
April
3, 2005
FROM
VIDEO WAR GAMES TO SIGNING UP FOR MILITARY?
By Jason Felch
Times Staff Writer

Tim Casper, a crew-cut-sporting
15-year old from Victorville peered into the computer monitor and hunched
slightly as he maneuvered the video game’s solider into a flanking position.
Using a keyboard, Casper ordered the soldier
to lob a grenade, then slap a new magazine into his
assault rifle. Creeping past the burned-out shell of a Humvee, the soldier
fired a quick burst into the back of what looked like the enemy.
“That’s me, dude,” said Jeremy
Donnelly, 15 looking up from a video screen across Casper.
The classmates, both Air Force
Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps cadets at Victor
Valley High
School, were playing “America’s Army,” a realistic,
multiplayer combat video game designed by the Army as a recruiting tool.
They were among about 2,000
teenage cadets from 40 local and national high schools who gathered in El
Segundo on Saturday to show off their skills in the seventh annual West Coast
National JROTC Drill Competition.
Students in crisp dress uniforms
performed their drills with straight backs and steeled looks of determination,
the heels of their polished shoes clicking on concrete.
Others practiced their flying
skills in a Navy flight simulator or peered through infrared sights mounted on
military assault rifles.
Across the country, about 3,000
JROTC units such as these teach self-discipline and leadership skills. They are
not geared explicitly to recruiting students into the military, officials said.
But amid recent military recruiting shortfalls, finding new ways to attract
teenagers has become a priority, and recruiters from all branches of the
military were out in force.
“It’s a lot more difficult to find
the best candidates because you’re recruiting at a time of war,” said Maj.
Martin Casado. He is commanding officer of the Los Angeles Marine Corps
recruiting stations, which reaches from San Luis Obispo
to Redondo Beach.
Events like this one, held by
Raytheon, one of the nation’s largest defense contractors, help the effort,
recruiters say.
On display for the hundreds of
teenagers, parents, children and veterans who turned out were the tools of war.
“Can I pull the plug,” a small boy asked his father, clutching a “baseball”
grenade from the Vietnam
era.
Across the lot, a teenager peered
into the steel belly of an M1A1 Abrams tank and said to his friends:
“That thing makes me want to join the Army.”
“I want my son to go into
military, said Marie Calleja, watching closely as her 9-year-old, Charles,
struggled to bring the telescopic sight of an AR-15 assault rifle to his eye.
“We don’t want him to go over there and get killed, but the percentages are
pretty small.”
Calleja’s
husband, Charlie, a Vietnam
veteran, agreed. “JROTC programs would be really beneficial for the whole
country,” he said. “The program will teach them respect and self-discipline.
These kids are running wild these days.”
Others are concerned about the
message the program sends to children with few other opportunities.
“These events are often done in areas
where students feel like they have no other options,” said Andy Griggs, a
member of the Coalition Against Militarism In Our
Schools, a Los Angeles
group opposed to the recruitment efforts. Griggs said in a phone that military
recruiters often outnumber college recruiters at poorer schools in Los Angeles.
“It costs the military $18,000 per
year to recruit one high school student,” he added. “In California,
we spend $6,000 a year to educate these students.”
For Tim Casper and Jeremy
Donnelly, the Army’s video simulation of combat is as close as they can get to
the real thing, for the moment.
“I want to join either the Marines
or the Air Force,” Casper
said. “I kind of wish I was old enough to be over there right now. It’s a good
cause. The Iraqis are trying to threaten us.”
Donnelly, still enthralled by the
video game, disagreed without looking up. “I don’t think the main threat is
Iraqis. I think it’s anyone who threatens our freedom.”
Turning to Casper, he barked: “Secure that area for
me.”