Who is truly bearing the burden of repeated deployments and protracted conflicts? Who comprises our shrinking all-volunteer force? As the daughter of an A-10 pilot, I see my fellow military brats enlisting and being commissioned at incredible rates. Anecdotally, it has seemed at least one child in every military family tends to serve, while the ROTC programs in the Ivy League are some of the smallest in the country, and military service is left unconsidered as a viable career option for most young Americans.
This is creating a cultural gap between military and civilians and presents challenges for effective civilian control and oversight of the military. More and more military service has become a family affair, creating a “warrior caste” whose mantle is passed down from generation to generation.
via Defense in Depth » Does America Have a Warrior Caste?.
Eh… to some extent, the military has always been a “family business.”
The article spends a good bit of time on the Ivy League and the disconnect they have from the military. Though what it doesn’t recognize is that the Ivy’s are gaining a significant number of veterans in their ranks, particularly the graduate programs, but also in the undergrads. Whether the Ivy’s should come before or after military service might be an interesting question on its own.
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