By Alan
Caruba
Wars are
often unpredictable. The outcome of such conflicts is also unpredictable, but defeat
in future conflicts is now being “baked into the cake” and I suspect most
Americans are totally unaware of how serious this threat is. You can be sure
potential and actual enemies are calculating the odds.
A recent
USA Today article noted that the choice between troops and modern weapons would
require the Army to shrink to “as few as 380,000 soldiers and the Marine Corps
to 150,000 troops. There would also be fewer Navy aircraft carriers and Air
Force bombers. Current plans envision an Army of 490,000 soldiers in the coming
years, and a Marine Corps of 182,000”, added that “The Army hasn’t been that
small since before World War II when it had 267,767 soldiers.”
In
January, the members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff sent a letter to Sen. Carl
Levin, the Chairman of the Committee on Armed Forces.
“The
readiness of our Armed Forces is at a tipping point. We are on the brink of
creating a hollow force due to an unprecedented convergence of budget
considerations and legislation that could require the Department (of Defense)
to retain more forces than requested while underfunding that force’s
readiness.” The letter addressed the “sequestration that has trigged “a cut in
operating budgets of more than twenty percent across the Joint Force compared
with the President’s budget.”
While
“Troops on the front lines will receive the support they need…the rest of the
force will be compromised.” The “looming readiness crisis” would force the
Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marines “to ground aircraft, return ships to port,
and stop driving combat vehicles in training.” After more than a decade of hard
fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Joint Chiefs warned that “We will be
unable to reset and restore the force’s full-spectrum combat capability…”
The U.S.
military is on life support. In July, The Washington Times reported that Gen.
Raymond Odierno, the Army’s chief of staff, told a gathering at the American
Enterprise Institute that fewer than one-quarter of today’s youth can qualify
for Army service” but what struck me as odd was his view that this makes “the
recruitment of women even more important.”
In the
long history of the American fighting forces—indeed in the history of
civilization—nations have not called upon their women to be front line combat
personnel. The feminist movement in America has changed that and the military
is under orders to recruit more women in the name of “diversity.”
It does
not take an expert in military affairs to know that the demand to include more
women in the ranks will degrade unit cohesion throughout of our fighting forces.
The Center for Military Readiness devotes itself to this topic and its findings should be
front-page news. Instead, Americans remain unaware of the deterioration of the
nation’s ability to train a new generation to defend itself and project its
strength.
A recent
Pentagon study by the Sexual Assault Prevention & Response Office (SAPRO)
fills two hefty volumes. The Center says it “documents the dysfunctional
consequences of social experiments with human sexuality in our military over
many years” warning that “Failing to see the big picture, the Department of
Defense is moving ahead with plans to extend problems of sexual assault and
misconduct into the combat arms.”
As someone
who has served in the U.S. Army well before women were introduced as part of
the fighting elements, it comes as no surprise that, between 2004 and 2012, the
number of sexual assault cases among military personnel “escalated from 1,275
to 2,949, an increase of 129%.” This has occurred in a military that has ”more
sexual response coordinators (25,000) than it does recruiters (19,000).”
From the
chiefs of staff down through all the officer ranks, the pressure has been on to
accommodate the very real differences between men and women. It is compromising
all elements of military service and is most evident in the area of training.
The Center says “It does not matter what Pentagon officials and women-in-combat
activists are promising now…incremental pressures to assign women to fighting
infantry battalions eventually will drive qualifications standards down.”
The Marine
Corps, an elite fighting force, serves as just one example. They reported that
obvious differences in physiology should rule out women in combat. “On average,
women have 47% lower lifting strength, 40% lower muscle strength, 20% lower
aerobic capacity (important for endurance), and 26% slower road march strength.
In addition, both female attrition/injury rates during entry level training and
discharge rates were twice those of
men and non-deployable rates where three
times higher.”
“There is
no incentive,” says the Center, “for ensuring that tough training standards for
elite fighting battalions remain high and uncompromised.” That is the
description for a fighting force that can no longer meet the rigors of the
battlefield.
Every
indicator of how our military’s combat readiness is being degraded is available
to those in the Pentagon and in Congress. Double standards in the name of
“diversity” will undermine the vital element of survival in combat, team and
unit cohesion.
The Center
has called on Congress to acknowledge these ancient and present challenges and
to shape policy for the military as is its responsibility under Article 1,
Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution.
“To truly
honor and respect our courageous servicewomen, Congress should take this issue
seriously,” says the Center. “The highest priority should be military
necessity, not self-interest, political illusions, or ideology that denies
differences between men and women.”
An
under-funded U.S. military, riven with all manner of social experimentation
involving women and gays, is putting the nation and our global interests at
risk.
© Alan
Caruba, 2013
American military weakness at a time when WW III is about to break out in the Middle East...INSANE!
ReplyDeleteIt reminds me of the U.S. Army of the 1930s that drilled with wooden rifles and cardboard tanks, as Nazi Germany massed for the offensive with plenty of real guns and tanks.
If history is a teacher this weak military machine of ours will become lean, mean and find good leaders.
After we lose much ground and many good troops...
Carter gutted the military, Reagan brought it back.
ReplyDeleteBill Clinton gutted the military and Intel services, George W. Bush brought them back.
Obama guts the military, and if some rumors are to be believed, it's so he can take over America and disarm the American citizen.
He's going to need United Nations troops to do that, and I am firmly convinced that the 150 million or so gun owners and at least 75% of what military may remain will be enough to stave off that effort.
Fred. American gun owners/hunters constitute a very large army of free people who want to stay that way.
ReplyDeleteThere's hardly any mention of homosexual rapes that are increasing in the military to the disbanding of DADT. Not only that, but recruiting thugs, gang members, terrorists and low IQ immigrants into the military will only push it back.
ReplyDeleteA nation that cannot defend itself with its army cannot hope to hold itself.
Feminists can whine all they want, the simple thing is: women were not made for combat. And, if they're going to complain about sexual assault, they should mention the growing homosexual rapes. But we won't see that, as that is "offensive."