U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter speaks in Cambridge, Massachusetts, April 1, 2016. 
 Photo: Darren McCollester/Getty Images 
U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter has issued new policy 
guidelines aimed at curbing tobacco use within America's military that 
include raising the prices of tobacco on military bases to match local 
market prices.
The policy, which also includes widening smoke-free zones in
 areas frequented by children, was detailed in an April 8 memo seen by 
Reuters on Tuesday.
A U.S. defense official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said 
that the U.S. military would raise the price to take into account taxes 
charged in local communities, which are not charged on-base.
Officials within the U.S. military were now meeting to 
discuss ways to implement the policy guidelines describe by Carter in 
his memo, the defense official told Reuters.
R.J.Reynolds Tobacco Company declined to comment, but Harold
 P. Wimmer, National President and CEO of the American Lung Association 
said in a statement that this is "an important step in the right 
direction."
"The American Lung Association urges the DOD to follow all 
of the steps outlined in the Institute of Medicine’s Combatting Tobacco 
Use in Military and Veterans Populations to ultimately phase out tobacco
 use in the military, which will be a win-win for health and spending,” 
he said.
The military once tolerated and even encouraged tobacco use 
because people incorrectly thought it calmed soldiers as they dealt with
 both the dangers and the boredom experienced during a tour of duty. 
Cigarettes were distributed in field rations as late as the mid-1970s.
Tobacco use costs the military about $1.6 billion annually 
in lost productivity and healthcare expenses tied to respiratory 
problems, cardiovascular disease and slower healing, according to the 
Department of Defense data. That’s expected to climb to $19 billion 
during the next 10 years and result in 175,000 premature deaths.
Soldiers are prohibited from using tobacco during basic 
training, but the military still provides smoking pits or designated 
ship decks where they can light up.
In recent years, the military has expanded programs to help 
soldiers quit. The Air Force and Navy have recommended banning tobacco 
altogether at their facilities and hospitals. But those efforts have 
lagged other priorities and been stymied by a military funding bill 
passed by Congress that require its facilities to sell tobacco products.
 
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