December 15, 2005
The Desperation In Military Recruiting
John
Murtha is calling for the removal of U.S. military troops from Iraq in
the near future because he has heard enough from generals in the
military about the need to do so.
These are the generals who do not offer these same opinions to Secretary
of Defense Donald Rumsfeld because of the fear of no further
promotions, or, in fact, demotions. Who can blame them? Why offer truth
to an entity who refuses to consider any alternatives but his blessed
opinion. It's like talking to a rock and expecting a transformation to
a different size, color or texture.
Rumsfeld's silly reply to questions about his intransigence--offering
that he is certainly open to dissenting opinions--is yet another in the
factual litany of his lies.
Besides these generals telling Murtha that the war cannot be won
militarily, Murtha is also calling for an end to troops in Iraq because
of concern that the occupation is actually destroying the military. Specifically, he said: "The future of our
military is at risk..our military and their families are stretched
thin. Many say that the Army is broken. Some of our troops are on their
third deployment. Recruitment is down, even as our military has lowered
its standards."
Connected to this is a chilling and incredulous Michael Bronner-written story in the September issue of Vanity Fair, that highlights Murtha's second concern:
The Recruiters' War
By MICHAEL BRONNER
Vanity Fair
September 2005
Pressured to fill quotas, army
and Marine recruiters have been enlisting kids who don't meet basic
physical, moral, and educational standards. Ten recruiters reveal just
how corruptedand in one case deadlytheir job has become (from
Vanity Fair, September 2005)
Near the western edge of North Carolina,
bright-green kudzu vine spills like water down the hillsides of the
Great Smoky Mountains. The kudzu seems to close in on the landscape at
dusk. That's when Tim Queen likes to run, 10 to 15 miles at a time on
country roadstraining ground for the Marine Tim once hoped to
become.
He's a tough kid. He ranks "cliff-jumping off of
waterfalls" high among his hobbies. He's from a tough place: Cherokee
County is one of the poorest, most sparsely populated parts of North
Carolina, hill country where the descendants of Scotch-Irish settlers
still speak with a unique southern brogue that takes some getting used
to. (It's also where Eric Rudolph, the accused serial bomber of two
abortion clinics, a lesbian nightclub, and Centennial Olympic Park, in
Atlanta, lived off the landand, some say, the sympathy of the
localsfor five years as a fugitive before being caught.)
Tim was raised in a small home on seven acres with
a brother and two sisters. His father, John, works on the production
line at an auto-parts manufacturer. His mother, Sheilah, works at the
local trout-processing plant, Carolina Mountain. Like most families in
the area, the Queens are capable people, getting by on very little.
They grow a lot of their own foodsquash, cucumbers, okra, corn,
beans, tomatoes, onions, pumpkins, radishes, and watermelons, all out
back of their house.
In the spring of 2000, just out of high school, Tim
was working part-time with his mom at the trout plant and taking
welding classes at the community college. One morning, two Marine Corps
recruiters arrived on campus in their dress blues and set up a "fruit
stand" (a recruiting table). They rarely made the trip all the way out
to Andrews, Tim's hometown, but one of the administrators at the
college was an old Marine Corps master sergeant, so they were always
welcome. That morning, they caught Tim Queen's eye. "I think I may be
joining you soon," he announced.
Tim caught the recruiters' eyes, too. It was crunch
time, a couple of days before the end of the month, and they needed one
more body to "make mission"their monthly quota. Timmy Queen would
be that body.
The trip to Tim's school was a training run for the
younger Marine, Sergeant Jimmy Massey, who'd been on recruiting duty
less than a year. He was out with his gunnery sergeant, Tim Dalhouse,
being shown the ropes. Massey wasn't new to the Marine Corps. He'd been
in for eight years already, several of them working with new recruits
as an infantry instructor at basic training at Parris Island. He
planned to retire from the Marine Corps an old man; he was in for the
long haul, and for many career Marines, doing a tour on recruiting duty
is a gauntlet worth running, a roll-of-the-dice that can fast-track
your career, all but guaranteeing promotion if you're good. If you're
not, however, it can be a career-ender.
The latter prospect never entered Massey's mind, he
said. He was as gung-ho as they come. When he'd go out "trolling," he'd
always bring a propan English bulldog he named Tank Balls. When he
brought potential recruits back to his office he'd show them a trick.
"I had a toy gun in my desk, and when I'd pull it out the dog would go
crazy," Massey told me. Tank Balls would lunge at the gun, teeth bared.
"It would really impress the poolies," he added ("poolie" being Marine
Corps slang for a new recruit).
On that spring day in 2000, Tim Queen was impressed
by Massey and Dalhouse. "They was always saying things like 'Semper fi'
and all that stuff, and it was definitely encouraging to be around.
They seemed to me to be true and hard-core people, and I liked that."
In many ways, Tim has the makings of a great
Marine. He's serious, polite, goes to church every Sunday, and keeps
himself in shape. He graduated from high school with pretty good grades
and scored well on the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery
(known as "the ASVAB"), a standardized test given alongside the S.A.T.
in many high schools, particularly in areas with deep military
traditions. When Tim approached the recruiters that day, though, Massey
thought his boss was joking when Dalhouse instructed him to proceed
with the standard Marine Corps interview. Spend a couple of minutes
with Tim and you'll understand why: ever since the ninth grade, Timmy's
had a "twitch," as his father puts it. When I met Tim, the term struck
me as a significant understatement.
At regular intervalsevery 20 seconds or
sothe muscles in Tim's left arm seem to convulse, sending his arm
in a lurch he struggles to suppress. He'll also stutter when the twitch
is bad, and blink involuntarily. His condition has never been formally
diagnosed, but it's pronounced enough, especially when he's stressed,
that he was not permitted to test for his driver's license until he
passed several medical screenings, including an EEG to rule out
seizures. Tim told me the condition got worse after a prank in high
school: some other kids pinned him inside a locker and he panicked.
Since then, he's also suffered from claustrophobia he characterized as
"pretty bad."
Tim
told me he talked to the recruiters about all of his medical issues
that first day. They told him not to worry, he said, that they'd seen
this kind of thing before; no problem, he'd get in. In Massey's
version, after reassuring Tim, he concluded the standard recruiting
interview the way he always did: "Tim, are you ready to be a Marine?"
"Yeah," Tim Queen answered. He didn't flinch.
For the rest of the article, go here.
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