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WEAPONS OF CHOICE
Military demands details on soldiers' private guns
Fort Campbell command reversed under pressure
Posted: March 21, 2009
12:15 am Eastern
By Bob Unruh
© 2009 WorldNetDaily
A military commander at Fort Campbell
in Kentucky demanded his soldiers give him the registration numbers of
any guns they own privately and then reveal where they are stored.
The order was stopped, according to base officials, when it was discovered the commander was not "acting within his authority."
The
original order was issued on the letterhead of Charlie Company, 3rd
Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment and said effective March 11, any
soldier with a "privately owned weapon" was required to submit the
information, along with any information about any concealed carry
permit the soldier may have, and what state issued the permit.
Further, the rule warned, "If any soldier comes into possession of a
Privately Owned Weapon following the effective date of this memorandum,
he is required to inform the Chain of Command of the above
information."
One soldier who objected to the demands circulated the memo, commenting that he lives off post.
"It just seems a little coincidental to me that within 90 days the most anti-firearm president in history is inaugurated, some of the nastiest anti-firearm laws are put on the table in Washington,
and then the Army comes around wanting what amounts to a registration
on all firearms, even if they are off post, and doesn't provide any
reason or purpose as to why," the soldier said.
Base spokeswoman Cathy Gramling told WND the letter apparently
was a mistake. She said the base requires anyone bringing a privately
owned weapon onto the installation to register it.
"As a response to a number of negligent discharges of privately owned
weapons, the command decided to explore how to implement a training
program for soldiers with privately owned weapons. Their goal is to
identify soldiers with firearms and provide additional safety training
to them, much like our motorcycle and driver safety classes," she said.
"Our soldiers train and operate in combat with M-4 carbines and various
other military weapons, but not all who purchase their own weapons are
properly trained to handle them. Determining which soldiers possess
weapons will allow the command to identify the soldiers who may require
additional training on them," she said.
Learn here why it's your right – and duty – to be armed.
Gramling said the memo was "from a subordinate unit commander
who, at the time, believed he was acting within his authority." She
said requiring the information was halted when it was discovered the
commander was not within his authority.
The process has been suspended pending a full review, she said.
"This is not an effort to infringe on soldiers' rights to own firearms," Gramling told WND.
Mistake or not, the commander's order comes
on the heels of a Department of Defense policy that limited the supply
of ammunition available to the private gun owners by requiring
destruction of fired military cartridge brass.
That policy already had been implemented and had taken a bite
out of the nation's stressed ammunition supply before it was reversed
this week.
Mark Cunningham, a legislative affairs representative with the Defense Logistics Agency, explained in an e-mail to the office of Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., that the Department of Defense had placed small arms cartridge cases on its list of sensitive munitions items as part of an overall effort to ensure national security is not jeopardized in the sale of any Defense property.
"Upon review, the Defense Logistics Agency has determined the
cartridge cases could be appropriately placed in a category of
government property allowing for their release for sale," Cunningham
wrote.
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Isa 52:15 - "So shall he sprinkle many nations; the kings shall shut their mouths at him: for that which had not been told them shall they see; and that which they had not heard shall they consider."