By Rosa Brooks
In my last column, I wrote about the
civilian-military gap, and asked whether the most common laments about it make
sense when examined closely. We tend to think that the military is
"special" in some way, and fundamentally different from other
occupations. I asked whether that belief in military
"differentness" is justified, and suggested that in many respects,
the military isn't as different as we assume.
That is: If members of the military deserve special consideration and
respect, it can't be simply because careers in the military are dangerous,
since there are other occupations that are equally dangerous that we don't view
as similarly "special." It can't be simply because military
service often involves extreme hardships (time away from families, long hours,
physical discomfort), since here too, many civilians have jobs that involve
such hardship. And finally, the military's specialness can't be based simply on
the fact that military careers provide a vital public service, since millions
of other Americans also do work that serves the nation in critical ways,
whether that involves teaching our children, building our roads, mining our
coal or staffing our hospitals.
Some readers objected to these arguments, viewing them as an offensive
implied comparison between military personnel and the likes of truck drivers or
sanitation workers. But the comparison shouldn't cause any angst -- why should
we regard those who do the exhausting, dangerous, and invisible work of hauling
goods or hauling our trash with anything other than respect? Millions of
Americans give their all -- their energy, their health, their time -- on cold,
windy oil drilling platforms, in dark, methane-filled mines, and in decaying
inner-city classrooms. Noting that military service is less different from such
other jobs than many assume is no insult to the military. In a better world,
we'd respect and honor all the
Americans -- military and civilian alike -- who do difficult, dangerous work
for the benefit of the nation.
But there are two key ways in which serving in the military is deeply different from serving the country as a
school teacher or working in a coal mine. For one thing, our nation, like some
many others, arose out of war, and the cauldron of war has profoundly shaped
our history. For this reason, the military is deeply linked to our sense of
national identity -- to dearly held national narratives about where we come
from and who we are -- in a way that is true for no other profession.
No other profession has shed so much blood at the nation's behest. For
members of the military, the shedding of blood (that of others and that of
their own) isn't a strictly incidental part of their work -- something that
could happen, might happen, but isn't supposed to happen. Historically,
the shedding of blood has been the fundamental purpose of militaries.
Some service members will never hear a shot fired in anger, of course --
and in my own experience, military personnel tend to be a great deal less
bloodthirsty than the average civilian, perhaps because they've been forced to
consider what it truly means to be prepared to kill and die. Most military
personnel I know fervently hope killing and dying will never be required, that
the mere existence of a robust American military prepared to kill and die will help deter
conflicts, and ultimately reduce bloodshed.
Yet the fact remains: Even as our military finds itself moving into
unfamiliar terrain (cyberspace, the information domain, intelligence gathering,
humanitarian aid, development work), it's still the only public institution
that's inherently defined by the willingness of its members to kill and die.
There's a second and related reason to view military service as
fundamentally different from other kinds of work. However tough and dangerous
their jobs are, loggers and miners and commercial pilots can always quit. A
commercial pilot who doesn't like his odds can decide from one day to the next
to become a realtor; a miner ordered into a situation he deems dangerous can
tell the foreman to go to hell. His pay may be docked -- he may be fired and
face consequent economic hardship -- but he won't go to prison for his refusal
to risk his life.
That's not the case for service members. Yes, we have a volunteer
military, but once you sign up, there's no changing your mind until you've
fulfilled your service obligation. A soldier ordered to engage the enemy can't
politely decline. Under the Uniform Code of Military Justice, disobeying a lawful order will
land you behind bars-and desertion in
wartime is still punishable by death.
When someone volunteers for the military, they do more than just sign on
for a career that may have its difficulties and dangers. They're asked, in
effect, to embrace those dangers, and from that moment on, to waive their
fundamental right to preserve their own lives. The Declaration of Independence
tells us that all men have the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of
happiness, but those who volunteer for military service effectively give up
those rights. Once in the military, their lives belong to the nation. Their
time, their comfort, and ultimately their lives are subject to the whims of
their military superiors, who, in turn, are subject to the whims of elected
civilian leaders.
In the end, this is why civilians in a democracy have a moral obligation
to understand the military, treat service members with respect and concern, and
try to ensure that military force is used wisely and only when necessary.
Members of the military voluntarily place their lives in our hands.
I suggested at the end of my July 26 column that there's a pragmatic
reason to worry about the civilian-military gap: When senior military officials
and senior civilian officials engage with each other at the national level, a
lot of vital questions just get lost in translation. Too often, that leads both
to an impoverished decision-making process and to poor policy outcomes.
(I'll discuss this more next week.)
But the moral cost of the civilian-military gap is also real. Civilians
have the luxury of voting or not voting, tuning in or tuning out, deciding to
pay attention to the war in Afghanistan or deciding to watch American Idol
instead. But if we -- through our votes, our choices or our simple lack of
interest in events that feel distant and unimportant -- allow our troops to be
ordered into harm's way, our troops have no choice but to go. Service members
entrust us with their lives.
Is their trust in us misplaced?
http://byothermeans.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2012/07/27/the_moral_cost_of_the_civilian_military_gap
The views expressed by the author are his own and left to public to judge and rationalise for themselves.
The views expressed by the author are his own and left to public to judge and rationalise for themselves.
The veterans have been crying hoarse and the serving soldiers silently that they should be treated differently from the civil servants as their conditions of service are poles apart. But the politician and the bureaucrat would have none of it.
ReplyDeleteThe Americans fought their War Of Independence against the British in 1775 and then the Civil War in 1861, 86 years later. Then 57 years later they volunteered to fight in World War I and another 31 years later in World War II. After WW II they have been fighting continuously in some part of the world or the other.
Despite the fact the Indian Armed Forces had to be launched, soon after the Partition, into operations barely 14 months of becoming an independent nation and gave the enemy a crushing blow, what was gained by them on the battlefield was gifted away by our sanctimonious political leaders.
Since, then our soldiers have been continuously involved in keeping peace either on the borders or within the country. In the process they have laid down more lives than any other force and got zilch in the bargain. On the contrary they have been downgraded continuously with every achievement on the battlefield while, those who have the ear of the politicians or have IOUs / dossiers on them have benefited.
All arguments have been futile even when backed by parliamentary committees. So much so that what all party committees have unanimously recommended many times has now to be decided upon by a bunch of bureaucrats who are the real cause behind the servicemen's plight.
The PM did not consider it appropriate to appoint members of the Armed Forces, who are an aggrieved party, to the committee ordered by the PMO to give their recommendations by 8 Aug 2012.
After all the PM himself is an ex bureaucrat so what can one expect from him.
Lt Gen SK Bahri (Retd)