Jon Soltz served as a United States Army officer in the Iraq War and is chairman and co-founder of the 700,000 member VoteVets.org. In 2011, he took a one-year leave of absence from VoteVets, while deployed as part of Operation New Dawn in Iraq. Also, as a member of the U.S. Army, he served in both the Kosovo campaign in 2000 and later in Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003. Soltz was an outspoken critic of Operation Iraqi Freedom and its execution.
Military service and background
He was commissioned in 1999 from the University of PittsburghArmy ROTC and attended the Armor Officer Basic Course at Fort Knox, Kentucky. Following his graduation he was stationed in Germany from 1999–2003. Between June and December 2000, he served as a Tank Platoon Leader in the Kosovo War. Between May and September 2003, he served as a Captain during Operation Iraqi Freedom, where he worked deployed logistics convoys with the 1st Armored Division. Leaving active duty in 2004 and transferring to the U.S. Army Reserve, in 2005 he trained soldiers for combat at Fort Dix, New Jersey. He took a leave of absence from VoteVets.org in January 2011, to deploy as part of Operation New Dawn. Until he returned to the group in 2011, Ashwin Madia, an Iraq War veteran former U.S. Marine CorpsJudge Advocate officer, and one time candidate for U.S. Congress, assumed the role of Interim Chairman. On December 12, 2011, Soltz returned as Chairman of VoteVets.org after completing his deployment to Iraq.
Political Activism
In 2006, Soltz co-founded VoteVets.org, which originally was a PAC that endorsed a slate of veterans running for office. Since that time, VoteVets has grown into a group that claims 700,000 supporters, including veterans, military families, and civilians who support them, and is made up of both a PAC and 501c, VoteVets Action Fund. The PAC has helped elect a number of veterans in every cycle at the Federal, state, and local levels. Soltz volunteered for the John Kerry presidential campaign in 2004. Regarding his personal political views, Soltz told The Washington Post in 2007 that "I'm a conservative" and that he opposed the Iraq War troop surge of 2007 because "I don't think 20,000 more troops is Democratic, I don't think 20,000 troops is Republican. I think it's stupid."