Sen. Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., chairman of the Senate
Veterans’ Affairs Committee, insisted throughout a hearing last week that he
and Department of Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie will deliver a
solution to extend VA disability benefits and health care to veterans who
served on ships off the coast of Vietnam during that war and today have
conditions VA presumes are linked to toxic defoliants sprayed on land.
But Wilkie, the only witness at the “State of the VA”
hearing, wasn’t prepared to echo the chairman’s assurances. Wilkie didn’t even
mention the House-passed Blue Water Navy Vietnam Veterans Act (HR 299) in his
oral statement highlighting priorities for improving VA’s organization and
services.
In his written testimony, he reiterated VA opposition to
extending benefits for up to 90,000 aging Blue Water Navy veterans and
survivors, saying VA’s “commitment to science and an evidence-based approach to
creating or expanding [Agent Orange] presumptions should be maintained.”
If HR 299 is enacted absent stronger scientific evidence
that shipboard veterans were exposed to wartime defoliants, Wilkie wrote, it
“would erode confidence in the soundness and fairness of the veterans’
disability benefits system, creating the impression that the system can be
gamed by political activism.”
Also, he argued, it would increase pressure on VA to
“expand additional presumptions administratively, under a similarly liberal
approach, favoring less deserving but politically demanding veterans over more
deserving veterans who trust VA to do the right thing for all veterans.”
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