Report: Black enlistment falls dramatically -- 33% drop since 2003
When Danny Edwards, 26, enlisted in the Army in April 2001, he expected to stay for a career. He changed his mind while serving in Iraq in 2003, a war fought for reasons he said he still doesn’t understand.
Edwards, who is black, has since advised black youth in his neighborhood in Savannah, Ga., to avoid the Army and “the hell” of Iraq.
Black youth across the country appear to be heeding similar advice from parents, teachers, ministers, coaches and other black veterans.
Racial data on enlistees, compiled for Military Update by the Defense Manpower Data Center, show that in fiscal 2002, the year before the U.S. invasion of Iraq, the Army had 43,400 blacks among its first-term soldiers, representing 21 percent of the total. By 2006, the number of blacks on their first hitch had fallen to 30,000, down to 14.5 percent.
Read the rest at Navy Times
Related Link:
Report: $1 billion in enlistment bonuses paid last year
Related Link:
Marine Corps nears legal limit on involuntary mobilizations
Related Link:
Marines lift limits on home-schooled recruits
Related Link:
In testimony, National Guard Generals fight to expand GI Bill for reservists
Related Link:
Survey: Almost 80% of Individual Ready Reserve officers saying no to deploying
Related Link:
Perspective: Officer shortage looming in Army
Related Link:
Army recruiting at 9-year high, secretary says
Related Link:
Most youth ineligible for Army, military survey says
Related Link:
Pentagon acts to crack down on recruiter misconduct
Related Link:
Navy offers $40,000 re-enlistment bonuses for intel officers to overcome shortage
Related Link:
Marines offer re-enlistment bonuses of $10,000-$70,000; DOD eyes similar for all troops
Related Link:
Perspective: Guard enlists younger help in its drive for recruits
Related Link:
Perspective: Many reservists elevating family over re-enlistment
Related Link:
Perspective: With Bigger Army, a Bigger Task for Recruiters
Related Link:
Pentagon defends quality of U.S. military recruits
Related Link:
5 years later: Recruiting isn’t the same either
Edwards, who is black, has since advised black youth in his neighborhood in Savannah, Ga., to avoid the Army and “the hell” of Iraq.
Black youth across the country appear to be heeding similar advice from parents, teachers, ministers, coaches and other black veterans.
Racial data on enlistees, compiled for Military Update by the Defense Manpower Data Center, show that in fiscal 2002, the year before the U.S. invasion of Iraq, the Army had 43,400 blacks among its first-term soldiers, representing 21 percent of the total. By 2006, the number of blacks on their first hitch had fallen to 30,000, down to 14.5 percent.
Read the rest at Navy Times
Related Link:
Report: $1 billion in enlistment bonuses paid last year
Related Link:
Marine Corps nears legal limit on involuntary mobilizations
Related Link:
Marines lift limits on home-schooled recruits
Related Link:
In testimony, National Guard Generals fight to expand GI Bill for reservists
Related Link:
Survey: Almost 80% of Individual Ready Reserve officers saying no to deploying
Related Link:
Perspective: Officer shortage looming in Army
Related Link:
Army recruiting at 9-year high, secretary says
Related Link:
Most youth ineligible for Army, military survey says
Related Link:
Pentagon acts to crack down on recruiter misconduct
Related Link:
Navy offers $40,000 re-enlistment bonuses for intel officers to overcome shortage
Related Link:
Marines offer re-enlistment bonuses of $10,000-$70,000; DOD eyes similar for all troops
Related Link:
Perspective: Guard enlists younger help in its drive for recruits
Related Link:
Perspective: Many reservists elevating family over re-enlistment
Related Link:
Perspective: With Bigger Army, a Bigger Task for Recruiters
Related Link:
Pentagon defends quality of U.S. military recruits
Related Link:
5 years later: Recruiting isn’t the same either
<< Home