Less Black People want to join the US-Army
Anti-war in the US:
“Be all you can be”
As
many wonder why Americans aren’t doing more to oppose a brutal,
illegal, but highly profitable war (if you have stock in Halliburton
that is) they should realize that a very quiet but effective protest is
going on. It is a protest that affects military planning, the morale of
the US Army, and may ultimately lead to the end of the war itself.
There is a boycott going on and it is being lead by young, poor, black
men.
The US all volunteer Army system (mandatory service was
another casualty of the American War in Vietnam) depends on the same
tools, tricks, and techniques capitalism uses to convince masses of
people that they absolutely “must have” the latest contribution to
their growing junk piles of products. “Be All You Can Be” and “An Army
of One” are slogans that come from the same Madison Avenue hacks
responsible for selling soap and toilet paper. Slogans aside, the US
Army has traditionally found fertile soil for collecting recruits off
of the streets of America’s most depressed economic areas. Areas where
a job is scarce and a good job is rare offer little hope for the future
for thousands of young black men. The US Army offered these men a
chance of escape that no other organization in the country would.
Blacks,
a far from monolithic community, have supported service in the army
since the Revolutionary War for economic and other reasons. Perhaps in
the days of slavery it was simply the prospect of freedom since blacks
fought on both sides of the Revolutionary and Civil Wars. Maybe it was
considered a rite of passage to manhood denied blacks in most other
areas of American society. Maybe it was another chapter in the
unrequited love affair many blacks are engaged in with American culture
as they try to prove their constantly questioned loyalty and right to
first class citizenship through military service. Whatever the reason,
blacks have been significantly represented in the US Army since WWII.
By 2000, 24 percent of Army recruits were black even though blacks made
up only 13 percent of the overall population. When you subtract the
number of black men who could not serve due to criminal convictions,
the amount of voluntary support is staggering.
Yet since 2000, the
numbers and percentage of blacks in the army have been in decline.
Today, blacks account for only14 percent of US Army recruits. As the
overall recruiting shortfalls in 2005 indicate, it isn’t as if this
decline doesn’t matter. It isn’t as if recruiters aren’t trying as they
troll the streets and roam the halls of high schools peddling dreams of
money for college and trips to exotic places like game show hosts. The
fact is many recruits are simply saying “no”. Even though poor black
men are facing increasing economic pressure, such as a 50 percent
unemployment rate in New York City, often living in dangerous
surroundings with little hope of building a better life unless they
leave, the prospect of fighting a war for the new American oligarchy
seems foolish. Many would rather take their chances on the streets of
Chicago than on the streets of Baghdad.
Black young men are often
not in alone in their decision to reject the call of the military.
Parents of potential soldiers of all backgrounds are dissuading their
children from military service too. The Army has attempted to counter
that trend with an add campaign stressing the “independence and
reasonableness” a decision to join the military is for young people
painting the decision to support a war of aggression as a perverse
right of passage to adulthood.
They even have created a web site
specifically for parents of potential soldiers touting the benefits of
being a soldier. Naturally, death and dismemberment benefits aren’t
mentioned. Parent organizations like No Draft No Way and Mothers
Against the Draft are alerting parents to covert military aptitude
testing in the schools and how to opt out of a law that requires all
schools receiving federal funds to provide military recruiters with
personal information about their children. They also share information
about how to stop recruiter phone calls and contacts.
The decline
in recruits, particularly from the black community, a source thought to
be secure, hurts the army in many ways. First, current soldiers are not
allowed to leave when their contracts are up because their replacements
are not in the pipeline. This “stop-gap” provision, or back-door draft,
creates morale problems when soldiers want to come home at the end of
their enlistment and be done with it all but legally can’t. Many
soldiers are facing the prospect of their third tour in Iraq.
Additionally, if recruiting numbers continue to fall and the US seeks
to maintain troop strength in Iraq at 100,000 soldiers through 2009
(while threatening actions in Iran and elsewhere), a real draft may be
necessary.
War planners fear a real draft because there main
economic stooges, the American middle-class, will then be directly
affected by the war as opposed to the faceless poor who are currently
suffering the majority of the casualties. A real draft, especially one
without the “my daddy is rich” exemption would awaken already stirring
anti-war sentiments and may call the oligarchy itself into question. A
Pew Research Center poll indicates for the first time that a majority
of those polled believe the Iraq war is a mistake. An NBC poll showed
that nearly 60 percent of Americans want to reduce the number of
soldiers in Iraq.
Polls have consistently shown that blacks in the
US are overwhelmingly against the war in Iraq. A recent PBS report
noted among black youth only 36 percent think the war is justified
while over 61 percent of white youth think it is. Even though they are
in the same country, many blacks know first hand what it means to be
“those” people and they naturally question those in power. Blacks
remember the days in the US when they were thought of as a community of
potential terrorists too and treated accordingly. When blacks hear of
terms like ‘haji’, ‘raghead’, or ‘sand nigger’ being used to dehumanize
the Iraqi people, they know the tune of their oppression is still
playing though the words have changed.
It is difficult to question
the intelligence of young black men as they continue to see through the
charade and march away from the recruiting station. As America recently
marked the occasion of the death of the 2001 US service member, black
men may be choosing to save their own lives while refusing to take the
lives of others for a president that in the words of rapper Kanye West
“… Doesn’t care about black people.”
[prol-position news #4, 12/2005]

