wvrevy
Daddy to da' princess, which I guess makes me da'
- Joined
- Nov 7, 1999
- Messages
- 8,130
Seems that this factual article, including quotes directly from people at the Pentagon, completely contradicts the numbers posted earlier (and pay particular attention to the drastic drop in Guard and Reserve enlistment, which seems to contradict the nonsense about "they know what they're getting into"):
From MSNBC:
(You can read the rest of the August 10th article here )
One more quote from the article, however:
The person that wrote that op-ed piece was either lying, or badly misinformed. Yes, the Army met it's active duty goal for the last two months...but that followed a four month drought. These goals are set in place with full knowledge that recruiting is cyclical throughout the year. As such, the monthly goals are set based on previous years...not by just arbitrarily dividing the yearly goal by 12.
From MSNBC:
US Army Poised to Miss 2005 Recruiting Goal
WASHINGTON - The U.S. Army, hard pressed to attract new soldiers amid the Iraq war, exceeded its July recruiting goal but seems doomed to miss its target for the year, while the Army Reserve and National Guard fell short of their goals again.
The Iraq war marks the first test of the all-volunteer U.S. military during a protracted war, and Army officials have conceded that all three components of the Army likely will miss their recruiting goals for fiscal 2005, which ends Sept. 30.
The Army, aiming to get 80,000 recruits this year, stood 11 percent behind its year-to-date goal at the end of July, with just two months left to overcome a shortfall of more than 7,000. It has not missed an annual recruiting goal since 1999.
The Army provides the bulk of ground troops in the Iraq war, in which about 1,840 U.S. troops have been killed and another nearly 14,000 wounded.
(You can read the rest of the August 10th article here )
One more quote from the article, however:
The Reserve missed its July recruiting target by 18 percent, getting 2,131 recruits with a goal of 2,585, and stood 20 percent behind its year-to-date target. It had a shortfall of about 4,700 recruits toward its 2005 goal of 28,485.
The Army National Guard has missed every monthly goal in fiscal 2005 after falling short in 2004 and 2003, the Pentagon said. It missed its July goal by 20 percent -- getting 4,712 recruits with a quota of 2,585 -- and was 23 percent behind its year-to-date target. With two months left, it had a shortfall of more than 11,600 toward an annual goal of 63,002.
The person that wrote that op-ed piece was either lying, or badly misinformed. Yes, the Army met it's active duty goal for the last two months...but that followed a four month drought. These goals are set in place with full knowledge that recruiting is cyclical throughout the year. As such, the monthly goals are set based on previous years...not by just arbitrarily dividing the yearly goal by 12.

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