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Do military boot camps enable abuse?

Results so far:

Yes
70% 132 votes Total: 189 votes
No
30% 57 votes

Yes

by Ted Sherman

Created on: April 07, 2008

Abuse is the basis for military boot camp training. It can be no other way, because in wartime or preparing for war, schoolboys and schoolgirls must be quickly transformed from the easy life of Mom's apple pie to be able to kill another country's young men and women. Don't talk to me about the immorality and inhumanity of it all. Get real! As General Patton said, "You're not expected to die for your country. Your job is to make some other poor, dumb bastard die for his country."

I went through Navy boot camp many, many years ago, and later as a CPO, I was a boot camp instructor. We all know that Marine boot camp is by far the toughest of all, because they are trained as shock troops who must go in where the combat is close up and brutal. However, Navy basic training is never a pleasant summer at Camp Hiawatha. I question the use of the word abuse in this essay, as if it were a sweeping indictment of everything that happens at boot camp. The job of the instructors is to take civilians and make them into capable military men and women. If that takes some abuse, then so be it.

Of course, there are the stories that break out once every year or so about a recruit who is severely injured or dies as the result of boot camp activities. That is tragic, but no more so than when a military aircraft crashes or someone is shot on the rifle range. You can be sure military officials closely monitor all training programs, and any situations that could be interpreted as outright abuse or other dangerous practices are thoroughly examined. A boot camp instructor is usually a "lifer", which means he/she has made the military a lifetime career of 20 to 30 years. It makes no sense that any instructor would deliberately jeopardize that career by using illegal treatment on recruits.

Of course, boot camp is harsh, and instructors deliberately make it very unpleasant for teens who aren't used to the unremitting discipline imposed on him/her. However, the training is meant to toughen up the body and mind for what may lay ahead in the service. The regimentation is intended to make the recruit into an unquestioning part of a unit, who will act promptly on command, no matter what the dangers or distractions of combat. Call it brainwashing if you will, but it should be actually more described as self-survival and the protection of those who depend on you.

The job of boot camp instructor can be a thankless one. Not many of us started out as gruff-voiced tormentors of teens, but that's the only way to do the job. Some of my proudest moments were when I learned several members of my boot company had later qualified for flight training, and several others were accepted as students at the Navy Academy at Annapolis. One of my fondest memories is when one of my former boots, now 25 years later and wearing the four stripes of a Navy captain, said, "Chief, all through boot camp I hated your lousy guts. It seemed you always picked on me to yell and give me extra duty. Now that I outrank you, and can return the favors, all I want to say is: thanks for everything!"

Learn more about this author, Ted Sherman.
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No

by Tyson Abaroa

Created on: March 27, 2009   Last Updated: March 29, 2009

It will be tough not to sound like Jack Nicholas in A Few Good Men, but the last thing the military needs is armchair Generals criticizing recruit training. I found myself on a bus bound for Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego in 2002.

This was not the boot camp of the nineties when most of the Corps watched as a few other Marines did the operations in small conflicts. My boot camp was preceding the Iraq war, and during Operations Enduring Freedom, and Enduring Eagle. My Drill Instructors were tougher, meaner, and more demanding. They knew the possibility that our entire platoon would see combat operations, and a few would see actual blood, sweat, and tears combat. We trained to fight and react under extremely stressful operations. Nothing else in my life could have prepared me more for my Deployment to Iraq than my three months in Boot Camp.

From Boot Camp I went to the much more relaxed Marine Combat Training and my MOS School in Virginia. Immediately after checking into my unit in 2003 my battalion was mobilized and sent to Kuwait. The Invasion of Iraq was the most confusing time of my life. The principles and habits I formed in Boot Camp were what pulled my platoon and me through the Iraq war successfully. When scuds missiles were inbound the only person freaking out was the civilian reporter attached to our company. When everything was moving around us and we didn't know where to go, we trusted our senior marines and obeyed every order. When we observed suspicious activity we quickly and calmly reported it. The ability to be calm under pressure was the most important trait I took from Boot Camp and brought to the War in Iraq.

It is easy for some to watch reports on cable news shows and judge us. I was yelled at; I was called names, at the appropriate times I was adjusted according to my mistakes. Mistakes in Boot Camp can be corrected. Mistakes in forward operations can be fatal. Every movement, every class, every exercise in recruit training is meticulously scrutinized and planned to instill the ability to not only function in a combat area but to succeed in combat. Winning is the only way to get our brothers and sisters home, making winning our only option.

Boot Camp may not seem very pretty or even politically correct. It's not! It is that way to make men and women that can succeed. Civilians should be able to see portions of our training, because they are flipping the bill. However, when it comes to criticizing our tactics they need to remember that the United States Military has been winning and losing battles and wars for over two hundred years. We know what works and what doesn't work. We are learning how to adjust our training daily. Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, and Marines are all capable of defending our freedom because of tough and thorough basic training.

Learn more about this author, Tyson Abaroa.
Click here to send this author comments or questions.


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