The Military Recruiting Crisis: Even Veterans Don’t Want Their Children to Join - Pentagon scrambles to retain the main pipeline for new service members as disillusioned families steer young people away


Sky Nisperos’s grandfather came to the U.S. from Mexico, and became an American citizen by serving in the U.S. Navy. Her father, Ernest Nisperos, is an active-duty officer in the Air Force with two decades of service. For years, Sky planned to follow a similar path. “I wanted to be a fighter pilot,” the 22-year-old said. “It was stuck in my head.” Now, one of the most influential people in her life—her father—is telling her that a military career may not be the right thing. The children of military families make up the majority of new recruits in the U.S. military. That pipeline is now under threat, which is bad news for the Pentagon’s already acute recruitment problems, as well as America’s military readiness. “Influencers are not telling them to go into the military,” said Adm. Mike Mullen, the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, in an interview.

“Moms and dads, uncles, coaches and pastors don’t see it as a good choice.” After the patriotic boost to recruiting that followed 9/11, the U.S. military has endured 20 years of war in Iraq and Afghanistan with no decisive victories, scandals over shoddy military housing and healthcare, poor pay for lower ranks that forces many military families to turn to food stamps, and rising rates of post-traumatic stress disorder and suicide. At the same time, the labor market is the tightest it has been in decades, meaning plenty of other options exist for young people right out of school. U.S. recruiting shortfalls represent a long-term problem that, if not resolved, would compel the military to reduce its force size. With America embarking on a new era of great-power competition with China and Russia, that problem has become more serious. China, which has around two million serving personnel, versus a little under 1.4 million in the U.S., has steadily expanded its military capabilities in recent decades, especially in the South China Sea.



The most immediate threat is a possible conflict with China over Taiwan, which would require a rapid and sustained response from all parts of the U.S. armed forces. “I’ve been studying the recruiting market for about 15 years, and we’ve never seen a condition quite like this,” said a senior Defense Department official. Toughest year The U.S. Army in 2022 had its toughest recruiting year since the advent of the all-volunteer military in 1973 and missed its goal by 25%. This year, it expects to end up about 15,000 short of its target of 65,000 recruits. The Navy expects to fall short by as many as 10,000 of its goal of nearly 38,000 recruits this year, and the Air Force has said it is anticipating coming in at 3,000 below its goal of nearly 27,000. The Marine Corps met its target last year of sending 33,000 to boot camp, and expects to meet its goals this year, but its leaders described recruitment as challenging. Only 9% of young people ages 16-21 said last year they would consider military service, down from 13% before the pandemic, according to Pentagon data. Pentagon officials see recruitment shortfalls as a crisis and pledge to hit their targets in the future to stave off making changes to the force structure. Army Secretary Christine Wormuth said she expects within weeks to begin drafting a proposal for a recruiting overhaul so sweeping that Congress might need to pass legislation to enact all of it. She declined to provide details but said a key element will be to coordinate with veterans’ groups. “Right now we are not in a comprehensive, structured way leveraging our relationships with veterans organizations,” Wormuth said. The Army has stepped up and modernized its marketing, launched remedial courses to bring unqualified young people to a level where they can join and revised some benefits. Army recruiters spoke with members of the National FFA Organization, formerly called Future Farmers of America, at an FFA convention in Indianapolis, Ind., in October. PHOTO: KAITI SULLIVAN FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL Defense officials said they aren’t doing a good job of battling what they call misperceptions. They said many families want their children to go on to higher education after high school, considering the military a stumbling block instead of a steppingstone. Once a young person is on a path to a career, they aren’t as likely to put on a uniform, they said. When the draft ended at the close of the Vietnam War, the military fostered recruitment with the promise of a good career with retirement benefits and healthcare, as well as education benefits to prepare soldiers for life after the military.


That strategy worked, and the Army typically met its overall needs. It did so by relying heavily on veterans and military families to develop the next generation of recruits, especially in the region known in the military as the “Southern Smile,” a curving region from the mid-Atlantic and down across the southern U.S. Today, nearly 80% of all new Army recruits have a family member who has served in uniform, according to the service. That can be a good thing, said Col. Mark Crow, director of the Office of Economic and Manpower Analysis at West Point, because “people who know the most about it stick around.” Depending too much on military families could create a “warrior caste,” Wormuth said. Her plans seek to draw in people who have no real connection to the military and to broaden the appeal of service. Sky Nisperos, who moved around the world as a military brat, said that as a teen she began to see the effect of her father’s nearly dozen deployments and tours away from his family.


Ernest Nisperos said he remembers being asleep when one of his kids jabbed him in the ribs to wake him. He put Sky’s sister in a wrestling ankle lock before he realized he was back home. “My sister and I would say, ‘It’s just drill sergeant-dad mode,’ especially for the month he came back,” Sky said. Ernest Nisperos realized his deployments, which involved battle planning and top secret intelligence, were taking a toll. In 2019, after he returned from Afghanistan, he took the family to Disneyland. During the nightly fireworks extravaganza, he cowered in the fetal position while his family and “Toy Story” characters looked on. Sky worried her father would end up like her grandfather, the military patriarch, who in the years since he retired from the Navy started to have what the family describes as flashbacks to his time in Ramadi, Iraq, in 2005, sometimes yelling that he needed to take cover from a nonexistent attack. Her father decided he didn’t want that life for Sky and her two siblings. ‘What was it all for?’ Some on the left see the military as a redoubt of fringe conservatism. Oath Keepers, the militia group involved in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol whose leaders were found guilty of seditious conspiracy, and other extremists have touted their veteran credentials.

Those on the right have expressed concerns about the military focusing on progressive issues, or in the terms of some Republican lawmakers, being too “woke.” The sudden and unpopular conclusion to the war in Afghanistan in 2021 added to the disenchantment of some veterans, including Catalina Gasper, who served in the Navy. Gasper said she and her husband, who spent more than two decades in the Army, used to talk to their boys, now 7 and 10, about their future service, asking them if they wanted to be Navy SEALs. In July 2019, on her last combat deployment to Afghanistan, she was stationed at a base in Kabul when the Taliban launched an attack. The blast battered Gasper’s body and she was transported back to the U.S. for treatment and recovery. She was left with lingering damage from a traumatic brain injury. She is sensitive to loud sounds and bright lights. She has recurrent dizziness and forgets words. She also has bad knees and herniated discs in her back. The U.S. pulled out of Afghanistan in the summer of 2021, precipitating Kabul’s fall to the Taliban. “We’re left with the gut-wrenching feeling of, ‘What was it all for?’ ” she said. She said she was a patriot but decided she would do everything she could to make sure her kids never enter the military. “I just don’t see how it’s sustainable if the machine keeps chewing up and spitting out” our young people, she said.


Katherine Kuzminski, head of the Military, Veterans and Society Program at Center for a New American Security, a bipartisan security think tank, said the pandemic exacerbated the military’s long-term recruiting problems. “You can’t underestimate the fact we didn’t have recruiters on college and high school campuses for two years,” she said. “Recruiters are the only military access point for many people” without family or friends in the military. Potential Army recruits at the FFA convention used virtual reality headsets. PHOTO: KAITI SULLIVAN FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL Wormuth, the Army secretary, said she is working with the Department of Education to streamline access to schools. Even with federal laws in place that guarantee military recruiters access to high school and college students, school administrators can limit the scope of visits and restrict recruiters’ movements and activities in schools. Recruiters are competing with some of the lowest unemployment numbers in decades, and entry-level jobs in the service industry that can promise quick paychecks, no commitments and no wait times to start. “To be honest with you it’s Wendy’s, it’s Carl’s Jr., it’s every single job that a young person can go up against because now they are offering the same incentives that we are offering, so that’s our competition right now,” said Sgt. Maj. Marco Irenze, of the Nevada Army National Guard. Defense officials said the military pay scale was designed for single teenage men content to live in barracks and who joined to seek adventure, among other reasons.


But the military has seen a shift from teens to people in their 20s, who come in later in life with greater expectations for benefits, pay and marketable skills and who pay more attention to the job market. The lowest-ranking troops make less than $2,000 a month, although pay is bolstered by benefits including healthcare, food and housing, leaving them few out-of-pocket expenses. Families or those who live off base can find expenses outstrip income. More than 20,000 active-duty troops are on SNAP benefits, otherwise known as food stamps, according to federal data. When service members move to a new base they often have to spend money out of pocket—even though the Army is supposed to cover all costs, according to Kathy Roth-Douquet, CEO of Blue Star Families, a military-family advocacy group that is currently asking Congress to mandate more funding for troops’ housing. “If it’s too expensive to serve in the military, families won’t recommend service,” she said. “This hurts the main pipeline of recruitment.” The promise of a pension down the line isn’t as attractive as it once was, said West Point’s Crow. Only 19% of active-duty troops stayed until retirement age in 2017, according to the Pentagon. To tackle that problem, the military started a system in 2018 that allows troops to invest in what is essentially a 401(k) program, so if they leave the military before full retirement they can still benefit. Prep courses The Department of Defense said 77% of American youth are disqualified from military service due to a lack of physical fitness, low test scores, criminal records including drug use or other problems. In 2013, about 71% of youth were ineligible.



The Army estimates that pandemic pressures on education including remote learning, illness, lack of internet access and social isolation lowered scores on the ASVAB, the military’s standardized test for potential recruits, by as much as 9%. Those who score below a certain level on the test and on physical readiness tests can’t join without improving their scores. Lt. Col. Dan Hayes, a Green Beret who once taught Special Forces captains, some of the highest-performing soldiers in the Army, took charge of the Future Soldier Prep Course in Fort Jackson, S.C. The course takes Army recruits who can’t perform academically or physically and gets them up to standards that allow them to join the service. Other programs help new soldiers raise scores. “We’re looking at the problems in society and recruiting and realizing we have to meet people half way,” said Hayes. The Army is adapting marketing techniques from the private sector. One early lesson: The Cold War-era slogan, “Be All You Can Be,” performed better than a recent one, “Army of One,” which didn’t reflect the teamwork the service thinks appeals to current teenagers. The slogan also emphasizes that the military offers career development and a broader sense of purpose, some of its strongest selling points. Maj. Gen. Deborah Kotulich, the director of the Army’s recruiting and retention task force, a unit convened to address recent shortfalls, said potential recruits should know the Army has more than 150 different job fields available.


Maj. General Alex Fink is just as likely to wear a business suit as camouflage fatigues at the Army Enterprise Marketing Office based in Chicago. The Army put Fink, a reservist with a marketing background, in Chicago so he can be in the heart of one of the nation’s advertising and marketing hubs. “It hadn’t evolved for the last 15 or 20 years,” he said in an interview. “We really couldn’t measure the effectiveness of marketing.” Fink’s office is now gathering data on every potential recruit. If an Army ad runs on Facebook and a link gets clicked, the service can follow that anonymous user digitally. “We don’t know your name, but we can start serving you ads,” he said. And if that user eventually fills out an Army questionnaire, the service has a name to go with that data and can know what kinds of ads work best. “Literally we can track this all the way until a kid signs a contract,” he said. Restructuring units Deeper problems soldiers report include moldy barracks, harassment, lack of adequate child care and not enough support for mental health issues such as suicide. “Parents have concerns about, hey, if my kid joins the military are they going to have good places to live?” Wormuth said. “If my kid joins the military are they going to be sexually harassed, or are they going to be more prone to suicidal ideations?” She said the Army has encouraged recruiters to be forthright about addressing what might have once been taboo issues in order to dispel those concerns


. The service says it has worked to encourage troops to report abuse and harassment and cracked down on such behavior, and has also expanded parental-leave benefits. Department of Defense officials have said they will have to address the total combat power of the military if the recruiting crisis continues, but that they aren’t ready to yet talk about whether strength will ultimately be affected. Readiness shortfalls can be masked when units aren’t headed into war, but a full-scale response, such as what would be needed in the Pacific, could expose undermanned units that can’t be deployed or aren’t effective, and ships and aircraft that aren’t combat ready due to a lack of personnel to maintain them. The military faces decisions on either cutting the size of units or reconfiguring them, or making choices that could hurt the quality of the current forces. Working to retain existing soldiers is an option. But retention can mean low performers aren’t let go, said Gil Barndollar, a senior research fellow at the Center for the Study of Statesmanship at Catholic University of America. “If you’re not cutting your bottom 10% after their initial contracts it’s going to have a long-term effect on high performers,” he said. Last year, the Army’s top officer, Gen. James McConville, told reporters the service was prepared to eliminate redundancies in the Army’s key fighting units, which are called brigade combat teams.


The Army would maintain the number of the units by reducing the personnel in each of them, a restructuring that was prompted by the recruiting crunch, according to one defense official. Potential recruits at the FFA convention tried a fitness challenge. PHOTO: KAITI SULLIVAN FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL Mark Cancian, a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a nonpartisan think tank, said the Army might end up making cuts that leave too few soldiers in platoons and other units. During peacetime and training this may go unnoticed, but if those units have to deploy, the Army would have to take troops from other units to fill in gaps. Undermanned units aren’t ready to respond quickly, Cancian said, and units with fill-in soldiers don’t have the same effectiveness as a unit whose members trained together for months or years. “What you’re going to see in the Army are hollow units,” he said. Wormuth, the Army secretary, has said units will get cuts but hasn’t made public her plan. She has for months hinted at broader force reductions. “If you look at us over the course of the last 50 years of history, the Army is a little bit like an accordion.


We tend to expand in times of war,” Wormuth said. “Frankly that’s how the Founding Fathers thought about the military, they didn’t want a large standing militia.” Still, she said, the Army is “very, very focused” on turning around the recruiting numbers. Changes may come too late for those about to graduate from high school or college. Sky Nisperos, who once dreamed of becoming an Air Force pilot, graduated from the University of Oklahoma in May. Her plan now, she said, is to become a graphic designer.


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The grift here is PTSD. When I was getting out, everyone and their mother told me, "Tell them you have PTSD!"

"PTSD from what? I don't have PTSD."

"Okay, here's what you have to tell them..."

I didn't lie and claim I had psych issues. Maybe that was dumb for leaving easy money and 100% disability on the table, but I had enough physical injuries I wanted treatment for and I didn't feel comfortable pretending I needed a shrink. But the fact that I had multiple people give me full-blown scripts of how to scam the VA...honestly, it boils my blood seeing people with legitimate service-connect issues get told to pound sand while some Depot Diva who spent her minimum four years in pushing papers in garrison cries that she has ~trauma~ because one time Chief said mean words to her or something, and she gets a payout. Fuck that.


A quarter of the country would cheer the death of pod people and another quarter of the country would smugly insist we deserved to get 9/11'd again, and the rest of the country would be too busy trying to make ends meet to give a shit.
I fucking hate those people. I wasn’t doing super secret squirrel shit but I did my fair share of time outside the wire. I watched a sgt claim PTSD because he had to watch the rest of the company go out on missions and couldn’t go because he was too much of a retard to be trusted. Got a higher percentage for it then the Lcpl who got blown up 3 times.

Reading between the lines I don't like this.

Can they bring pressure to bear on any of these organisations? Of the "some of your people seem really critical of us these days. Therefore you're going to get less support. which will directly impact them."
Needn't be direct financial stuff, even just cutting staff support or just working slower for those groups currently under observation could provide chance for some really malicious stuff.
Welcome to the party. They have been calling vets domestic terrorists for 15 years now.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/dhs-domestic-terror-warning-angers-gop/
 
The grift here is PTSD. When I was getting out, everyone and their mother told me, "Tell them you have PTSD!"

"PTSD from what? I don't have PTSD."

"Okay, here's what you have to tell them..."

I didn't lie and claim I had psych issues. Maybe that was dumb for leaving easy money and 100% disability on the table, but I had enough physical injuries I wanted treatment for and I didn't feel comfortable pretending I needed a shrink. But the fact that I had multiple people give me full-blown scripts of how to scam the VA...honestly, it boils my blood seeing people with legitimate service-connect issues get told to pound sand while some Depot Diva who spent her minimum four years in pushing papers in garrison cries that she has ~trauma~ because one time Chief said mean words to her or something, and she gets a payout. Fuck that.


A quarter of the country would cheer the death of pod people and another quarter of the country would smugly insist we deserved to get 9/11'd again, and the rest of the country would be too busy trying to make ends meet to give a shit.
Knew a guy I served with who retired and started collecting for PTSD. But I was never sure why he collected for PTSD, he was a linguist, wasn't in ground combat. VA gave him a shitload of pills. As time went by, things got worse and worse, he sued the VA, ended up on the cover of a Scientology-produced magazine. Passed away a while back.

After the way the country overall was fucked over by government/law enforcement/the judiciary/the mainstream media/"science" at every level during the time of the Chinese Flu, TPTB will have only themselves to blame when people largely ignore/work around them the next time they claim the sky is falling.

Personally have never joined any vets' organization. Not one to hang out in geriatric ward bars and listen to bullshit stories. Also don't advise joining the Disabled American Veterans. Their rep was rude to me during a retirement transition seminar before retiring. They sent me stuff for years trying to get me to join, got a lot of free address stickers. Got FAR more help from the county veterans' service office over the years, they were always glad to help.
 
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"You’ve spent 15 years enlisted in the military. You’ve been on 8 combat tours, have a few KIA bracelets on your wrists, & you missed your 2nd child’s birth because you were overseas. In walks your new commander, Major “Rachel” Jones."



The military is activity using this person as a ad. I want to take this video on loop and just play it outside of any recruiting table/office for any one dumb enough to show up.
 
Personally have never joined any vets' organization. Not one to hang out in geriatric ward bars and listen to bullshit stories. Also don't advise joining the Disabled Veterans of America. Their rep was rude to me during a retirement transition seminar before retiring. They sent me stuff for years trying to get me to join, got a lot of free address stickers. Got FAR more help from the county veterans' service office over the years, they were always glad to help.
That's because you weren't in the Fighting 69th.

 
"You’ve spent 15 years enlisted in the military. You’ve been on 8 combat tours, have a few KIA bracelets on your wrists, & you missed your 2nd child’s birth because you were overseas. In walks your new commander, Major “Rachel” Jones."
View attachment 5188848


The military is activity using this person as a ad. I want to take this video on loop and just play it outside of any recruiting table/office for any one dumb enough to show up.
This MAN is overweight, just look at the way the uniform is worn. Simply disgusting.
 
Welcome to the party. They have been calling vets domestic terrorists for 15 years now.
My old man, having served in Vietnam, literally gets flagged every single time before going on an airplane for "random checks" and always gets treated like absolute dogshit by the TSA. He's literally been visited by the feds over "suspicions" twice despite never having once done anything wrong. It's actually insane how much contempt the government has for the people they sent off to die for them.
 
Doctors will still do it because it pays well, but you won't get many general practitioners anymore because they're trying to replace them with AI.
It's not about "doing the job" though - it's the level at which it's done.

We'll always have police as an example - but we no longer have police that are actively part of and care about the community. Gone are the days where you can expect a police officer to be welcomed anywhere they go and conversely gone are the days where you can expect them to lay their lives on the line for citizens (see Uvdale police response).

We will always have doctors - but gone are the "do no harm" doctors of old. Doctors and Scientists were so beholden to the truth previously they would rather litrerally die than lie about what they believed in. Now we've got Doctors lying under oath because "I did not want to publicly agree with Donald Trump".

In this instance - we're always going to have an army. But gone is the Army of America, full of patriotic soldiers who are doing what they think is right, to make their communities and families proud. They've been replaced with mercenaries, essentially. Trannies, furries, diversity hires - people joining just to do the minimum possible and steal the most benefits possible. (Free SRS, two years recovery, can't be deployed because of medication and then milking the VA)


We'll always have these things, but they aren't the same as they used to be.
 
My old man, having served in Vietnam, literally gets flagged every single time before going on an airplane for "random checks" and always gets treated like absolute dogshit by the TSA. He's literally been visited by the feds over "suspicions" twice despite never having once done anything wrong. It's actually insane how much contempt the government has for the people they sent off to die for them.
Going to the airport is always fun. Walk through the metal detector. BEEEEEP! Next thing I know, they're having me take off my shirt in a back room. I quit flying after joking I should just wear a jockstrap when I show up and not bother to get dressed till I get on the plane.

As to that fucking Major...

Anyone thinking of joining needs to remember: People like him will get promoted over you, no matter what you do. Combat? He'll get promoted for being his "true self." Pull off a peacetime mission that's fucking amazing? He'll get an award for "being true and brave" while you get told you did your job. Pull a half dozen people out of a burning helicopter? He'll get news articles written about him about how he's 'stunning and brave' while you are yelled at for not grabbing their reflective belts from the burning wreckage.

When he gets out, he'll whine about how tough it was to be trans in the military, while sitting next to people who got their bodies and brains ruined doing actual work.

Then you top it off with he'll get his titty skittles, the chop, all the surgery he wants to be his 'authentic self' while the VA tries to claim that injuries you have paperwork for were pre-existing conditions. (I have three pieces of paper saying things that happened were not related to my military service. You know, stuff like "Your Gulf War Syndrome is not related to your service in the Persian Gulf" as well as being told that "Burn Pit Conditions don't cover Desert Storm because your war only lasted 4 days" by a VA rep.

If you survived your tours, they hate you because you didn't have the patriotism to die so they could wave around your bloody shirt.

Between the VA wanting you to literally DIE before they part with one red cent or one pill of Motrin and the way the government treats you (If your MOS dealt with certain things, or you got certain training, you ARE on a fucking list) and that creature being showcased by the DoD, why should I encourage anyone to join?
 
Wow you mean people don't want to fight and die for a country that seem to hate them? What a shock!

There is no honor, no nationalism, no patriotic duty, no feeling of the country giving a shit. Why would people volunteer?
The United States is no longer a country worth dying for. It hurts to say it but its true.
 
I assume he identifies as a woman so people can't make fun of his moobs and he doesn't have to cut his hair.

"You’ve spent 15 years enlisted in the military. You’ve been on 8 combat tours, have a few KIA bracelets on your wrists, & you missed your 2nd child’s birth because you were overseas. In walks your new commander, Major “Rachel” Jones."
View attachment 5188848


The military is activity using this person as a ad. I want to take this video on loop and just play it outside of any recruiting table/office for any one dumb enough to show up.
That looks like a TikTok video. The DOD isn't allowed to use TikTok because it's a Chinese intelligence op. Great OPSEC from the head of the Sustainment Command's Cyber Division.

And look at these flags. No stars and stripes. No Army flag. He's even covering the flag patch on his uniform with the rainbow flag. In a way, I'm glad. If we have to have a zombie Army, I want it to use as few symbols from the dead Army as possible.
1688346576072.png
AGP smirk, check.
 
We'll always have police as an example - but we no longer have police that are actively part of and care about the community. Gone are the days where you can expect a police officer to be welcomed anywhere they go and conversely gone are the days where you can expect them to lay their lives on the line for citizens (see Uvdale police response).
When you get cursed and shot at for simply doing your job and trying to do the right thing, putting yourself in harms way day in and day out dealing with the absolute garbage of humanity, you'd be a little bitter too. Especially when you get blamed and hated for what some other asshole did thousands of miles away.
 
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