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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Recruits death highlights brutality of Marine training
By Clare Hurley
25 February 2005
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On February 8, US Marine recruit Jason Tharp, 19, from Sutton,
West Virginia, died during a training exercise at the Parris Island,
South Carolina, Marine base. Under normal circumstances, the tragic
drowning of the teenager during the Combat Water Survival Training
phase of boot camp might have remained a family tragedy recorded
only in military statistics. However, video footage taken February
7 by a local television station turned up documenting physical
abuse of the young recruit by his drill instructor. Picked up
from local NBC affiliate WIS-TV in South Carolina, the clip aired
on the Today show on February 18, provoking an outcry
and demands for an investigation by his family.
No less than three investigations were swiftly announced by
the Marine Corps into the circumstances of the death and the relation,
if any, to the abusive treatment of the previous day. Pending
the outcome of the investigations, the Tharp family says it may
sue the Marine Corps for the wrongful death of their son. But
because of the Feres Doctrine, a 1950 US Supreme Court decision
that prevents soldiers and families from successfully suing the
military for active-duty injuries or deaths, they are unlikely
to win the justice they seek.
The Marines are busily engaged in damage control, attempting
to place the focus on the technicality of whether the drill sergeant
physically touched Tharp while abusing him.
The videotape shows Tharp being grabbed by his uniform and
forearmed by the instructor in the presence of four
other recruits, an instance of abuse that, if anything, seems
mild given the reputation of Marine boot camp. The brutal treatment
of recruits is hardly a secret. It is, in fact, something the
Marine Corps promotes as necessary to forge young people into
the few and the proud and has already been the subject
of such films as Full Metal Jacket (1987).
The case of Jason Tharp is poignantly typical. His birthplace
of Sutton, West Virginia, is like so many that are home to members
of the US armed forces. The town has a population of just over
5,000, with a median annual household income of barely $24,000,
well below the national average of $42,000. Only 69.8 percent
graduate from high school, and not even 7 percent earn a four-year
college degree. For young people like Jason Tharp, the option
of joining the military to become one of the few and the
proud is one of the few available, period, regardless
to what extent they embrace ideals of military conduct or patriotism.
Only recently graduated from high school in 2004, Tharp left
his job at the Wendys fast-food chain in December to join
the Marines to earn money for college. He was in his fifth week
of the 13-week training course but regretted his decision. In
desperate letters to his family, he begged them to help him get
out. He complained of being sick, along with other recruits who
he said were suffering from pneumonia and coughing blood. I
told him [the drill instructor] I couldnt cut it.... I still
dont think I belong here, and I think I should go home and
get a grant.
Ironically, in December 2004, the same month that Tharp enlisted,
the Pell Grants that he is most likely referring to, which are
a primary source of financial aid for working- and middle-class
youth, were targeted for cuts by the Bush administration. The
already inadequate grants are to be reduced to $4,050 a year and
the eligibility requirements changed, eliminating 80,000 deserving
students.
Nor was Tharp alone in panicking at having found himself in
a situation over his head, with no way out. Relentlessly humiliating
recruits for showing signs of fear and weakness is an essential
part of the training process. They are expected to get over being
wusses to such an extent that actual symptoms of life-threatening
physical or emotional distress are disregarded by their superiors.
Justin Haase, another 18-year-old, died of acute bacterial
meningitis at Parris Island in October 2001 for lack of treatment,
even after it was clear that his collapse during an obstacle course
had nothing to do with cowardice.
In response to Jason Tharps death, some commentators
have asked how he and his family could have been so unaware of
the nature of Marine service and how unsuited a sensitive boy
hoping to study art would be for its grueling training. His fathers
comment upon seeing the video was I dont know how
they could treat my son the way we saw him. He never hurt nobody.
Hed do anything asked him. Its just not right.
He and Jasons mother, like many other parents in towns like
Sutton, see their children go off to join the military with reservations,
but with a degree of hope that it may provide a future for them
that otherwise seems out of reach.
But many young men and woman like Jason Tharp are invariably
unprepared for the degree of brutality fostered at places like
Parris Island. Such training is designed with the express purpose
of rendering recruits capable of razing cities to the ground with
overwhelming force, killing innocent civilians, softening
up detainees and policing a population opposed to US occupation.
The pressure on the military to turn recruits into killing
machines has increased, as has its difficulty in meeting recruitment
goals. The army has recently had to raise its enlistment bonus
40 percent to $10,000, more than twice the amount of a Pell Grant.
Recognizing the limits to which the human spirit can be forced
to carry out indiscriminate acts of homicidal brutality under
the guise of fighting to spread freedom and democracy,
and the increasing resistance this will provoke, the army reportedly
plans to spend $127 billion on developing robot soldiers, representing
the biggest military contract in US history, driving the already
record-large military budget up by another 20 percent (New
York Times, February 16, 2005). The military hopes to deploy
robots, capable of firing 1,000 rounds of ammunition a minute,
as early as this April in Iraq.
However, robot soldiers that can be directed from a safe distance
by laptops to do the killing, as if it were a computerized game,
are just another high-tech weapon in the militarys impressive
arsenal. The military will never be able to entirely eliminate
its dependence on youth like Jason Tharp, whose tragic inability
to cut it may have represented, albeit in an inarticulate
manner, his revulsion at the dehumanizing and brutalizing treatment
that he was being trained not only to endure, but to inflict.
See Also:
General who led US Marines in Iraq says
Its fun to shoot some people
[7 February 2005]
The siege of Fallujah:
America on a killing spree
[18 November 2004]
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