Party Over At Fort Bliss As Drinking Age Raised To 21

Team Infidel

Forum Spin Doctor
Houston Chronicle
May 30, 2008 Commander also bans soldiers from crossing border to visit Ciudad Juarez
By Alicia A. Caldwell, Associated Press
FORT BLISS — This military base in the far West Texas desert stood as the last Army post in America where if you were old enough to fight and die for your country, you were old enough to drink a beer.
But the party is over at Fort Bliss.
Citing too many drunken-driving crashes and arrests and too many fights, the new commanding general has raised the drinking age on base from 18 to 21, bringing the 17,000-soldier Fort Bliss into line with what has been the law in the rest of Texas since 1986.
And not only that, but all Fort Bliss soldiers are barred from slipping across the Mexican border to Ciudad Juarez, the city of famously loose morals where young Americans have been getting drunk — and getting into trouble — for generations. From now on, no passes to Juarez will be issued.
The new policy took effect May 22.
Pfc. Walter Iverson, a babyfaced 19-year-old, said he will miss grabbing a beer after work: "It's like my parents say, I'm old enough to join the Army, but I'm not old enough to drink.
"I don't know why they changed it. I never had a problem with drinking," he said. A few guys "ruined it for everyone."
Other Army bases around the country raised their drinking age to 21 over the past 20 years or so.
Many states went to 21 under federal pressure beginning in the mid-1980s, and 21 is now the law in all 50 states.
For the past 28 years, however, Fort Bliss let young soldiers drink. For most of that period, it was peacetime, and things were calm on base. Also, commanders figured that letting soldiers drink on base would discourage them from going to Juarez.
But now units are routinely shipping back and forth to Iraq and Afghanistan, and base officials say young men and women have been using alcohol to blow off steam — too much steam.
Maj. Gen. Howard Bromberg, who took over in January, cracked down after a review of base crime statistics showed that in late 2007 and early 2008, sexual assaults, domestic violence and traffic accidents by soldiers who were 18, 19 or 20 involved alcohol more often than not.
Before the war, "we didn't have a large number of incidents involving younger soldiers," said Fort Bliss spokeswoman Jean Offutt. "We weren't in a wartime situation, which made for a difference in behavior upon returning."
 
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