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Americas Child Soldier Problem
Terry J. Allen, In These Times
May 15, 2007
Congratulations:
You have lived long enough to cringe at the bad decisions you were
seduced, dared, bullied, inspired or stoned enough to make as a
teenager.
Thousands of America ’s children, however, are not so lucky.
Almost 600,000 of America ’s 1 million active and reserve
soldiers enlisted as teens. The military lures these physiologically
immature kids with a PR machine that would make Joe Camel proud.
While the age of legal and cultural adulthood can vary, science is now
able to determine the physiological markers of maturity. A recent study
headed by Jay Giedd of the National Institutes of Health using MRI
scans shows that the brain of an 18-year-old is not fully developed,
with the limbic cortex-brain structures, the cerebellum and prefrontal
cortex still undergoing substantial changes.
As of March 31, the U.S. military included 81,000 teenagers. Its 7,350
17-year-olds needed parental consent to enlist, and only this April
were all barred from battle zones.
But the military aims even lower, marketing itself to children as young
as 13 with multimedia videos, school visits and cold calls to
teens’ homes and cell phones. In Junior ROTC, kids get uniforms,
win medals, fire real guns and play soldier, while adults trained in
psychological manipulation steer them toward the army. The Army’s
JROTC website lists such motivating activities as “eating at
concession stands.”
A mature prefrontal cortex, “the area of sober second
thought,” is vital not only to deciding whether to enlist, but
also to choices made under the stress of deployment and the terrors of
combat. But the prefrontal cortex, “important for controlling
impulses, is among the last brain regions to mature,” according
to Giedd, and doesn’t reach “adult dimensions until the
early 20s.”
Teenagers’ brains simply lack the impulse control that can
prevent a lifetime of regret, psychological and physical disability,
and preventable deaths—their own, their fellow soldiers’
and those of civilians.
The child soldier problem is global and so is America ’s role in
it. More than 300,000 children around the world, some as young as
seven, serve as soldiers, or, in the case of girls, as military sex
slaves. The State Department reports that 10 countries are violating
international treaties against child soldiers. Washington provides
military assistance to nine of these outlaw nations: Afghanistan ,
Burundi , Chad , Colombia , Ivory Coast , Democratic Republic of Congo,
Sri Lanka , Sudan and Uganda .
The reason the United States and other militaries target children is
their need for cannon fodder, coupled with the vulnerability of youth.
In 2002, almost half of Marine recruits were 17 or 18. A Pentagon
survey found that “for both males and females, propensity [to
enlist] is highest among 16- and 17-year-olds.” That
“propensity” quickly declines with age.
A 2004 Pentagon database listed the number of 16- and 17-year-olds who
applied for active service enlistment at 69,000 and 18-year-olds at
73,000. By 19, the count had dropped to 49,000 and by age 24 had
plummeted to 9,700.
The Department of Defense (DoD) spends more than $4 billion a year on
recruiting, with $1.5 billion for advertising and maintaining the
recruiting stations staffed by more than 22,000 recruiters. Much of
that money goes to convincing children to become soldiers.
A recruiters’ handbook discusses creepy seduction techniques with
all the subtlety of predatory stalking. Adult recruiters skilled in
“projecting credibility” lurk in snack joints, set up
laptops playing action-packed videos, proffer rides and promise
friendship and fatherly advice. With blacks particularly skeptical of
the war effort, the military is aggressively targeting Hispanics with
multimillion dollar marketing campaigns that include chatting up
mothers and attending church. Recruiters get non-English speaking
parents to sign enlistment papers for 17-year-olds by letting them
believe that service is mandatory, or that they were approving blood
tests, according to the New York Times.
Recruiters also try to win over high school guidance counselors with
offers of “extended tours, VIP trips (‘A day in the life of
a sailor’) or workshops.”
A DoD training manual instructs recruiters to appropriate the
techniques that pharmaceutical salespeople use to convince doctors to
prescribe the most profitable drugs: “Pharmaceutical
representatives court doctors and provide incentives to them in
exchange for listening to a sales pitch and considering their
products.” DoD advises following the pharma model by offering
“personalized incentives in exchange for some of their time
(bring food when asking favors).”
The manual suggests bribing teachers: “Provide lunch for teachers
in exchange for information.” It quotes an anonymous teacher:
“Giving teachers pencils and calendars lets us know that you
understand our needs and support us. We, in turn, are more likely to
support your efforts in the future.”
“Chiefs of warfare reach out to children precisely because they
are innocent, malleable, impressionable,” says Olara Otunnu, the
U.N. Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict.
The science is clear: Turning children below the age of brain maturity
into soldiers, whether in the United States or Sudan , exploits that
vulnerability.
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