This Week at War: Uncle Sam Wants You … Whoever You Are

Is the United States running out of military recruits?

BY ROBERT HADDICK | AUGUST 6, 2010

Writing in Small Wars Journal, Gregory Conti and Jen Easterly, both U.S. Army lieutenant colonels, discussed the problems the military faces recruiting "cyber warriors" into the newly created Cyber Command, which aims to "conduct full-spectrum military cyberspace operations in order to ... ensure US/Allied freedom of action in cyberspace and deny the same to our adversaries."

Yet Conti and Easterly note that Cyber Command will recruit from an already tiny pool of cybersavvy talent, a pool made even smaller by Cyber Command's requirement that its soldiers pass security clearances, polygraph examinations, and drug screening. Meanwhile, Cyber Command will have to compete with the likes of Google for talented techies who may not find military culture all that inviting. It should come as no surprise to eventually find Cyber Command mostly staffed by highly-paid civilian contractors rather than uniformed soldiers or career civil servants.

Cyber Command's recruiting difficulties are a microcosm of the broader troubles the military, especially the Army, now faces. The all-volunteer military has been a success and should be retained. But evidence continues to mount that the Army has grown as big as it can under the all-volunteer system. If circumstances ever required a significantly larger Army, Army leaders and U.S. society would have to get used to an Army of much lower quality at the margin. Deploying such a force, especially into stability operations, would entail taking greater risks and paying higher costs.

The recently released Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR) Independent Panel report called for an overhaul in the military's personnel system. The report concluded that compensation costs for the all-volunteer force have exploded and are no longer sustainable. Active-duty head count has declined from 2 million in 1991 to 1.37 million in 2009. Yet in spite of this 32 percent decline in head count, military personnel costs (in constant 2005 dollars) have grown from $122 billion in 1991 to $130 billion in 2009 ($60,939 per head in 1991 versus $94,533 per head in 2009, adjusted for inflation).

Even with this vast expansion in soldier compensation, the Army has had to reduce enlistment standards to fill its ranks. According to the QDR Independent Panel, these reduced standards include raising the maximum enlistment age to 42; accepting more recruits without high school diplomas, with criminal records, and in Category IV (low mental aptitude) on the Armed Forces Qualification Test; and increasing the numbers of noncitizens serving. The overall population of the United States is growing, but the cohort qualified and willing to volunteer for military service is shrinking. (Seventy-five percent of American youth are ineligible for military service for physical, mental, or educational reasons, or due to criminal records.) The prime recruiting base seems to be narrowing by geographic area and to families of veterans, increasingly turning military service into a "family guild."

Immediately after taking office, Defense Secretary Robert Gates directed the Army and Marine Corps to increase their headcounts in response to the pressures of Iraq and Afghanistan. Regrettably, this decision collided with the evaporating pool of suitable military recruits. The Army recently released a report that studied suicide prevention and the Army's mental-health issues. The report revealed a broader range of rising high-risk behaviors and criminality in the Army's ranks. Part, maybe most, of the increasing incidence of suicide in the Army is related to the strain of wartime deployments. But the report noted that 68 of the 120 suicides (57 percent) the Army suffered during the first half of 2010 were to soldiers who had zero or one deployment.

Over the past five years, the Army has suffered from increasing rates of discipline problems, crime, and drug use. The suicide prevention report noted that during this time, enlistment waivers increased and soldiers who previously would have been dismissed during initial training for unsuitability were instead retained, presumably due to the requirement to increase the Army's head count. Indeed, the Army calculated that one-third of the soldiers recruited to meet the Army's higher end-strength would have been dismissed from the service under the previous quality standards. It seems highly likely that the Army's retention of soldiers it would previously have found unsuitable for service is related to the increased suicide rate, along with other behavior problems.

Chris Hondros/Getty Images

 SUBJECTS:
 

Robert Haddick is managing editor of Small Wars Journal.

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FRANKFURMAN

2:12 AM ET

August 7, 2010

Give me a break

Who's writing this article? Small Wars Journal is intended to be an intelligent publication.

"If the Army needs additional manpower, perhaps it should be standard operating procedure for the Special Forces to recruit it from the indigenous population within the war zones. "

Ok, this is nonsensical. The military brings in non-citizens, true, but that means people who live in the United States but are not citizens. Not indigenous personnel from Iraq and Afghanistan. It should be standard operating procedure for journalists like this to not make these kinds of leaps.

"As we have seen in Iraq and Afghanistan, a stabilization campaign requires infantrymen, anthropologists, truck drivers, linguists, pilots, cost accountants, snipers, warehousemen, IT whizzes, negotiators, commandos, public relations artists, artillery gunners, teachers, report writers, construction foremen, nurses, and many other specialties. "

Or, specialties that have existed for years within the American military structure. The problem is we specialize too much, we have 20,000 Marines at Camp Leatherneck who are great at being warehousemen and public relations artists, but have absolutely no impact on the population. And for those dead-weight individuals, there's a legion of support staff to make sure they're comfortable. Little sacrifice is asked of the majority of American servicemembers. Most of that "well-deserved" bonus pay you refer to probably isn't justified. This is an article written by an amateur who believes everything he reads.

 

MACMC

11:19 AM ET

August 21, 2010

Recruiting Nightmare...

I can't comments specifically on the needs in the war zones, etc, but my son is Marine recruiter (he hates it and cant wait to get back to regular duties) and he says that the requirements and exceptions are changing often. They aren't even so interested in someone who is interested injoining because of unemployment. They are looking for carerr soldiers. Maybe, we should "hire" the qualified unemployed, as this son was unemployed when he enlisted (at the suggestion of his lifer,older brother) and he is turing into a lifer. A keeper and he is satisified with his "work". I am proud of him and have seen a tremdous boost his is confience.
Anyway, I think the writers make an excellent point. All volunteer Army/Marines, the ground troops, may need help.

 

NICHOLAS WIBBERLEY

3:30 AM ET

August 7, 2010

War is not everyone's cup of tea

If the US were to come under direct attack there would be no shortage of volunteers who would not even think about salary. This is a normal self-defensive human response to external threat but not readily triggered in support of more remote militaristic undertakings.

The Romans faced a similar problem; first they had a citizen army that was neither paid nor permanent, then it became permanent and paid, later it was supplemented with non-Roman legions, soon there were more ‘barbarians’ than Roman soldiers and, as cost began to exceed revenue, taxes were raised, civil discontent erupted into strife, the legions turned on their patrons, and the republic collapsed. The breakpoint came when expansion ceased, and with it the revenue from looting, but the boundaries and distant outposts had still to be maintained. This is a very oversimplified account but it outlines a not unfamiliar process.

Should the US plan to continue indefinitely with these adventures, there are two avenues to take. One is to extend the use of mercenaries by raising units in overseas areas, as the British did, and the other is a compulsory military service programme such as practised by many nations including China and Russia and, of course, Israel with whom the US already shares so many values and unbreakable ties. Normally this involves something like two years training from age 18 followed by annual refresher courses until around 40. The system thus provides a permanent pool of trained personnel. It may also inculcate certain disciplines of a beneficial social nature.

 

JBROCKLE

4:11 AM ET

August 7, 2010

Not quite correct

Roman armies were actually contained as many (if not more) non-Roman soldiers from mid-Republic onwards. This was (arguably) the cause of the Social War around 90BC. They were the Italian allies of Rome. So I'm afraid your history is off. Certainly Rome wasn't a Republic by the time it collapsed. You should be careful looking for historical parallels when sometimes they aren't there.

 

NICHOLAS WIBBERLEY

5:18 AM ET

August 7, 2010

You misread me

I was referring to the collapse of the Republic, 49BC, not the collapse of Rome itself, and Italian allies were not Romans but non-Romans introduced into what had hitherto been a citizen army. We have a similar situation today but the 'allies' are all bundled together in NATO.

Anyway, I merely wrote that the republic collapsed at a stage in the evolution of the military process, not that the process was the cause of it. The collapse of the republic was far from being the collapse of Rome; on the contrary it led in time to periods of extraordinary peace and prosperity, particularly in the 2nd century, periods that may be argued to be unique in history.

What was not possible was that such peace could be achieved or maintained under the republican constitution since that restricted the authority of the Consuls to the vicissitudes of domestic policy much as Obama is restricted today. As you doubtless are aware, in moments of great danger sole authority was granted one man, a Dictator, who would resign his powers when he chose. Sulla acquired that power and relinquished it, Caesar acquired it and bequeathed it and it was never again voluntarily relinquished until Diocletian in early 4th century. I wonder if the US might one day head that way.

 

THATONEGUY72

12:53 AM ET

August 8, 2010

Recruiting currently not as tough as you may think.

The recruiting statistics and "facts" in this article are severely outdated. Currently, every service is overmanned and all but the Army have begun to make cuts in in certain jobs and fields (forcing lateral transfer to another job or straight up denying re-enlistment due to that servicemember's current job being full). Also, enlistment requirement have gone up in each service. Not one one branch as of last week are taking enlistees that have not graduated from high school. No GEDs accepted...at all. Army Officer Candidate School is no longer accepting waivers of any kind (age, medical, crime) meaning even a broken arm when you were sixteen years of age could disqualify you even though you are 29. The Army enlistment age has fallen to 34 while the other services are under 30 for active duty.

I agree with most of the article but the fifth paragraph is bursting at the seems with statements that were accurate in 2006...not 2010.

 

NICHOLAS WIBBERLEY

4:13 AM ET

August 8, 2010

Unemployment plays a role

Unemployment at 9.5% has a positive effect on military recruitment but it is scarcely a long-term solution.

 

ASHOK2718

8:03 AM ET

August 8, 2010

Pick me pick meeeeee

where are the US army recruiters when you need a job.

O, I guess it is because I am in India. ha ha

But I don't think that USA will ever EVER face a shortage of recruits.

Third most populous country in world, growing disparity, Mexico next door so many factors.

 

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August 8, 2010

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USOILINVENTORIES

11:11 AM ET

August 10, 2010

if 75% of American youth are not fit to "serve"...

then there is something fundamentally wrong with our system, and it is questionably worth defending.

There's probably some justification for taking these young thugs out of the currently insufficient home environment, at about age 16, and doing the job their parents can't, which is whip some sense into them for about two years. After that, when they are ready to fight, at 18, they might be indoctrinated into some system besides the "bloods" and "crips".

If they're not good enough for the army, why would they be good enough for the rest of society?

Expensive? No more so than sending them to jail, which it sounds like is where they are going anyway.