As the nation honors veterans, the next generation looks more diverse and professional
Since 11-10-05
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As the nation honors veterans, the next generation looks more diverse and
professional.
By Mark Sappenfield Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
10 November 2005
WASHINGTON - On a day when the warriors of America's past will talk of great
sacrifices long remembered and old friends not forgotten, a new generation of
soldiers deployed to the far corners of the Middle East is beginning to pencil
in the first lines of its own story. It is already obvious that this is a force
unlike any America has sent to war - older, more diverse, and all volunteers.
But gradually, the ways in which these wars spawned by Sept. 11 are shaping
these troops are also becoming apparent.
In the midst of a war with no clear endpoint, the ultimate judgment of this
generation of fighters must wait for Veterans Days to come. But if World War II
veterans were perceived to be the greatest generation and Vietnam's conscripts a
lost generation, then those who are serving in Iraq and Afghanistan today could
be called the dedicated generation - convinced of America's cause and determined
to shepherd it through days of dust and destruction.
It is perhaps most apparent in reenlistment rates, which continue to exceed the
Pentagon's goals more than four years into the war on terror. Yet more deeply,
military sociologists suggest that this war is having a profound and unique
effect on many men and women, putting them face to face with the struggle for
freedom and giving them a greater sense of purpose.
That war should be a life-changing experience is hardly a surprising thought.
But in his interviews with troops returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, Morten
Ender of the United States Military Academy notes that three-quarters of them
describe their deployment as a "turning point" - a number that strikes him as
high."In World War II, soldiers knew what they had to do, and they wanted to do
it and come home to get on with life," he says.
"In Vietnam, [the war] became a turning point, because there was a sense [among
the conscripted soldiers] that they had no control."Since the troops in Iraq and
Afghanistan are all volunteers, the war was very much part of a conscious career
choice, and the intensity of the experience is focusing their lives.
For some, it is a desire to get out and move on to anything else. Yet the
reenlistment rates also suggest that many are finding a deeper love for service
and a connection to something greater than themselves. "It really did open my
eyes," says Spc. Ryan Snyder, a military policeman, of his year in Iraq. "I
realized how lucky we are as American citizens." He is one of that class of
recruits who signed up after Sept. 11, and he has already reenlisted.
In fact, his division - the 1st Cavalry - made 125 percent of its reenlistment
goals after returning from the Middle East. In many ways, a portrait of the
soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan is a portrait of how the all - volunteer force
has changed the military. Demographically, this force has opened the military to
more women and, more recently, it has seen a drop in the overrepresentation of
blacks.
But significantly, it has also created a professional force capable of greater
sophistication - partly because everyone wants to be there. "None of us entered
this machine without knowing in our heart of hearts that we may have to go to
war," writes Capt. Christopher Connors in an e-mail from Afghanistan. "That is
why it is the Army, not the Boy Scouts." The result is a military that - despite
incidents like Abu Ghraib - is more disciplined than those of the past, say
analysts.
Since the beginning of the war on terror, there have been only two cases of "fragging"
- killing an officer - compared with hundreds during Vietnam, says Dr. Ender.
Moreover, soldiers have been able to reprogram their skills to the task
required, whether it's fighting islamic butcher terrorists or collecting trash.
"The American soldier of today is more adaptable than the American soldier of
the past, in part because America is requiring them to be so," says David Segal,
a sociologist at the University of Maryland in College Park. The American
soldier of today is also older and more likely to have a spouse and children
than those who fought in the past, particularly in Vietnam. Never before has the
military relied so heavily on the National Guard and Reserves, which comprise
many older soldiers who join after leaving active duty."
This military is more deeply embedded in the communities from which it is coming
than the one in Vietnam," says Dr. Segal. "More family members are left behind.
Employers are losing their workers; communities are losing their soccer coaches.
"Yet the trend has shaped the Army as much as it has the communities left
behind. Captain Connors saw it firsthand during a stint in Iraq, where the
father of two was supporting a National Guard unit."
The Iraqi people around the Forward Operation Base used to say that these
'soldiers are different than the other ones,' " he writes. "Many [members of the
Guard unit] had jobs where they had constant contact with a civilian population,
allowing them to learn techniques that did not involve direct confrontation."
To Master Sgt. Lanie Ray Vickers, a reservist, experience also brings a
different perspective. Sergeant Vickers served one tour in Vietnam as a draftee
and is now in Iraq as a member of the 490th Civil Affairs Battalion. To him, the
distinction between the draftees of Vietnam who simply wanted to finish their
tour and the soldiers of this generation could not be greater.
I've talked to many of these kids on their second tour, and they talk about,
'When I reenlist ...' " says Vickers by phone. "When you see that kind of
dedication - when they know what's out there - it makes an old soldier like me
proud to be an American.
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Contributed, YNCS Don Harribine, USN(ret)