Battleland

U.S.S. Tobacco

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While the Navy has banned smoking on submarines, it can’t do that aboard surface ships, where most of its sailors go to sea. That’s because, according to this fascinating article in an upcoming issue of the American Journal of Public Health, the tobacco industry convinced Congress to mandate the availability of the cancer sticks aboard ships. In other words, tobacco must be sold on ships — it’s the law. The corollary: the Navy can’t stop selling cigarettes aboard, something it has been trying to do for decades, without Congress changing the law.

No surprise here: it was collusion between the tobacco industry and lawmakers from tobacco-friendly states — puffing on Big Tobacco’s campaign contributions — that made this happen 17 years ago:

The [relevant] amendment did not contain obviously pro-tobacco language, but merely revised the applicable section to replace the word ‘‘may’’ with ‘‘shall,’’ thus reading: ‘‘(c) Items Sold. — Merchandise sold by ship stores afloat shall include items in the following categories…’’ and listed ‘‘tobacco products’’ as one among many items that must be made available.

Almost as insidious as small-cell carcinoma.

Meanwhile, in 2006, Senate appropriators decried tobacco use by service personnel. Smoking has been growing among members of the military, and plays a role in the Defense Department’s skyrocketing health-care costs. “Tobacco use costs the Department of Defense hundreds of millions of dollars every year in medical costs and lost productivity,” they wrote in their report accompanying the 2007 defense-spending bill. “The Committee urges the Department to expedite the availability of tobacco use prevention and cessation programs to all personnel.”

Is this a great country, or what?