[NYTr] Uncle Sam's Favorite Targets

All the News That Doesn't Fit nytr at blythe-systems.com
Tue Nov 20 16:17:50 EST 2007


Alternet - Nov 19, 2007
http://www.alternet.org/story/68357/

Uncle Sam's Favorite Targets

By Sean Gonsalves

You're a senior in high school and Uncle Sam wants you reeaaally bad.
What do you do?

Last week, the AP reported that soldiers are deserting their posts at
their highest rate since 1980, with the number of Army deserters up 80
percent since the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

"We're asking a lot of soldiers these days," is how director of plans
and resources for Army personnel Roy Wallace explains it. "They're
humans. They have all sorts of issues back home and other places like
that. So, I'm sure it has to do with the stress of being a soldier."

There were 4,698 desertions this fiscal year and 3,301 last year. And,
as the AP notes, "the increase comes as the Army continues to bear the
brunt of the war demands, with many soldiers serving repeated, lengthy
tours in Iraq and Afghanistan. Military leaders -- including Army Chief
of Staff Gen. George Casey -- have acknowledged that the Army has been
stretched nearly to the breaking point by the combat," which is why
efforts are underway to bring 80,000 new recruits to the Army and
Marine Corps.

Are you familiar with the Future Soldier Training Program? It's a
military program aimed at recruiting high school seniors that
undoubtedly has chrome rim salesmen, retail industry giants, cell phone
companies and other receptacles for youth consumerism smiling.

"The Army designed the program for high school seniors. It's brand new.
Promotional materials haven't been printed yet, but recruiters are
talking it up at schools," the Dallas Morning News reports.

"The program pays students $1,000 for each month between signing the
commitment contract and leaving for basic training after completing
high school. The Army pays an additional $1,000 for high school
graduation."

For one North Texas senior who enlisted in late October and plans to
leave for basic training in late June, "he'll rack up $10,000 in bonus
money for his nine months in the program, including the $1,000
graduation award."

It's a new move in an old recruiting game, in which recruiters play the
class card, taking advantage of low-income families. Even though
hyper-"patriots" don't like to admit it, most people join the military
for economic reasons. According to a 2000 study by the Defense Manpower
Data Center, 33 percent of recruits join to fund their education, while
another third join for the job training experience.

You're a senior in high school and Uncle Sam wants you reeaaally bad.
What do you do?

People have to make their own choices but before enlisting, would-be
soldiers should, at the very least, read veteran war correspondent
Chris Hedges' book What Every Person Should Know About War.

Covering everything from "enlistment" to "weapons and wounds," on down
to "imprisonment, torture, and rape," as well as chapters on "dying"
and "after the war," Hedges aims to confront the "hard truth about
war;" not produce a work of anti-war propaganda.

"The book is a manual on war. There is no rhetoric. There are very few
adjectives. It is a book based on research," Hedges writes -- a claim
he lives up to on each of the book's 119 pages.

"War, I believe, is an inevitable part of the human condition. I doubt
it will ever be eradicated. But it should never be waged lightly or
without good cause. The cost is high. Most of those killed, wounded,
and left homeless in modern warfare are innocents, families, including
children."

Whether you agree with Hedges view of "the human condition," wrestling
with the questions posed, and answered, in the book are of invaluable
practical benefit to anyone thinking about enlisting.

"Will I feel worse if I kill an enemy in an ambush? ... Is it easier to
bear killing an enemy you cannot see? ... Is there a chance I will
enjoy killing?" Future soldiers and their families would do well to
face those kind of soul-searching questions.

You're a senior in high school and Uncle Sam wants you. What do you do?

Besides giving some real thought to the life-and-death issues covered
in Hedges' book, you might also consider an interview retired Rear
Admiral Gene LaRocque had with businessman Eugene Lang, chairman of the
"I Have A Dream" Foundation.

LaRocque: "we've come to equate patriotism with militarism. If you're
patriotic, you're assumed to be militaristic. If you're militaristic,
you're assumed to be patriotic. Now we've measured our patriotism in
the last several years against the backdrop of war ... But the question
we have to ask today is who are the patriots here at home ..."

Lang: "I believe the educational well-being of Americans is the key to
America's defense."

If America's best defense is an educated citizenry, how does it help to
siphon off high school graduates to fight a war that can't be won on
the battlefield?

[Sean Gonsalves is an assistant news editor with the Cape Cod Times and
a syndicated columnist.] 

© 2007 Independent Media Institute.




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