How the Bush administration honors our soldiers

Nothing is more important to the administration of Our Sainted President™ than the well-being of our brave soldiers… unless, of course, it’s a little bureaucratic sleight-of-hand to trim a few bucks from the soldiers’ benefits:

Approximately 2,600 members of the Minnesota National Guard recently returned home after serving multiple tours of duty in Iraq. They served 22 months — “longer than any other ground combat unit” — received nine fatalities, and were awarded dozens of Purple Hearts.

But the Army wrote the orders for 1,162 of these soldiers for 729 days, making them ineligible for full educational benefits under the GI Bill, which requires written orders saying they were deployed for 730 days or more. These soldiers were shorted more than $200 per month for college.

First Lt. Jon Anderson believes that the military deliberately cut short their orders to avoid paying the soldiers’ education benefits:

It’s pretty much a slap in the face. I think it was a scheme to save money, personally. I think it was a leadership failure by the senior Washington leadership…once again failing the soldiers.

Where, one wonders, is the outrage from the 101st Fighting Keyboarders?

UPDATE 10/07/07 08:33 AM EDT: Austin Cline points out that mercenaries of necessity sap money from the military budget, and that the actions of the Blackwater mercenaries in Iraq have most certainly put our troops in danger.