Army Recruiting problems
I hate to break the sad news to you liberal supporteres of the "modern minutemen" terrorists in Iraq, but Army recruiting is turning up...and the other services are once again ahead of their recruiting goal.
Washington Times
July 9, 2005
Army Recruiting Turns Up
By Jack Kelly
The Army slightly exceeded its recruiting goal for June, ending a four-month slide. In February, March, April and May, the Army fell some 7,800 recruits short of its goal.
Only the Army has had serious recruiting difficulty. The Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps are ahead of recruiting goals.
Summer typically, is the peak recruiting time, so the Army may reduce its shortfall somewhat before the fiscal year ends Sept. 30. But it is very unlikely to close the gap entirely.
People on the left assert the Army’s recruiting woes spell doom for the U.S. mission in Iraq, and for the All Volunteer Force. Retired Army Lt. Col. James Carafano says such fears (or in the case of the hard left, hopes) are overblown.
"If you are missing your goals year in and year out, you have problems, but it’s not an immediate crisis," said Col. Carafano, who now analyzes military manpower issues for the Heritage Foundation. This is especially so because re-enlistments have been higher than programmed.
But if the Army’s poor recruiting this spring isn’t a sign of incipient calamity, it is indicates clearly a powerful limitation.
I am among those who believe that to most effectively prosecute the war on terror, the Army should be larger by the equivalent of two divisions. This won’t happen. Recruiting reforms can — and probably will — ameliorate the present shortfall. But with the economy as strong as it is, it’s most unlikely the Army could be expanded by much.
Forget about the draft. It’s as obsolete a military instrument as the horse cavalry. Our generals know our military is as good as it is chiefly because it is all volunteer. They know that even if Congress voted tomorrow to reinstate conscription, it would take nearly a year for a draft to produce an additional soldier. And they know Howard Dean will become a Republican before Congress votes to reinstate the draft. Its only advocates are a handfull of ultraliberal Democrats who want to relive the glory days of the antiwar protests of the 1960s.
To improve Army recruiting, we could pay our soldiers more, put more recruiters on the job and/or lower standards. The Army, wisely, has rejected the third course.
If Congress approves, maximum enlistment bonuses will double, to $40,000. More recruiters could make a difference, Col. Carafano said. "What people tend to forget is that before Iraq, things were going so well that we were pulling people out of Recruiting Command."
What recruiters tell prospective recruits may also make a difference, said retired Army Maj. Donald Sensing, whose son is a Marine lance corporal.
Though they have suffered, proportionately, threefold the Army’s casualties, the Marines meet their recruiting goals.
His son chose the Marines over the Army because the Marines appealed directly to his patriotism, while Army recruiters talked of job training and pizza parties, Maj. Sensing said.
"The problem is, I think, the Army’s recruiting strategy with its heavily civilianized marketing influences," Maj. Sensing said. "At least the Marines don’t hide what they’re about."
Being involved in a protracted war has to dampen recruiting. But it’s likelier the strong economy is the greater culprit. The Army last failed to meet its recruiting goal six years ago. There was no war then, but the economy was strong.
Recruiting is harder because many parents won’t let their children talk with Army recruiters, said Maj. Gen. Michael Rochelle, commander of Recruiting Command.
Parental concern for the safety of their sons and daughters is understandable. But there is another group of "influencers" whose behavior borders on sedition. Any high school or college that denies military recruiters access to campus should lose all its federal funding immediately. Any high school or college that does not expel students who disrupt recruiters at job fairs should lose all federal funding immediately.
In his speech on Iraq from Fort Bragg, President Bush said, "There is no higher calling than service in our armed forces." Web logger "Tiger-hawk" said that should be the start of a national campaign to support military recruitment.
Perhaps such a campaign could embarrass the Me Generation parents into being as patriotic as their sons and daughters.
Jack Kelly, a syndicated columnist, is a former Marine
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