results. Most of the illegal drug use involved marijuana. According to Army Guard records, 16 of the 37 soldiers were relieved of duty before they shipped out to U.S. Army bases around the country. Officials could not immediately provide information on any actions against those soldiers. Local commanders have not yet decided how to proceed with disciplinary actions against the Iowa soldiers sent to Iraq. Fidell said no one should assume that the troops will be discharged, until their performance in the field is considered. "In all military cases, there is such as thing as a "good soldier" defense. You can be prosecuted for murder, and at least try to defend yourself on the basis of your record," Fidell said. "I would have to assume that for any person who performed creditably in a theater of operations, the military would find a way to recognize that."