Originally posted by Rufus T. Firefly
You and Plato make the same point. It's a reasonable point: if we really mean to do this, we need a larger army.
Unfortunately, that's not going to happen; now that army service = definitely headed to the hot zone, and now that the economy is such that everyone can get a job (usually a crappy job, to be sure, but it's still better than being maimed), the volunteer forces just ain't cutting it. Even as the army lowers their standards -- less education, lower IQ's, looking the other way regarding psychological problems -- they still can't make quota.
Solution: a draft. Believe me, nothing would make me happier than seeing the Bush administration push for that.
You and Plato make the same point. It's a reasonable point: if we really mean to do this, we need a larger army.
Unfortunately, that's not going to happen; now that army service = definitely headed to the hot zone, and now that the economy is such that everyone can get a job (usually a crappy job, to be sure, but it's still better than being maimed), the volunteer forces just ain't cutting it. Even as the army lowers their standards -- less education, lower IQ's, looking the other way regarding psychological problems -- they still can't make quota.
Solution: a draft. Believe me, nothing would make me happier than seeing the Bush administration push for that.
However, I believe that the main hurdle to increasing the size of the armed forces is Administration arrogance. Rummy's minimal force needed theories are still haunting the halls of the Pentagon. Not to mention that the current Congress is unlikely to authorize the additional money to add another division or two.
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