By Matthew Bishop on 9.12.08 @ 12:06AM
Improved living conditions for America's fighting men and women will keep them in uniform.
Iraq isn't exactly the Four Seasons, and air-conditioning is no
basis for marriage. Yet for many American troops who prefer
accommodations in Iraq over those provided stateside, and who
occasionally admit to tying the knot just to escape ramshackle
barracks, modern accommodations in garrison mean a lot -- perhaps
the difference between reenlisting or not. Thus far, though, troop
retention strategies by the military have hinged upon dangling
reenlistment bonuses in front of its warriors like carrots -- a
policy not without its limitations.
Perhaps owing to the steady stream of scandals over the past two
years, which have run the gamut from rat-infested hospitals for
wounded veterans to pestilential, overcrowded barracks, some now
acknowledge the problem. "We've got some ugly barracks around the
Army," admitted Maj. Gen. John A. Macdonald recently. A counterpart
from the Marine Corps echoed his sentiment: "When Marines say they
were living better in Fallujah, it hurts," said Maj. Gen. Mike
Lehnert. But they're still way behind: 79% of U.S. barracks
worldwide are over 30 years old and hard-used.
Unsurprisingly, troops returning from long deployments to
barracks constructed even as far back as World War II tend not to
reenlist. The Pentagon reports that retention is 15% higher at
bases with high-quality housing -- a figure that, extended
service-wide, adds up to tens of thousands of seasoned veterans.
More importantly, it confirms what the enlisted ranks -- most of
whom joined during wartime and expected deployments -- have known
all along: many comrades leave not because of Iraq or Afghanistan,
but because living conditions stateside are, in the parlance of an
official inspection, unsat. In the parlance of the common soldier,
they're !@#$%.
But increasingly the military's solution to troop retention has
consisted of parlaying the Selective Reenlistment Bonus -- once a
small incentive used to replenish job-specific gaps within the
force -- into a fat bribe offered to nearly everyone. The
Department of Defense's budget for the SRB more than tripled from
1997 to 2002 -- from $235 million to an estimated $789 million.
More recently, in fiscal year 2006, the U.S. Army single-handedly
made over 70,000 SRB payments, totaling more than $650 million, to
its members, prompting the GAO to criticize the military for its
not-so-selective use of the SRB.
While studies by the Cato Institute and others have shown that
the SRB does, in fact, help the military meet numerical quotas, a
retention strategy using raw numbers as its sole metric of success
is limited. Equally important are factors such as maturity, ability
and confidence. The importance of discretion, sound judgment, and
professionalism in fighting the highly televised, fourth-generation
warfare of today cannot be overstated. One lapse in front of a
camera, one immature or flippant blunder, can scandalize America
worldwide.
Maturity, albeit intangible and thus difficult to chart,
represents a very real resource. A young service member who rejects
a $50-80,000 reenlistment check shows a remarkable indifference to
immediate gratification. These guys are confident, independent, and
they're looking three or four moves ahead on the chess board. In
other words, they're precisely the subset of troops the military
needs on the battlefield, and for the most part, shiny lures won't
persuade them to bite. The other thing about purely monetary
incentives is that they actually tend to increase retention among
the financially and professionally insecure -- troops who have
accumulated debt, made poor decisions, and whose futures, in their
own eyes, don't seem so bright.
By no means do these limitations indicate the SRB should be
shelved altogether -- a former Chief of Naval Personnel described
it as "the most effective retention and shaping tool that we have
in our tool kit today." But it should not be used to the exclusion
of other obvious fixes. Common sense and decency lead to the same
conclusion as the Pentagon's own numbers: America's fighting men
and women endure enough spartan misery in training and in war.
They've got enough on their minds without roaches, rats, mold and
asbestos, and America owes them a comfortable place to
decompress.
topics:
Military, Iraq