The Littlest Soldiers

The Pentagon always has had an exquisite sense of timing. Take this week, for example. The U.S. military announced Wednesday it has launched a website – myfuture.com – so youngsters can learn more about military careers. “The fact is, we found existing career and/or college exploration websites not affiliated with the DoD provide little, if any, coverage of the military and its career opportunities,” Pentagon marketeer Matt Boehmer says. “Myfuture.com helps inform young adults who might not normally consider service about the benefits of a military career.”

DoD photo

The unveiling came a day after a scholar offered a “sneak peek” of a disquieting study now in its final stages. Amy Richardson of the Rand Corp. told an Army gathering that the school-age children of soldiers who have been deployed for 19 months or more, have lower achievement-test scores than kids whose soldier-parents had gone off to war for less time, or not at all. Richardson told a standing-room family forum in Washington, D.C., that the study focuses on students with military parents in North Carolina and Washington state. “We also found that children are facing some behavioral health challenges that can impact their academic success,” she added, “and for many of the children [resilience] seemed to be waning.”

Apparently, it’s not only the financial costs of these wars we’re bequeathing to the next generation. Perhaps we should add report cards, college admissions and future career success to the debit side of the ledger as well.

Related Topics: military families, Troops, National Security
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  • pintortwo

    Lowering the Bar
    John Letman
    .
    .
    “How old is old enough for students to be approached by military recruiters?
    .
    High school? Junior high? Fourth grade? How about ten weeks into kindergarten?
    .
    Last week at the dinner table, my five-year-old son announced blithely, “Soldiers came to school today.” He then added, “They only kill bad people. They don’t kill good people.”
    (…)
    (W)ith Department of Defense projections indicating that the baseline Pentagon budget will grow over the next decade by $133.1 billion, or 25 percent (even before war funding), it appears likely there will be plenty need for more soldiers in 2022 when my son and his classmates turn 18.
    .
    In his book “The Limits of Power,” Boston University history Professor and retired Army Col. Andrew J. Bacevich describes a near future in which the US is in an almost constant state of war. He writes, “Rather than brief interventions ending in decisive victory, sustained presence will be the norm … The future will be one of small wars, expected to be frequent, protracted, perhaps perpetual.” If Bacevich’s bleak assessment proves true, it’s no wonder the National Guard sees value in chatting up kindergarteners.”

  • Paul-no not that one

    This is how Gates wants to address the disconnect between the country and the military?
    .
    Does anyone, ever, say no to the Pentagon?
    .
    They get every dime they want. They sandbag presidents. They decide which policies they will follow.

  • http://jcapan.wordpress.com jcapan

    The second incredibly disturbing thing I’ve read about the empire in just the last hour.

    Just saw this at Digby’s:

    MILITARY OFFICERS TOUR JPMORGAN – JPMorgan Chase yesterday hosted about 30 active duty military officers (across all branches and agencies) from the Marine Corps War College in Quantico, Va. The officers met with senior executives, toured the trading floor and participated in a trading simulation. They discussed recruitment, operations management, strategic communications and the economy. Aside from employees thanking them for their service as they passed by, they also received a standing ovation on the trading floor. Said one officer after a senior JPM exec thanked him for his service: “We promise to keep you safe if you keep this country strong.”

  • Paul-no not that one

    “In October 2009, I had the pleasure of attending an Ideas Festival sponsored by the Aspen Institute and the Atlantic. Nearly all the country’s major figures in politics and business were there, grilled (or flattered) by nearly all the country’s leading journalists. When a John McCain or a Janet Napolitano took the spotlight, they were treated by the assembled guests with polite respect and pointed questions. The moment General David Petraeus walked in to take his place at the podium, the entire audience stood in hushed silence, as if the savior himself had suddenly appeared in the District of Columbia.”
    .

    From a book review of Andrew Bacevich’s new book

  • gysgt213

    “Apparently, it’s not only the financial costs of these wars we’re bequeathing to the next generation. ”
    .
    Apparently? You say that like it never crossed your mind Mark that children of deploy parents would have these type of problems. Imagine the kids of parents that have been killed in these wars both here and in the countries we are fighting. What comes to mind?

  • pintortwo

    “UNHCR estimates that more than 4.7 million Iraqis have fled their homes, many in dire need of humanitarian care. Of these, more than 2.7 million Iraqis are displaced internally, while more than 2 million have escaped to neighboring states.
    (…)
    Between security concerns and the general lack of resources, the massive internal displacement has led to a growing number of impoverished shantytowns without proper access to clean water and food.”
    .
    http://www.unrefugees.org/site/c.lfIQKSOwFqG/b.4950813/k.653D/Iraq_Refugee_Emergency.htm
    .
    What are we bequeathing to this generation of Iraqis? How will they view us?

  • gysgt213

    pintortwo: I don’t think we are allowed to think about the Iraqi children. Apparently because what happens to others at our hands has no cost to us.

  • http://jcapan.wordpress.com jcapan

    As Charles Davis tweeted yesterday:
    .
    “I wish Dem partisans were as outraged over their beloved dropping cluster bombs on women and children in Yemen as they are over Rand Paul.”

  • pintortwo

    If human suffering doesn’t move the needle, perhaps we’ll realize that the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are a huge threat to our national security. These tens-of-thousands of children are watching their friends and siblings starve or succumb to disease. They must witness brutality on a scale that few of us can imagine. They spend their formative years burdened with fear, hopelessness and anger. This is ripe recruiting ground. Many, no doubt, will be seduced by the Jihadis.

  • http://jcapan.wordpress.com jcapan

    “A true war story is never moral. It does not instruct, nor encourage virtue, nor suggest models of proper human behavior, nor restrain men from doing the things men have always done. If a story seems moral, do not believe it. If at the end of a war story you feel uplifted, or if you feel that some small bit of rectitude has been salvaged from the larger waste, then you have been made the victim of a very old and terrible lie. There is no rectitude whatsoever. There is no virtue. As a first rule of thumb, therefore, you can tell a true war story by its absolute and uncompromising allegiance to obscenity and evil.”

    — Tim O’Brien (The Things They Carried)

  • Paul-no not that one

    Who knew partisan Dems thought of “their” cluster bombs as beloved?
    .
    Sheesh.

  • http://jcapan.wordpress.com jcapan

    While cluster bombs are w/out question lovable, beloved here is a noun

  • Paul-no not that one

    Well that certainly changes the noxious point.
    .
    Purity is easy and fun.

  • http://jcapan.wordpress.com jcapan

    Come now, Paul, “noxious” is my word!
    .
    But, hey, I guess you’re right. There must be some shadow movement of authority-revering dem partisans protesting Obama’s war crimes that I’m unaware of.

  • http://elvisberg.wordpress.com Elvis Elvisberg

    Fits with the rest of our policies of the last 30 years, which seem designed to reduce our society to Eloi and Morlocks. And lord knows that the troops and the defense contractors fall on different sides of that divide.

  • michaelfury

    “Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it.”

    - Proverbs 22:6

    http://michaelfury.wordpress.com/2009/09/25/first-person-sho0ter/

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