Posted on 11/15/2017 3:30:17 PM PST by markomalley
The U.S. Army has not and will not approve enlistment waivers for individuals with a history of self-mutilation or other documented serious mental health conditions, the Armys top general said Wednesday.
Gen. Mark Milley, the Armys chief of staff, said recruitment standards have not been adjusted to meet hefty accession goals as the service looks to grow its force for the second consecutive year, calling a USA Today report that indicated the service would accept some individuals with past mental health issues mischaracterized. The report cited internal Army documents and listed conditions including self-mutilation, bipolar disorder, depression or drug or alcohol abuse.
The bottom line is there has been no change in standards, Milley said during a breakfast with reporters. Since 2017, there has been no one to come into the Army that has not met the Department of Defense standards for behavioral health and/or personal conduct. When it says we are letting people in with a history of cutting themselves, of self-mutilation, that is not true. When it says we are letting people in with serious mental health conditions, with bipolar disorder, that is not true.
The only change the Army has made is to lower the level at which ascension waivers for most issues must be approved, the service said in a statement following the USA Today report published Sunday. That change, moving the level of authorization from Army headquarters to U.S. Army Recruiting Command, was quietly implemented in August. But the Armys statement did not clarify in what situations it would grant waivers for potential recruits.
On Wednesday, Milley clarified it was not changing any categories of waivers that would be approved. The Army has routinely granted waivers for individuals to enlist or commission for a variety of reasons, including criminal history, medical issues, vision problems and age. Certain issues including felony convictions, serious mental health issues and criminal drug use other than marijuana cannot be waived by Defense Department policy issued in recent years.
Acting Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy said he and Milley spoke Tuesday with Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., to clarify the issue. He said the Army had been assured by the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee that civilian nominees would not be held up over the reports. McCain earlier Tuesday had threatened such action, citing the USA Today report.
The Army is looking to recruit 18,000 new soldiers by September, but Milley said he has made clear that the quality of applicants is the priority over meeting recruiting goals.
Heres what weve told recruiters: If you make the numbers thats great, but you will make the standard, Milley said. We will not reduce quality to gain quantity. Full stop.
I guess he had to phrase it that way ("Since 2017") to allow for the queers and trannies they are enlisting - AND commissioning, for all I know.
That would men that transsexuals would be excluded. I’m sure I’m not the only one to think of this.
DOH! That would MEAN that transsexuals would be excluded.
naturally.
they’ll even pay for the mutilation,, under obamamma’s taxpayer-paid-sex-change-operations policy to castrate our military defense forces
Well they already accept homosexuals and have for years. That in of itself qualifies as a mental disorder.
What’s new?
Nothing since 2017...
All the accommodations make me shake my head. I am going to guess that people on steroids shouldn’t be in the military, unless you are trans.
I hope I am compassionate toward them as they manifest this psychosis. But you know what? They are being used.
If they’ve mutilated their bodies with tattoos they shouldn’t be allowed to enlist. But that’s just the old out of touch me so don’t waste your time flaming me.
Agreed.
Working at a major base ER a couple of times month, I can tell you they already have all they can handle with the folks already in. We see a lot of people who have no business anywhere near the military.
Stars & Stripes story on terminating enlistment waivers for applicants with mental issues.
And FWIW, I am not surprised to hear that. It seems a lot of different people who have had no reason to be in the business get in there. Not just self-mutilation, but I question people like Bergdahl as well. I doubt he passed off as okay when he enlisted.
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