Friday, September 20, 2013

Military throwback to the Carter years

Robb at Sharp as a Marble had this to say about disarming troops while on base:

A Marine, trained in the art of rifles, with a Secret clearance, fully background checked and given access to real, military grade hardware, could not own something as simple as a handgun while on base.
Do you want to know why such rules happen? Here is why, according to the FBI:

Many street gang members join the military to escape the gang lifestyle or as an alternative to incarceration, but often revert back to their gang associations once they encounter other gang members in the military. Other gangs target the U.S. military and defense systems to expand their territory, facilitate criminal activity such as weapons and drug trafficking, or to receive weapons and combat training that they may transfer back to their gang.


~ In Iraq, armored vehicles, concrete barricades and bathroom walls have served as canvasses for spray-painted gang art. At Camp Cedar II, about 185 miles southeast of Baghdad, a guard shack was recently defaced with “GDN” for Gangster Disciple Nation, along with the gang’s six-pointed star and the word “Chitown,” according to the Chicago Sun-Times.

~ In Germany, a soldier is being prosecuted this week for the murder of Sgt. Juwan Johnson, beaten to death on July 4, 2005, allegedly during a Gangster Disciple initiation in Kaiserslautern.

~ In September, Department of Defense Dependents Schools in Europe warned teachers and parents to watch out for signs of gang activity, including the deadly MS-13 gang. At the time, DODDS-Europe public affairs officer David Ruderman said there had been two incidents in the past 18 months that involved students fighting, wearing gang colors or claiming to be members of gangs. In one of the incidents, a student’s family member may have been a gang member, he said.

~ Earlier this year, Kadena Air Base on Okinawa established a joint service task force to investigate gang-related activity involving high school teens linked through the Web site MySpace.com.
When I joined the military in the mid-eighties, I arrived at my first command, and I was told stories by the "old timers" about how things were in the late seventies. They told me stories about people doing lines of cocaine right on the tables in the lounge areas of the ship. They told me stories about how the officers would not enter the enlisted berthing areas without armed escorts. Drug use and drug dealing were widespread.
Vietnam, and the seemingly directionless leadership had stripped the military of honor and left the United States with a hollowed out force. That is not to say that everyone that entered the military was a drug abuser. No, like a bad neighborhood, many of the people that are there are good people, but there are still more troublemakers than average.

I think we are seeing the same thing now: The bad economy, combined with the leadership that is lacking for our military, has combined to recreate the hollowed out shell of a military that we had in the 1970s. Instead of a fighting force, our military has become a type of welfare- a jobs program, if you will. A jobs program that doesn't care about your honor, your background, or your mental state. After all, Aaron Alexis joined the Navy on a criminal background waiver. Eighteen percent of recruits joining the Army need criminal history waivers.

In 2007 more than half of the Army's 511 convictions were for thefts, ranging from burglaries to bad checks and stolen cars. Another 130 were for drug offenses. The remainder included two for manslaughter; five for sexual crimes, including rape, incest or sexual assault, and; three for negligent or vehicular homicide. Two received waivers for terrorist threats including bomb threats in 2007.

Even the Marines are not exempt. 235 of the Marine Corps' 350 waivers were for various types of thefts in 2007, and another 63 were for assaults or robberies that may also have included use of a weapon. The remainder included one for manslaughter in 2007; four for sex crimes; and five for terror threats, including bomb threats.

Without honor, of course the powers that be are afraid of giving you weapons. How many more people that are as crazy as Alexis, and have an even worse record? I am betting that there are more than a few.

3 comments:

SiGraybeard said...

While that makes the policy make more sense, it still fills me with "WTF??". The thing is, these guys have the same ability to do bad things in Kandahar or Qatar, or any base where they might have weapons, and they certainly have the ability to do bad things while they're out on patrol.

In other words, we trust them with a firearm in those situations and everywhere else in the world, we just don't trust them on a base in the US?

I was never in the service: it was Vietnam and my draft number came up low enough they never got to me (and not knowing anyone who simply enlisted, it never even crossed my mind). Consequently, I can only go by stories from friends I've known and trusted over the years. They always said if you so much as bounced a check, you were in deep trouble. Sounds like they need to go back to that standard.

Divemedic said...

Because the risk of them doing bad things is outweighed by the need to get the mission accomplished. It is a risk versus benefit calculation.

Think about this: The military uses civilian security guards and police to secure stateside bases, rather than simply using sentries from the ranks of personnel already based there.

This costs the military a lot of money, especially considering that you are paying the military personnel to sit around the base.

Anonymous said...

As a service member, I ran into my fair share of felons, but as the comment above me everyone deployed has a common goal, to make it home alive. That's when the most dysfunctional character in society will do the unthinkable, by putting aside petty differences and possibly making the ultimate sacrifice to save their battle buddies. But once in the states, they'll revert to their old ways. I have witnessed both. In saying that, I wouldn't give half the people I served with the right to purchase and own privately owned weapons, but it's becoming easier and easier to do so. Especially for those in the service.