Child Soldiers of the British Army
"Well, let me tell you, as an uneducated teen recruit from a poorer background on the edge of a northern English city, I am unfathomably thankful that I was figuratively captured and bundled into the back of a khaki green Bedford truck on the 10th January 2000, the first day of the rest of my life."
Isaac Newton’s third law sums it up best. “For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction”. Newton’s third law applies to physics of course; specifically to action/reaction force pairs. However, the third law should also be applied in a wider context too.
As such I make no apologies for interrupting those who are busying themselves with the sharpening of their pitchforks, and the lighting of their paraffin coated torches. Once again we are hearing the cat calls to abolish the recruitment of 16 year olds into the British Military. And once again the evidence is stacked highly on one side only, ignoring Newton and his third law completely.
In August 2019, The Guardian wrote about how the British Army is ‘leaning on’ under 18s to help fill recruitment gaps. The article airs the moot views of the Child Rights International Network’s (CIRN) stance on the situation, which is, that “the army is leaning on teenagers from the most deprived backgrounds to fix its recruitment crises, using them to fill the riskiest roles because it can’t persuade enough adults to enlist.” Well hang on a minute, is this a bad thing? And are the CIRN aware that no soldiers are exposed to real risk until such time that they are legally classed as adults? Are we to believe that the army employs a Chitty Chitty Bang Bang like child catcher to stuff unwilling children into the back of a military vehicle, before whisking them off to fight and die on a foreign field of battle?
Apparently these children who are recruited/kidnapped, hail “from poorer backgrounds, such as on the edges of cities in the north of England”, so, if you have children in that area, be on the look for military personnel attempting to lure them away; be warned though, spotting them is typically difficult, as these military child catchers are experts in the art of camouflage and concealment!
In February 2019, The Guardian, wrote how the “irresponsible policy of recruiting 16 year –olds put their (the recruits) health at risk”. It isn’t just The Guardian who publish this one sided propaganda though. No, we are seeing it from the Independent, from BMJ, child-soldiers.org, inews.co.uk, any many more.
Well, let me tell you, as an uneducated teen recruit from a poorer background on the edge of a northern English city, I am unfathomably thankful that I was figuratively captured and bundled into the back of a khaki green Bedford truck on the 10th January 2000, the first day of the rest of my life
The argument will have us believe that the military is some sort of cultish organisation that preys on the impressionable minds of children, brain washing them to its purpose, and then casting them aside once they are damaged beyond repair. Do the naysayers realise that those below the age of 18 are to receive parental/legal guardian consent to join the military? This being a procedure that has always been in place, in order to ensure that the decision to join the military is not taken lightly. Those opposed to minors joining the military argue that other than the obvious dangers of military life, those joining are more susceptible to mental health issues such as PTSD, depression, and anxiety, than their civilian counterparts. It is indeed substantiated that military personnel have suffered from ill mental health in large numbers in recent years. This is nothing to do with age so much as it is to do with operational tempo and exposure to traumatic situations in Afghanistan and the like. As previously stated, nobody under the age of 18 will set foot in such hostile environments whilst serving in the British military. So really, what is the argument?
Let’s put the shoe on the other foot shall we? Let’s look at what would likely happen if we did put a stop to under 18s joining the military.
As previously stated, I, like many others, am one such example that they speak of. I come from a town called Oswaldtwistle, a small town in Lancashire in the north of England, not too far from the city of Manchester. Oswaldtwistle is stereotypically your classic dead end town. Don’t get me wrong, they are not my words. I like Oswaldtwistle, and I love my family and friends who live there. What I mean to say is that Oswaldtwistle is of the lower class demographic, has average to poor schools, cheap housing, little in terms of work and career prospects, and a fair amount of violence, crime, drugs, and alcohol.
There are many successful people in that small town, and there are many successes yet to come. Now although one can never know for sure, we can always rely on probability. The probability of me ever doing anything purposeful with my life within the confines of Oswaldtwistle was pretty bloody slim.
I left school in 1999 without so much as a C grade in any subject that I had taken. With little work ethic, a less than ideal home life, zero reputable school grades, and zero direction in life, I was on a collision course for a miserable existence… until I joined the army that is.
Fast forward 20 years and the story is rather different. As I type this I sit in my home in Sydney, Australia. I moved here recently when I joined the Australian Military. I received permanent residency for my entire family and I, before ever stepping foot on the dusty orange soil down here. We are now awaiting the granting of our citizenship that we are now eligible for, despite being here only 10 months, thanks to the army.
I earn a wage well beyond the national average of the UK and of Australia, thanks to the army. I re-sat and passed my school exams at a time that I was more mature, and ready to do so, thanks to the army. I am half way through a BA Hons History degree, and am about to start a fully paid up sponsored degree in leadership, thanks to the army. I have a civilian trade, thanks to the army. I am an experienced commercial diver, thanks to the army. I have a true morale compass and a real sense of right and wrong, underpinned by a host of core values and principles, thanks to the army. I have been to 33 countries, and have banked inexplicably unique experiences and memories for life, thanks to the army. I have a wonderful wife, and 3 beautiful children; a wife and children I would not have had, had I not lived in a certain part of the UK at a certain time of my life. I lived in that part of the UK at that exact time with thanks to the army. I now have prospects for success outside of the military based entirely upon the experiences I have gained from my life in the military. I am so fiercely thankful for the opportunity that was afforded to me at a time that was so undeniably crucial to the rest of my life.
Do we get the point? Do you think that my circumstances are unique? Before the army educated me, I would have had to remove my shoes and socks to count the amount of people that I personally know who share my experience. There are literally tens of thousands of people who owe their happiness to their life in the military. What becomes of the 16 year olds who do not join the military? What do they do with their misguided time whilst waiting to turn 18? How many will be sucked in to a life of dead end jobs, crime, addiction, and ill mental health. I know that I was heading that way for sure. Thankfully we do not hold the statistics to answer that question. The reason we don’t hold the statistics is because in the here and now, the British military still offers a real future to those of us who need it the most. Those of us who were/are otherwise on a road to nowhere.
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