Shooting Up in the Army?
The Daily Mail has broken the story (HERE)
that apparently the Army will allow cocaine users to stay in the military if
they fail a drug test in their basic training. This has been accompanied by
lots of outraged quotes from retired senior officers about how things have gone
to pot. Is this really the case though, or is the Daily Mail possibly exaggerating
for effect? Rereading the notes cited in the paper, a more simple explanation
emerges.
The UK armed forces rightly have a zero tolerance policy
towards the use of any illegal drugs for serving personnel. Anyone found to
have failed a Compulsory Drugs Test (CDT) will be discharged very
quickly afterwards, with no sympathy from their peers. A tiny, tiny number may
in exceptional circumstances be given a second chance, but this will be a
mistake that impacts on their career prospects for years to come.
There is no change to the policy that anyone outside of
Part 1 training will be subjected to CDT and quickly dismissed if they fail the
test. What has seemingly slightly changed is the ‘grey area’ of
Part 1 training in the Army. It is perhaps inevitable that a Service that needs
to recruit people of a young age, who are often highly impressionable and have
friends who may not always be angels. To pretend that every recruit arrives at
basic training pure and innocent is touching and naive.
The purpose of the new policy is to spot during the initial drugs test taken in basic training those people who
may have made a silly mistake between entering the recruitment process, where
the battery of tests and medicals done will doubtless spot drug use, and
entering training – a gap which can often take some time to process.
Any habitual users would have been weeded out before
reaching the stage of an offer, but there is always the potential that a young
wannabe soldier has a leaving party with friends where drugs are passed around,
or they just get curious. It is a
reality that recreational drugs are in common use in some parts of society,
pretending otherwise won’t make the problem go away. Traces of drugs can stay
in the system for up to 14 weeks after use, even if the high has long gone.
If the new recruit fails the test, then previously the
system would have discharged them immediately. The new policy provides an
element of ‘wiggle room’ for those worth keeping who may have made an honest
mistake or error of judgement. It allows the right people to be kept, but its
wording implies that those with issues can be discharged as usual. Those who
are kept will be held back to an earlier phase of training and subjected to
repeated drugs testing, with any second failure resulting in an immediate
discharge.
This is a sensible moderated approach to take. It
provides sufficient flexibility to keep the genuinely good recruits who made a
very stupid mistake. Phase 1 training is a period when people are transitioning
lives, and they have yet to fully adapt to the way in which the military
totally dominates and takes over your life and the values you lead it by.
It seems likely that the individuals who fail will spend
at least 14 weeks further in part one training, in order to be certain that
they’ve not taken anything else. Frankly, given the part one environment, the
potential for them to have the time or space to take drugs is unlikely.
The punishment for failing is also higher than you might
imagine. At the outset of your career you will be tagged as someone who has
failed a drugs test, and your passing out will be delayed. Not only will this
make your immediate experience unpleasant, but trying to explain to friends and
family why you are being held back will also potentially be uncomfortable as
well. Never underestimate the power of social groups rejecting people in this
sort of circumstance.
While the Mail may want you to think that the Army is
full of drug users, the reality is very different. A tiny number of recruits
will be given one opportunity to correct a foolish mistake. There will be no
second chance. The Army provides hope, opportunity, training and a means
of social advancement to many who join it. Often they come from difficult or
challenging backgrounds and the Army is a means to escape this and start
afresh. To discharge someone for a single mistake in Part 1, made before they
even joined means writing someone off who could possibly make something of
their life.
The Armed Forces face a real challenge in the 21st
century of getting recruits in who meet exacting physical and medical
standards. During WW1 over 1 million males were denied the ability to serve on
medical grounds, even though the Army
was desperately short of manpower. More prosaically Humphrey only ended up in
Whitehall because he failed the medical after passing the AIB for regular entry.
Ironically those standards were revised later, and he ended up a Reservist
anyway.
20 years ago you could be discharged for being gay. Yet
today the military is a leading employer for gay rights. Times change, societal
values change and the military has to adapt to ensure it can recruit from the
pool of people it draws on. In 20 years time, if cannabis is legalised, then
how will the military adapt to reflect this?
There is emphatically no place for drug users in the
modern military. The new policy is not exactly allowing cocaine addicts the
chance to shoot up in barracks (presumably with sleeves rolled up?). But there
is enough common sense to allow the small number who make a very foolish
mistake at the very start of their career, before they enter or pass out of
basic training, the possibility of a second chance in exceptional circumstances.
The Daily Mail has broken the story, says it all really.
ReplyDelete9 members of HMS Vgilent crew sacked for cocaine use. I make that almost 7 percent,which I would guess and hope,is higher than the general population.
ReplyDeleteGeneral population probably, general population of people in their 20’s not so sure.
DeleteHave always found it rather odd that positive CDT results from trace amounts detected from drugs taken a long time ago during a leave period will result in immediate dismissal, whereas turning up to work under the influence of alcohol will typically result in far weaker sanctions being taken against the individual.
ReplyDeleteYou will get sacked for turning up to work sober with trace drug metabolites present in a hair sample but turning up drunk (with all the safety and effectiveness risks involved) seems to be tolerated. It's an incoherent policy and young people today that don't buy into the "Just say no" bs know it.