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Should the Armed Forces stop recruitment at 16 ?

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ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

Silly Sausage

Silly Sausage Report 24 Apr 2013 20:43

Thank you OFITG :-D


Roy my OH is ex RAF, he joined when he was 25 and he always said it was harder to adapt then it was for the youngest, however when he and my son had consummed alcohol and the banter would begin between RAF and Army I would often have to intervene with my rolling pin and banish them both to their rooms, happy times :-D :-D :-D

Porkie_Pie

Porkie_Pie Report 24 Apr 2013 10:56

Hayley, Having served in the Army myself and going to see my own son's passing out your post brought back that same pride and emotion I felt that day

Thanks

Roy

OneFootInTheGrave

OneFootInTheGrave Report 24 Apr 2013 10:55

Hayley Empress of Drama - brilliant post

Silly Sausage

Silly Sausage Report 24 Apr 2013 10:32

Hi OFITG

I personally think no. My son was 16yr when he joined up in 2001,at the time the troubles in Belfast had eased and we were generally at peace. 2 weeks after he joined up 9/11 happened. I wept buckets as I left him at the AFC in Harrogate, he rang me later that night and told me he didn't like it, I said well not every job suits everyone give it a few days and you dont want to stay I will come and get you. 2 weeks past before I heard off him again, I recevied a letter full of things he had leant and was doing he loved it. After 6 weeks we went and pick him up, it was half term ( as this was a college) there he was in unifrom and they put on a little display for us, again I wept buckets and it took 20 mins for them to peel me off him!
I noticed the change in him there and then I wasn't having a conversation with my son I was speaking wth an adult.
He stayed there for 12 mths and then passed out, a day I shall never forget the look of pride on my OH face me I just wept buckets. He then went off to join his regiment. He loved it there as well. He did serve in Iraq a year later and went on to serve in Belfast for 2 years and afganistan, he left the army at 24 as he and his long term girlfriend wanted to be married, she didnt want to be a army wife.

The skills he learnt in his first 6 weeks at Harrogate have never left him, even to this day you can see your face in his work boots.
I personally think going in so young, gave him some structure and prepared him for life as an adult. He talks about his time in the army all the time, always a funny story.

I think its the making of some young men and women, I hope it continues. :-D

Porkie_Pie

Porkie_Pie Report 24 Apr 2013 10:20

Dermot, With respect, None of those events where on anywhere near the same scale as those in the US

In the US mass shootings alone are in excess of 60 separate events since the 1980's

Then there's other events,
One of many is the 1995 April 19: Oklahoma City bombing killing 168 people including children

Roy

OFITG, as I said not relevant on this thread

OneFootInTheGrave

OneFootInTheGrave Report 24 Apr 2013 10:06

I do not see there is any connection between, Hungerford in 1987,
Monkseaton in 1989, Dunblane in 1996, Cumbria in 2010, and the age that the Armed Forces recruit at :-S

Dermot

Dermot Report 24 Apr 2013 09:54

Hungerford in 1987.

Monkseaton - 1989.

Dunblane in 1996 is the one I remember most.

Cumbria - 2010.

Porkie_Pie

Porkie_Pie Report 24 Apr 2013 08:12

Dermot, I fail to see the relevance of American soldiers committing suicide and this thread,

We are not Americans and we do things a different way to them

When did we last have mass murder as our US cousins have from within?

Roy

Barry, Good post as OFITG said sums up my views also

Dermot

Dermot Report 24 Apr 2013 07:53

Apparently, more American soldiers in Afghanistan died from suicide than in combat. And the war continues.

OneFootInTheGrave

OneFootInTheGrave Report 24 Apr 2013 07:20

Barry, this comment you made sums up my view:-

"While joining the military certainly is not meant to be the answer to today’s problems it certainly gives these youngsters the opportunity to learn many things about themselves, to learn a trade, and hopefully to lead a good honest life. In return they will contribute meaningfully to their country. Not so bad a trade-off, methinks"

As to your question - Aren’t we missing a contributor to this thread - shhhhhh, don't tempt fate ;-)

Barry_

Barry_ Report 24 Apr 2013 01:14

I wonder if the article would have been written if there was no minimum age a soldier could be sent to war? No money wasted then on (un)soldiers who could be sent regardless their young age. Is this another ploy to bring UK ‘into line’ with EU once more - or really to save money?

I was 15 when I became a Boy Entrant and with my flight of chums we received 18 months training. From the get-go we had impressed upon us “Use your initiative!” Where to buy that on a quid a week? (What the heck is it, anyway, we wondered?)

Over the decades I have expanded upon this advice and I say “Use your initiative, good judgement, and common sense.”

I said this to my apartment manager recently when chatting and she almost exploded replying “But no one’s got any common sense these days!”

I replied that’s because no one has texted their cell phone to tell them to use their common sense. In this electronic world so many (mostly younger) folk cannot think for themselves, sad to say!

When I ‘passed out’ from training and into man’s service I still had to be addressed as Boy Entrant until I became 17 ½ almost four months later. I was not allowed to sew onto my uniform my badge of rank until then. 17 ½ did, however, allow one to start on the ladder if ‘recommended’ for the next higher rank. It was (at that time, I have no idea today) the age of 18 when a military person’s service engagement began. It also counted toward a pension if the engagement was for 22 years or greater.

Some time ago my picture here showed me - under 17 ½ - with my service rifle and a big cup I won within weeks of passing out. My rank was engraved (unfortunately) as Boy Entrant on the individual name plate for 1962.

Money comes into play for everything - it always has and it always will! It may cost MOD x pounds to train a younger person but that money comes from the taxpayer in the first place. If these youngsters do not go into the military - always by their own choice if they have the opportunity as no one HAS to join these days - will a number of them remaining in 'civvy street' become delinquent and cost the taxpayer more money keeping them in custody / jail etc for a long time? Many surely will. The pounds to keep them comes from another purse within the Treasury!

What happened to good parenting to show responsibility today? Look how many kids can barely read or write after they leave school and also have no respect for anyone. How much did their ten years at school cost the taxpayer - and for what, in many cases?

While joining the military certainly is not meant to be the answer to today’s problems it certainly gives these youngsters the opportunity to learn many things about themselves, to learn a trade, and hopefully to lead a good honest life. In return they will contribute meaningfully to their country. Not so bad a trade-off, methinks!
Better than those who immigrate to a country and expect to be kept by its good citizens who cannot do anything to change this idle and ungrateful attitude of the newly cared for 'citizens'!

BTW, very good comment by Roy, Pat, and OFItG.
(Jus’ thinking. Aren’t we missing a contributor to this thread?)

Ron2

Ron2 Report 23 Apr 2013 22:59

Staffy Knot - couldn't agree more

Ron2

Ron2 Report 23 Apr 2013 22:58

I joined (Sappers) Boys Service January 1956 at age of 15 - much better than continuing to live in a mining village in Black Country and stayed for 16 years. Made many good friends and still in touch with a lot of them. It would be silly to end recruiting at age of 16. We young uns were regarded as future SNCOs/WOs of the Corps. 'Boys' later became "Junior Leaders" and they were known as "FREDS" = Future Royal Engineers Disasters".

OneFootInTheGrave

OneFootInTheGrave Report 23 Apr 2013 15:17

Thanks Roy, I think the regulations on enlistment were changed in 2006 and again in 2008, and no doubt they have been tinkered with several times since then.

Porkie_Pie

Porkie_Pie Report 23 Apr 2013 14:57

OFITG, all recruits still have the opportunity to leave in the first part of training thinks it the around the 3 month period, training is in two parts the first is the BullSh*t part basic training housekeeping such as how to keep clean, wash and ironing kit and bulling boots plus the discipline through Drill with lessons on other basic soldiering skills because no matter what part of the Army your going for your still a soldier first

Part two training is trade specific,

I also thought that you had to now be over 17 before you could join the Regular Army and the TA, that was the case in the 1990's when my son enlisted

PatinCyprus

PatinCyprus Report 23 Apr 2013 14:51

:-D

OneFootInTheGrave

OneFootInTheGrave Report 23 Apr 2013 14:40

PatinCyprus - that is an excellent contribution

PatinCyprus

PatinCyprus Report 23 Apr 2013 14:20

Could this report be based on inaccurate information?

Relating the report to what I know of 16 year olds in the armed forces when I was in the WRAF - I wonder if they realise that the training for 16 year olds is based in education.

My husband was an electronics technician in the RAF for almost 25 years. He joined at 16 and spent the first 3 years as an apprentice learning his trade. Yes he was in the RAF and learning the discipline etc. but he was also very thoroughly learning his trade. 1 of his jobs later was helping the science museum set up their first computer section. When he left he had 3 civvy firms fighting for him because of his knowledge, a friend of his walked into a job advertised for graduates, it was between him and about a dozen graduates. That's the quality of the training.

The cost of this is high, the over 18s learnt this trade in far less time but in far less depth so they didn't have the same pay scale and rank advancement as my husband. The Army also had technical apprentices.

If the same exists today then the figures are screwed because they don't understand the depth of training given to the youngsters.

OneFootInTheGrave

OneFootInTheGrave Report 23 Apr 2013 13:49

Looking at some of the problems young people are facing these days, I think that anything which gives them opportunities and a purpose in life, is a good thing, and I think joining the armed forces offers them this. If they decide it is not the life for them, I don't think it is to difficult for them to leave.

It used to be, I may be wrong, that if you enlisted under the age of 18, your contract lasted until the day before your 22nd birthday. Once you had enlisted you had to serve 28 days in training, and after those 28 days you could apply, in writing, to your commanding officer to leave and you then had six months to let your commanding officer know your decision.

BarneyKent

BarneyKent Report 23 Apr 2013 13:24

P.S.

A BIG BIG BIG PS.

Human Rights Groups suck - big time.