In recent years, both Republicans and Democrats in Congress have backed privatization of services provided by the Veterans Health Administration (VHA). As part of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), the VHA serves about nine million patients and operates the largest public health care system in the country.
Up until now, few Republicans, or their allies like the Koch
brothers–funded Concerned Veterans for America (CVA), dared to attack the
VA-run Veterans Benefits Administration (VBA), a sacred cow even for
conservatives. Nearly six million veterans currently receive payments for
service-related medical conditions that left them partially or totally
impaired; among them are 1.3 million men and women who served in Iraq and
Afghanistan. Their total compensation, plus pensions, costs the public about
$110 billion per year.
Publication of a new book, touted by Trump’s last VA
secretary, signals that any ceasefire over veterans’ benefits has ended inside
the Beltway. In Wounding Warriors: How Bad Policy is Making Veterans Sicker and
Poorer, Daniel Gade, a retired US Army lieutenant colonel and former Trump
administration official, has teamed up with an ex–Wall Street Journal reporter,
Daniel Huang, to demand major “entitlement reform” at the VBA.
The authors — who are definitely not critics of the
military-industrial complex — denounce what they call a “disability-industrial
complex.” They argue that monthly checks from the VBA foster a costly and
unhealthy culture of dependence among veterans — and should be sharply
restricted, not expanded.
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