Pentagon
to recall most furloughed employees despite shutdown
The
Pentagon is ordering most of its approximately 400,000 civilian
Defense Department employees back to work after being furloughed
following the government shutdown.
RT,
5
October, 2013
The
decision by Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel is based on the legal
review of Pay Our Military Act, which was signed into law on
September 30, 2013 - just hours before the government officially shut
down.
"I
expect us to be able to significantly reduce - but not eliminate -
civilian furloughs under this process,"
Hagel said.
"Employees
can expect to hear more information from their managers starting this
weekend."
There
has been much speculation from senior figures in the army and
intelligence agencies that the shutdown is posing a significant
threat to US national security.
“I’ve
never seen anything like this. In my view I think this, on top of the
sequestration cuts, seriously damages the safety and security of the
nation,”
James Clapper, the director of national intelligence, said during a
Wednesday Senate Judiciary Committee hearing which was convened to
discuss NSA surveillance powers.
“This
affects our global capability to support the military, to support
diplomacy, and to support our policymakers. And the danger here, of
course, that this will accumulate over time - the damage will be
insidious. So each day that goes by, the jeopardy increases,"
said Clapper.
The
army is currently furloughing all “non-essential” personnel,
particularly those not involved in live operations abroad.
Hagel
said while on an official visit to south Asia this week that lawyers
for the Pentagon and the US administration were looking at ways to
expand the number of defense department personnel who are exempt from
furloughs.
He
also voiced concern that the shutdown damages America’s reputation
among its allies as a reliable partner.
“It
does cast a very significant pall over America’s credibility to our
allies when this kind of things happens,”
Hagel told reporters traveling with him.
For
many Pentagon workers, the shutdown is the second time this year that
they have been forced to take unpaid leave. Back in August, over
600,000 civilian defense employees were required to take unpaid leave
in an effort to reduce spending after across-the-board budget cuts
went into force in March.
“This
has been a very disruptive year for our people,”
Hagel said.
Meanwhile,
US sailors have complained about delays in annual payments of
re-enlistment bonuses, which are typically paid by October 1.
Military academies have reduced their scheduled classes and even
commissaries that sell groceries to military families have been
closed.
Earlier
Saturday, the Republican-dominated House of Representatives
unanimously
voted
to approve a bill which will see the 800,000 furloughed workers paid
retrospectively once the crisis has been resolved.
The
House voted 407-0 and the bill will now be sent to the Senate, which
is controlled by the Democrats. The White House has announced that
President Obama will sign the measure into law once it passes
Congress.
The
shutdown was the result of a lack of agreement between Republicans
and Democrats in the House of Representatives over the passing of the
federal budget.
The
Republican majority in the House refused to accept President Obama’s
Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare, which formally went into
effect on Tuesday.
On
Saturday, Obama urged the House to “stop
this farce”
and end the shutdown by unconditionally approving the federal budget.
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