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African-American youths are rejecting Army, military says
By Ron Harris of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Monday, Mar. 14 2005

As he made his way to the cafeteria, Malcolm Cotton spotted the Army
recruiters passing out video games and making their pitches from a long
table they had set up in a hallway at his school.

The recruiters made joining sound oh so terribly good - a $20,000 bonus
for enlisting, $9,000 more if enlistees shipped out in the next 30 days
and even better, $70,000 for college.

Cotton, 18, a senior at Gateway High School, just walked on by without
pausing, almost with disdain.

"I love this country and I will defend this country if someone is really
attacking us," he said. "But I don't agree with this war. I believe it's
really nonsense. It's about power and taking oil. I really don't think we
need to be over there fighting."

Increasingly, young African-Americans have been turning away from the
Army, many for the same reasons as Cotton, the military says. They don't
agree with the war. They dislike President George W. Bush's handling of
the military and foreign policies, and they are not willing to fight and
possibly die for a cause they don't believe in.

The number of African-American recruits, a cornerstone of the Army in
recent years, has plummeted, the military says. And the Army is struggling
to maintain a force large enough to wage a war on two fronts, Afghanistan
and Iraq.

For years, African-Americans have made up nearly 25 percent of the Army,
more than twice their representation in the general population. The
military, especially the Army, has had a long history of providing
opportunities for African-Americans.

But since 2000, according to the Department of Defense, African-American
representation among Army recruits has fallen sharply.

In 2000, 23.5 percent of Army recruits and 26.5 percent of Army Reserve
recruits were African-American. Last year, African-Americans represented
just 15.9 percent of Army recruits and 20.2 percent of Army Reserve
recruits. As of the end of last month, those numbers had fallen even
further - to 13.9 percent of Army recruits and 18.4 percent of Army
Reserve recruits.

Additionally, the Army has seen a decline among women, often for the same
reasons as African-Americans, according to one of two surveys of youth
conducted by the military last year. For the studies, more than 1,000
young people were interviewed, as well as more than 1,000 adults who were
likely to influence youth, including parents, guidance counselors, members
of the clergy, coaches and teachers.

"Female respondents were less likely to support the American presence in
Iraq, the war on terrorism, or the Bush administration's use of military
and foreign policies," the report said.

At the root of the decline among blacks is a deep philosophical difference
between African-Americans and much of the rest of the nation regarding the
war in Iraq. And that difference has been passed on to African-American
adolescents, who, according to the military, are much more inclined than
white youth to be influenced by their parents, their clergy and coaches.

"Black youth did not believe that important people in their life would
support their decision to join the military," according to the study.
"This has important implications ... because blacks' attitudes toward the
military are significantly influenced by their social-support systems.

"Whites were less influenced by extended family, teachers and guidance
counselors than blacks and-or Hispanics," the survey found.

Women mirrored the sensibilities of African-Americans and Hispanics, the
military found.

"In comparison with males, females tended to believe that important people
in their life would be less supportive of their decision to join the
military, which in turn affected their attitude toward the military," the
study said.

The Army does not attribute the fall in the percentage of African-American
recruits to a disproportionate number of blacks dying in the war. In fact,
according to a study by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation at the
University of California, Berkeley, the number of African-American deaths
in Iraq is proportionately lower than the number of African-Americans in
the military.

African-Americans, who make up about 20 percent of all active-duty
personnel, represented 16.7 percent of all deaths during the phase of the
war that ended May 1, 2003, according to the study. They have made up 12.2
percent of the deaths during the occupation as of September last year, the
study found.


The racial gap

Almost from the beginning, many African-Americans have held vastly
different opinions than many white Americans about the war in Iraq.

In April 2003, one year after the invasion of Iraq, a Gallup Poll reported
that while 78 percent of whites supported the war, only 29 percent of
blacks did.  And in September of last year, while the rest of America was
nearly evenly split on the war, a survey of 850 African-Americans by the
Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, a Washington think tank,
found that 72 percent of blacks disapproved of the war.

And that attitude is now reflected in African-American youth, the military
found. Only 36 percent of black youth felt the war was justified, compared
with 61 percent of whites. Meanwhile, 80 percent of blacks and 71 percent
of women reported that the war made them less likely to join the military,
the study said.

Maj. Gen. Michael D. Rochelle, commander of the Army Recruiting Command at
Fort Knox, Ky., and one of the Army's most senior black officers, has
called the trend "alarming."

Said Doug Smith, a spokesman for the Army Recruiting Command: "Obviously
we are concerned anytime we see a decline among anybody. But this may be
the most striking example of the environment that we're in now. I think it
just reflects the wartime concerns of the applicants and their families.

"This is not like the old days of the front line and the back of the line
in a wartime environment. Everywhere in Iraq is the front line. So
everybody is weighing the risks."

The Army expects to fall short of its recruiting goals this year of 80,000
recruits for the Army and 22,175 for the Army Reserve. If so, it will be
the first time since 1999. The Army already has fallen short of its
recruitment goals for the Reserve for January and February.

The military's recruiting difficulties are expected to persist as long as
many parents, clergy and other influential people in the lives of black
youth are against the war. Among them is the Rev. Donald Hunter, pastor of
New Sunnymount Missionary Baptist Church in St. Louis.

"I have always been against it," Hunter said. "I am really pushing my
youngsters to go and get an education." Hunter said he believes that if he
took a poll, about 95 percent of his 1,100-family congregation would say
they are opposed to the war.

"I've got a brother-in-law and others in my congregation who are still
mentally messed up from the Vietnam War," he said. "And this war, we went
in under false pretenses. Even if there were weapons of mass destruction,
they were not a threat to the United States, and yet all these lives are
being lost."

Rep. William Lacy Clay, D-St. Louis, said the vast majority of his black
constituents do not support the war or Bush and his policies.

"These would-be recruits are saying what a lot of Americans are not saying
because of 9/11," Clay said. "Anytime anyone ever criticizes President
Bush, they are considered unpatriotic. I don't consider these men to be
unpatriotic but to be making the best decisions in regards to their lives.

"Over the history of this country, African-Americans have always served
proudly, from the Revolutionary War to the Civil War to the Buffalo
Soldiers and both world wars," Clay said. "Those causes meant more to the
African-American community. They meant freedom, to seek justice in other
places and to come home and seek justice here. This one doesn't mean
anything."


Recruiting in St. Louis

Despite the difficulties recruiters are encountering elsewhere, Capt.
Scott Wadyko, who is in charge of Army recruiting here, said he hasn't
seen a change in recruiting numbers for African-Americans locally.

Yes, the military is a tougher sell with the war looming in the
background, but recruiting has "pretty much remained steady," Wadyko said.
"But we've developed good relationships with schools like Vashon and
Beaumont, where there is a large military influence."

The St. Louis area traditionally has been bad for recruiters, said Wadyko,
who has been in command for two years. It annually ranks near the bottom
of the more than 200 recruitment centers, he said. In the past seven
years, the St. Louis unit has met its monthly goal of between 60 and 70
recruits only twice, he said.

"St. Louis is an odd town for recruiting," he said. "Normally, we make
about 50 percent of our recruiting goal."

With the war in the background, it's even tougher, Wadyko said. He and his
recruiters must talk to more prospects before they get one to commit.

To counter the concern about war, the recruiters bring up the subject even
before the parents do.

"We try to allay their concerns," he said. "It's a different method. It's
more a family package now."

Over the past few months, the military also has increased its incentives,
doubling the sign-up bonus, adding the new quick-ship bonus, increasing
the college scholarship money by $20,000 and pushing the school loan
repayment program from $48,000 to $65,000.

But even all that is not enough for many, said Preston Thomas, a guidance
counselor at Normandy High School, where most of the students are black.

"Every year, we tell kids there is an ROTC scholarship out there that can
help pay for their education," Thomas said. "Lately, the numbers are real
low of those who are applying for that ROTC scholarship, because they know
that there's a military commitment, and there's a high probability that
they can end up in Iraq."

Additionally, he said, counselors have warned students that if the draft
ever returns, those who are not in college or pursuing a post-secondary
education are the ones most likely to be drafted.

"That has spurred a large amount of students to go to school, either to
four-year institutions, to two-year institutions, even trade school.
They're just not saying, 'I'm going to the work force.' I've even had
students come by and say to me, 'If the military comes by, don't put me
down on the list to take the (entry) test.' It's a conscious thing right
now."

Fueling that consciousness are parents such as George Cotton, Malcolm's
father. It is parents, other relatives and influential peers that
recruiters like Wadyko must counter in order to win African-American
recruits.

"Yes, we talk about the war and how senseless it is, and how different it
is from World War I and World War II," said Cotton, who teaches political
science at St. Louis Community College at Florissant Valley. "They know
that the war in Iraq is not about freedom and justice. It's about power
and oil, and I think people understand that."

Cotton's wife is so adamant that her son won't be going to the military
that she tears up every piece of recruiting mail that comes to their house
without ever opening it.

"I think young people have been sold a bill of goods," Cotton said. "And
there's no way Malcolm is going off and getting killed for nothing."

Reporter Ron Harris
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Phone: 314-340-8214

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