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CLEARWATER, Fla. –
Jordan Hunkin wants to be a Marine so desperately
that he skipped his high school graduation this month to get an early start
at boot camp. His recruiter had to
pull some strings to make it happen:
The slight 17-year-old wants to go straight into the infantry, qualify
for Special Operations and become a sniper.
And if he is needed in "I want to do my
part," said Hunkin, who showed up at the
recruiting office with his father on his birthday, the first day he could
legally enlist. "I think it's our responsibility to the rest of the
world to maintain order." Despite a particularly
bloody spring in Many recruits are
unfazed by the flag-draped caskets coming home from The Pentagon said the
fighting in And despite the
bloodshed, soldiers are re-enlisting at rates that exceed retention goals,
according to the Pentagon. Recruiters here say
patriotic interest in the military has been high since the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks, and they are still tapping into it. Gunnery Sgt. David
McDaniel, chief of Marine recruiting in And a good many want to
fight. "The infantry
program is definitely not one that we have to convince people to do,"
said Staff Sgt. Patrick Miller, who found Junkin
and has three Marines he recruited now serving in One of the slots is
going to Jeremy Wellenreiter, a high school senior
who said he has wanted to be a Marine since the sixth grade. Despite a good
score on the military aptitude test that might qualify him for more skilled
jobs, he wants infantry and Special Operations. Wellenreiter said his recruiter explained
the risk, explained that people might be shooting at him before long. He said
it was a source of much hand-wringing by his parents but not a huge issue
with him. Dying "is always
in the back of your mind if you're thinking about joining the military,"
he said. McDaniel said
recruiters are making an extra effort to ensure recruits know what they are
getting into. "We tell it like it is," said McDaniel, a Gulf War
veteran. "If it scares somebody, we don't want that individual in the
Marine Corps." Staff Sgt. William W.
Judge Jr., who recruits for the Army in Tampa, said young people still join
the service for the old reasons - get money for college, learn a trade, find
some direction - but the war on terrorism generates a few more soldiers. The morning after the
news media reported the combat death in Afghanistan of Pat Tillman, the
former NFL star turned Army Ranger, Judge fielded
about 10 calls from people who were inspired to ask about joining up. Judge said he is frank
about the risks, whether the recruit is signing up to be an infantryman, a
computer tech or a diesel mechanic. "I don't want anybody walking out of
here thinking that they'll never see Recruiters said news
about prisoners being abused by military police officers in a In Hunkin's
case, his father, Thomas, said: "I've suggested other roads, but I think
he has a real good handle what he wants to do and what's coming." As far as missing his
high school graduation, his parents will get over it. The teenager said:
"I figure I can get a head start in what's important." |
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