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NEWS FROM THE RANKING MEMBER OF THE U.S. SENATE COMMITTEE ON
VETERANS’ AFFAIRS SEN. CRAIG COMMITTED TO HELPING FILIPINO VETERANS April 16, 2007 (Washington, DC) U.S. Senator Larry Craig thanked Filipino
veterans who fought alongside U.S. troops during World War II
during a hearing held last Thursday and said he would work to
help improve the benefits they receive. Many of them had come to
Washington, D.C., to participate in and witness firsthand a
hearing held by the Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs. "Your service is undeniable. It is historical fact. Victory
in the Pacific would not have been assured without that help,"
said Craig (R-Idaho), the Ranking Member of the Committee.
The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs has maintained a
Regional Office in the Philippines since 1921 and currently
operates a medical clinic near the capital city of Manila. It is
the only VA facility located outside of the United States. A new
VA clinic will soon be built there as part of the U.S. plan to
build a new embassy, which is scheduled to be completed in 2010. The current VA clinic provides services to over 13,000
American veterans living in that island nation, as well medical
care for the "Philippine Scouts" – native Filipinos who served
in the U.S. Army's Philippine Department beginning in 1901 and
on through World War II. Those Filipinos already receive the
same benefits as other U.S. veterans. But Craig said he will not support a new legislative proposal
(S. 57) – in its current form – which would grant full VA
benefits to those who served in the Philippine Commonwealth Army
and to another group known as the New Philippine Scouts. "While Filipino veterans were certainly U.S. nationals at the
time of the war, a fact which heightens our obligation to them,
they were also on a path to full independence as members of a
sovereign nation. Yes, they fought for U.S. interests against a
common enemy. But they also fought for their own homeland. As
such, I believe that the governments of the Philippines and the
United States collectively share responsibility for the care of
these veterans," Craig said. The Philippine government pays approximately $100 per month
to its veterans who served during World War II. But if the U.S.
began paying those veterans, the Philippine government would
offset that nation’s $100 monthly payment. "I find that unacceptable. I am interested in improving
benefits to Filipino veterans, not in merely shifting funding
obligations from one nation's taxpayers to the other," Craig
said. The Congressional Budget Office estimates the cost of S. 57
at $1 billion over a ten year period, while VA officials
estimate the cost could be as high as $4 billion over the same
time frame. "In times of budget deficits and with wounded coming back
from Iraq and Afghanistan, we need to meet the needs of current
tax payers and heroes of the present, while working to honor
those who, so many years ago, fought alongside us in the cause
of freedom," Craig said. |
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