Jim Garamone at the DoD News
offers the below piece:
WASHINGTON, Jan. 29, 2018 —
It is a sign of America’s disconnect with its military that there are those who
believe that when a person joins the military, that person cannot have a spouse
or children or pets, said Amber Smith, the deputy assistant to the secretary of
defense for outreach.
This misperception may be
extreme, but there are other and it’s one reason why DoD is launching an
outreach program on Feb. 1 called “This Is Your Military.” The program is
designed “to inform and educate the American public on who is serving in the
military today,” Smith said during a Pentagon news conference today.
Less than 1 percent of
Americans serve in the military and the number of Americans with firsthand
experience with service members or veterans has declined precipitously since
the beginning of the all-volunteer military in 1973.
‘A Force for Good’
“We want to show [Americans]
how the military is relevant to their everyday lives; we want to show how
innovative the military is and how we are a force for good,” she said.
The initiative will highlight
the lives of those serve and give a balanced view of military service and life,
said Smith, noting the initiative will be primarily a digital program.
Smith said she wants to reach
out to people who know little about the military. The department already has a
robust social media presence and she expects to use that to get the
information, articles, videos, tweets and more to the 99 percent of Americans
who haven’t served in the armed forces.
“We are working very closely
with the services and some of the programs that they have in place that reach
all the way to the installation and community level programs that have been
successful,” she said.
Some of the community level
programs she hopes to piggyback on include Fleet Week, Marine Week and Know Your
Army.
“It has always been in the
best interests of DoD to engage with the American public,” Smith said.
Recent surveys demonstrate
the divide between the military and the public it serves is growing. This
disconnect “threatens the viability and sustainability of the all-volunteer
force, which does pose some long-term national security risks,” Smith said. In
1995, 40 percent of young adults had a direct connection to a service member or
a veteran in their families. Today, it is around 15 percent.
Correcting some of the
misperceptions will be one part of the Know Your Military initiative, she said.
One of the most pernicious is the majority of American youth think if a person
serves in the military a person will leave with a physical, psychological or emotional
issue.
Each month the initiative
will have a different theme, and when it starts on Thursday the theme will be
We Are Connected. The website for the initiative is knowyourmilitary.osd.mil.
The hashtag is #KnowYourMil.
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