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US Army Could Waive Combat Training For Hackers

An anonymous reader sends word that the U.S. Army may adjust some of its training practices and rules in order to attract the best "cyber warriors" available. "New U.S. Army cyber warriors could be spared the rigors of combat training to help the Pentagon attract badly needed recruits from the ponytail wearing Google generation, a top American general has suggested. Lt Gen Brown, commander of the US Army Combined Arms Center at Fort Leavenworth, said: 'We need to give serious consideration to how the US Army could combine the technical expertise of the "Google" generation with its more traditional military skills. In order to gain an intellectual advantage over adversaries in cyberspace, we will need to tap into a talent pool that may not fit the stereotypical soldier profile. Our goal is to recruit the best talent possible.'" This is not the first time there has been talk about loosening requirements to fill these roles.

14 of 223 comments (clear)

  1. It would do them good. by ColdWetDog · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How hard is it for a twenty something year old to get into basic fitness? Perhaps if there is a good candidate but would otherwise fall out because of fitness, work with them in 'pre basic' to get up to speed. It needn't be punative - might be the best thing that happened to them. For really handicapped people (say someone with paralysis), perhaps a medical waiver.
    But to have a whole group of 'different' Army folks - not such a good idea.

    --
    Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    1. Re:It would do them good. by qbast · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Hackers seem to come it two shapes: grossly overweight, constantly snacking one and skinny kid looking like bag of bones. The second type could be brought up to speed in relatively short time (2-3 months of quite light exercise) - they might even like it. But the first kind ... just forget it.

  2. Re:Why not as civilians? by qbast · · Score: 5, Interesting

    They can be under much tighter control while in uniform. For example civilian is allowed to say 'no' without legal problems.

  3. Wrong Stereotype by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It isn't physical activity that scares off hackers, it's that the entire military lifestyle and mindset is something that runs counter to the hacking culture.

  4. The Mullet Wearing Facebook Generation of Press by ohnocitizen · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "the ponytail wearing Google generation" - that is a hell of a lazy shot in the dark. But such reporting is all too frequently the norm among the latest generation of journalists. "We need to give serious consideration to how the Press could combine the technical expertise of the "Facebook" generation with its more traditional journalistic skills" - said Worthington Alfredingtonshite, god-king of journalists.

  5. Hire them as GS whatever. by khasim · · Score: 3, Interesting

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Schedule_(US_civil_service_pay_scale)

    But to have a whole group of 'different' Army folks - not such a good idea.

    100% agreement.

    If they are NOT going to be deployed then hire them as GS whatever.

    If they ARE going to be deployed to a situation where they can be shot then they need combat training.

  6. Dress Code by ZipK · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Will they also let the "ponytail wearing Google generation" wear their ponytails? How about their bespoke frontiersman beards?

  7. This is already done ... by Syncerus · · Score: 5, Informative

    Bear in mind this is already done for medical recruits. You don't seriously think they make neurosurgeons undergo the rigors of basic training do you? When last I heard MD recruits had a 3 week familiarization course on military customs and courtesy.

    --
    "Man is nothing without the works of man" -- Helvetius
  8. No need to lower the bar any further really. by jedidiah · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The Army is already a 2nd tier service with lower standards. Short of creating an entirely new branch of the service, they aren't going to get away from the fact that they are the Army and get whatever cultural baggage comes along with that.

    Watering down bootcamp is really not going to address the real problem.

    They spun off the Air Corps and there wasn't nearly as much of a culture gap going on there.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  9. Re:The mistake is having them in the military at a by Karmashock · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You say that indifferent to the fact that the CIA does such things without being under military rules at all.

    And you say such things despite the NSA hacking away at things without being under military rules. A member of the NSA can quit at any time. Just resign and go home.

    Same is true of all the military contractors that design and build the fighter planes, the submarines, the missiles, etc.

    Just because you work for pay does not mean you are without honor or that it is unethical to do the work.

    The men that built the atomic bomb were not members of the military.

    You perhaps do not know your military history... please take no offense... do you know that mercenary armies used to be the most common means of waging war? You had your police force which was paid by the state and you had a royal guard of sorts which was very much like the modern military. However, the actual armies were considered too expensive to maintain in those days so instead of maintaining an army, you would rent one.

    This had pros and cons. They were very cheap over time. Even though during war they were quite expensive, during times of peace they cost nothing at all.

    The disadvantage of a mercenary army was that they lacked loyalty and a willingness to die for their client. If they were routed they would run away.

    Professional armies owned by the host nation would win in most cases against a mercenary army because the mercenary army would break and run.

    What further ended such armies was that professional armies could be much larger. Mercenary armies could fight little wars. They might have a few thousand men in them but they rarely got any larger then that. While as you know, professional armies can number in the hundreds of thousands.

    This hacking issue however brings the whole thing full circle. There is no question of a hacker running away because he fears for his life in a hack. There is no question of the money really. And the free hackers tend to be a great deal more competent then those under conscription.

    As such, a flexible mind will see that hiring them as mercenaries actually makes perfect sense.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  10. Re:Why not as civilians? by Penguinisto · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This is part of it (you give up a *lot* of constitutional protections while in uniform), but there is another, far more important reason: Every member of a given military branch is fully expected to be capable of fighting. The Marines have a saying "Every Marine is a rifleman", and it holds true for every branch (even as a USAF electronics/avionics technician, I was still trained to use, strip, assemble and clean an M-16, and I had to maintain a minimum proficiency of marksmanship with it.)

    This has its roots in one aspect of combat - a salient of enemy soldiers breaking through the front. Even as late as the Battle of The Bulge (WWII), rear-echelon troops such as cooks and mechanics had to quickly stop what they were doing and start shooting back. Most of them sucked at it, but without the combat training they did get? They would have been even easier pickings, and likely would have allowed Germany to prolong the war for years longer than it had lasted.

    I see no problems with requiring a basic level of combat ability and readiness. It instills a sense of physical fitness, a level of discipline (a slob generally cannot run 5 miles, aim a weapon worth a damn, etc), and gives them at least some modicum of stature with their fellow soldiers (who would otherwise consider them to be far, far worse than a POG. We give each other crap as it is, but at least everyone knows that everyone else had at least some level of martial training.)

    --
    Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
  11. Re:Why not as civilians? by Penguinisto · · Score: 3, Interesting

    That's the funny part - you never know where you're going to wind up.

    I originally figured that as a flightline grunt in the Air Force, I'd never, ever have to see a combat zone. Then this happened, they send a few of us and our jets to Howard AFB, and that's where a young kid with a uniform and a multimeter discovered that Panama is a really, really tiny country.

    While the operation was short and sweet, the odds of sent to some war zone isn't as remote as it seems. With respect to OP, consider that satellites have built-in lag, and that undersea cables can easily be cut. Suddenly, your hacker corps has to go to where they can get a network connection...

    --
    Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
  12. Re:Even better, why not another division? by ColdWetDog · · Score: 4, Funny

    Why not just have the white/black hats be a separate division completely, as opposed to attached to the AF, Army, or whatnot?

    First of all, there is a loss of esprit de corps if the white/black hats are brought in and given rank without seeing boot camp. Pretty much similar to the same contempt that enlisted people have about a butter bar.

    Sure. Instead of calling them SEALs we can call the WHALES (White Hat and Leviathan Exploit Syndicate). They can have their own Fedora and everything.

    --
    Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
  13. Re: Why not as civilians? by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The USA was pretty uncivilized toward Japan as well.

    Please put down the crack pipe.

    Of the 19,000 Japanese on Iwo Jima, only 216 were taken prisoner. The official line was "hey, they all committed suicide", but if you talk to the people that were there, they will tell you that is not true. We regularly shot Japanese soldiers attempting to surrender.

    Yes, we did shoot a lot of them pretending to surrender. Way too many times prior, starting on Guadalcanal and moving on to Tarawa, Japanese soldiers would pretend to surrender, waiving the white flag, then when they got close they would pull the pin on a grenade and take an American soldier with him.

    When things like that happen as often as not, it becomes very hard to take prisoners. In addition, Japanese soldiers would often, once they had run out of ammo, put on their bayonets and charge into the US line, directly into machine gun fire.

    Off Okinawa, 32 warships were lost to Kamikaze pilots and many more were damaged. About 5,000 US sailors lost their lives at sea from suicide pilots in 92 days of fighting off Okinawa.

    The intentional white phosphorus firebombing of Japanese civilians wasn't so civilized either.

    It was an effort to end the war, other options were not working. In truth, the idea was sound but for some reason, people don't respond to 200,000 people being killed over 2 days via 1,000 bombers dropping a million tons of bombs, yet they DO respond to 200,000 people being killed in 5 minutes via 2 bombers and 2 bombs.

    Don't ask me why, but it seems to make a difference.

    ---

    Oh, and lest you think that we started all of it, keep in mind that Japan started that war and they considered surrender dishonorable. If you don't know that, then you don't understand the war and really shouldn't comment on it:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B...