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Animosity toward military service produces desperate US recruiting
measures
By James Cogan
10 June 2005
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Disaffection among the American people with the Iraq occupation
and general opposition to the militarist trajectory of US foreign
policy is producing a sustained decline in military recruitment
rates. Thousands of soldiers, marines and National Guard members
are leaving the armed forces for the same reasons.
In the Seattle area, for example, the Army has enlisted just
94 people in the past seven months, out of a target of 266 by
September 30. Nationally, from October 1, 2004, to the beginning
of May, the active or full-time US Army signed up just 35,926
people toward a 12-month target of 80,000. At the current rate
of approximately 5,000 recruits per month, the Army will fall
20,000 shortthe equivalent of an entire infantry division.
The part-time Army Reserve had signed up just 7,283 recruits,
a little over 1,000 per month. To reach its target of 22,175 recruits
by September 30, the rate will have to triple. The Army National
Guard is languishing at 19,000 soldiers below strength, with 331,000
troops instead of the regulated 350,000. The Marine Corp is struggling
to meet its annual recruitment target for the first time in a
decade.
Iraq is the primary factor in the recruitment crisis. The latest
Washington Post-ABC News poll found that three quarters
of respondents believed the number of American casualties in Iraq
were unacceptable and that close to 60 percent said the war was
not worth fighting. Retired colonel Andrew Bacevich, a professor
at Boston University, told the Post: It appears that
Americans are coming to the realisation that the war in Iraq is
not being won and may well prove unwinnable. That conclusion bleeds
over into a conviction that it may not have been necessary in
the first place.
Just 14 percent of parents and other influencers
are prepared to encourage 18-to-24 year-olds to enlist for military
service, according to Major General Michael Rochelle, the US militarys
top recruitment officer. Master Sergeant Jim Sneed, who is in
charge of National Guard recruitment in southwest Missouri, told
the Joplin Globe: There are places where they are
not waving the flag, and those recruiters are feeling the effect.
If the people are not behind itserving their countrycertainly
the recruiter will have a difficult time.
After 1973, when the draft was abolished, the US military was
able to rely on what amounts to economic conscription. Lower-income
youth signed up for a term in the armed forces, often with the
support of their parents, in order to get college grants, basic
skills or a well-paying job.
The inequality and disadvantage that has fueled recruitment
has clearly not gone away. What has changed is the popular sentiment
toward the military. Charles Peña, a defence policy analyst
for the Cato Institute, a US thinktank, told United Press International
on June 2: The problem with Army recruitment now is that,
unlike in peacetime, the Army is not an opportunity to benefit
yourself in terms of advancing education or starting a career.
Now people understand that joining the Army could mean getting
shipped to Iraq and potentially getting killed.
While it is an issue generally ignored by both the media and
the political establishment, there is a groundswell of anger among
American parents against the once accepted efforts by military
recruiters to convince teenagers to join the armed forces.
The focus of parental opposition is a provision in the Bush
administrations No Child Left Behind program,
which obligates schools to give military recruiters the same access
to students personal information as they provide to colleges
and employers. Unless a parent notifies the school that they want
to opt out, the name, home address and phone number
of each student is handed over to the military.
A feature in the June 3 New York Times, Growing
Problem for Military: Parents, provided a rare report on
some of the backlash against the law. A recruiter in New York
told the Times that, unlike several years ago, people
hang up all time when they call homes. A recruiter in Ohio
recounted: I had one father say if he saw me on his doorstep
I better have some protection on me. We see a lot of hostility.
In Whittier, southern California, parents protested to the
school district for failing to make them aware of their right
to opt out from the military having access to their
childrens personal details. The district has now drafted
a form that clearly shows how parents can indicate they do not
want the details released. Orlando Terrazas, a 51-year-old father
and one of the parents behind the protest, told the Times:
Because of the situation were in now, I would not
want my son to serve. Its the policy that Im against,
not the military.
At Garfield High School in Seattle, the Parent-Teacher-Student
Association (PTSA) voted in May to ban military recruiters from
the school. One of the parents at Garfield, Stephen Ludwig, told
the Times: The recruiters are in your face, in the
library, in the lunchroom. Theyre contacting the most vulnerable
students and recruiting them to go to war.
The school district has ignored the vote so as not to lose
$15 million in federal funding. It is, however, distributing forms
for parents to opt out.
Desperate recruiting measures
The pressure on the US military to find ways to fill the ranks
is leading to desperate recruiting measures, including preparations
for some form of draft, which will only heighten the opposition
and hostility among broad layers of the population.
Recruiters have been accused of falsely telling youth they
would definitely not be sent to the Middle East if they joined
and of generally downplaying the reality of enlisting in a war
machine that now has troops deployed in 120 countries, including
the 140,000-strong occupation force in Iraq.
Unprecedented financial incentives are being offered to bribe
both new recruits and soldiers considering re-enlistment, including
signing bonuses of as much as $20,000 and college grants of up
to $70,000. The maximum enlistment age for the National Guard
and reserves has been raised from 34 to 39.
The White House and the Pentagon are resorting to far more
questionable policies to try and get personnel. The use of stop-loss
orders that prevent soldiers leaving active service when their
enlistment has expired has been widely commented on. The military
has also selectively called up over 6,000 ex-service personnel
with specialised skills who are on the rolls of the Individual
Ready Reserve.
The Armys new option of a 15-month active enlistment
for some jobs, such as the infantry, with all the benefits associated
with more traditional two- or four-year terms, is now attracting
attention. It is a blatant attempt to encourage low-income youth
into signing up, most likely as cannon fodder for the Iraq occupation,
with the false expectation they will be able to get out of the
military quickly.
This particular measure was subjected to a scathing comment
on the Soldiers For the Truth website by military analyst
Chad Miles on May 31. Miles noted that the devil is in the
details. People taking the offer will in fact be signing
up to the military for eight years, with their training time not
included in the 15-month term, which is followed by two years
of mandatory service in the National Guard or reserves, and four
years or so listed as an Individual Ready Reserve, subject to
call-up at any time.
Miles noted that during the mandatory service in the part-time
branches of the Army, the chances of being called back to
active duty would probably be pretty high during this time considering
the reliance on the Guard and the reserve in Iraq. Up to
45 percent of the troops in Iraq are reservists or National Guard,
including five brigades of National Guard infantry.
The US Army introduced a new policy last month to slash the
attrition rate among first-term enlisted soldiers. Battalion commanders,
including those overseeing training camps, have been stripped
of their power to throw out personnel for alcoholism and drug
abuse, unsatisfactory performance, inadequate standards of fitness,
pregnancy and several other issues. They will instead be referred
to a brigade-level review, where the overriding consideration
will be keeping them on the Armys books.
The memo explaining the policy from the Army Deputy Chief of
Staff stated: We are an army at war and increasing levels
of attrition of first-term enlisted soldiers in both the training
base and units is a matter of great concern... By reducing attrition
one percent, the Army can save up to 3,000 initial-term soldiers.
Thats 3,000 more soldiers in our formations.
The implied lowering of standards is likely to result in hundreds
of soldiers who in the past would have been deemed to be physically
or psychologically unsuited for military service being sent to
Iraqan added danger to themselves, their fellow soldiers
and the Iraqi people.
Parallel with the efforts to gain more voluntary recruits and
keep existing personnel, preparations are being made for some
type of draft. Virtually all American males between the ages of
18 and 25 are legally obligated to register with the draft authority,
the Selective Service System (SSS). Over the past three years,
the SSS has negotiated with US state governments making registration
for the draft a pre-requisite for obtaining a drivers license,
holding a state job or attending a state college. Just nine states
have not implemented such laws.
The result has been an increase in the rate of registration,
and the persecution of those who refuse. A total of 11,889,604
men born between 1979 and 1984 were listed as eligible
for call-up as of September 30, 2004. The details of more than
162,000 people were sent to the Department of Justice for investigation
and possible prosecution for failing to register.
A little known fact is that SSS information is handed over
to military recruiters. The agencys 2004 report to Congress
notes: The Agency provides names of registrants to the Secretary
of Defence for recruiting purposes, in accordance with a provision
in the Military Selective Service Act. Additionally, information
about Armed Forces opportunities and a business reply card are
enclosed with the registration acknowledgment that Selective Service
sends to each new registrant. Thus, the Defence Department benefits
by piggy-backing on Agency routine mailings and it
reimburses Selective Service for the additional costs of including
DoD materials.
Among the possibilities being canvassed by the SSS is the use
of its database to carry out a selective conscription of individuals
with particular skills. In the 1980s, the SSS was delegated to
prepare for a draft of medical personnel in the event of a national
emergency. The agency proposed to Congress in its 2004 report
that this program could be expanded if so directed by Congress
and the White House to include other shortfall skills required
by the US Armed Forces or civil authorities.
Richard Flahavan, an associate director of the SSS, told the
June 2 Washington Post: Were not advocating
that it should be done. All were saying is... [w]e know
how to run a draft. Among the occupations Flahavan listed
as possible candidates for a special skills draft
were linguists, computer experts, police officers and firefighters.
The SSS proposals must reflect a broader discussion in Washington
that a policy of selective conscription to replenish the ranks
of the armed forces would not provoke the same degree of opposition
as a general draft. Such a calculation, however, is an attempt
to sidestep the source of the recruitment crisis. Millions of
American working people believe that US soldiers are killing and
being killed in Iraq for illegitimate and criminal ends. The dragooning
of particular professions into the military would heighten the
popular outrage toward the quagmire that the Bush administration
has created.
See Also:
US military recruitment crisis deepens
[1 June 2005]
As recruitment falls, top
military official warns of strains on US forces
[6 May 2005]
Opposition to Iraq war hitting
US military recruitment
Black and female enlistment down sharply
[12 March 2005]
US Army National Guard faces
recruitment crisis
[11 February 2005]
US troops confront
Defense Secretary Rumsfeld
[9 December 2004]
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