April 03, 2007
The Color of Cannon
Fodder: Whites Bearing Burden in Iraq
[See also
Race Relations: The Myth Of The Military Model,
by Steve Sailer]
Are minorities overrepresented in the volunteer army?
That claim is often expressed in
the Mainstream Media. It was hammered home ad
nauseam in Michael Moore’s
Fahrenheit 9/11. New York Representative Charles
Rangel openly advocates a
return to the draft on the grounds that "It
shouldn't be just the poor and the
working poor who find their way into harm's way."
[The
Return Of The Draft, Rolling Stone,
January 27, 2005]
Reinstate conscription, these folks say, and we’d
alleviate the
disproportionate burden the current system places on
minorities.
Funny: I watch network news nearly every night, but
I’ve not seen many soldiers of color on the Iraq
segments. Most of those guys in Hummers, or recuperating
at Walter Reed, look like the boy next door in my
Indianapolis suburb.
And
DOD statistics confirm this: 74.4 percent of U.S.
military deaths in Iraq, and 73.0 percent of the
wounded, are white.
Blacks and
Hispanics make up 9.7 percent and 10.8 percent of
the dead, respectively.
(Table 1.)
To be sure, whites accounted for a significantly
larger share of battlefield deaths in Korea and
Vietnam—but their share of the U.S. population was
greater at that time too.
(Table 2.)
A Heritage Foundation study released last October
compared the demographic characteristics of recent
military recruits with the total U.S. population. We
present some of their data, along with DOD statistics on
U.S. military casualties by race, in
Table 3. [Who
Are the Recruits? by Tim Kane, Ph.D. Center for
Data Analysis Report #06-09]
In 2004 about three-quarters (75.6 percent) of the
adult population, and 73.1 percent of recruits, were
classified as white. This indicates a population/recruit
ratio of 0.97—with 1.00 indicating an exactly
proportional representation. The casualty/population
ratio for whites is also 0.97.
Bottom line: whites are proportionately represented
among both recruits and casualties.
Blacks, on the other hand, account for 14.5 percent
of recruits, but only 12.17 percent of the population,
for a recruit-to-population ratio of 1.19. Yet only 8.4
percent of casualties are Black—a casualty-to-population
ratio of only 0.69.
The same pattern holds for Hispanics, although they
may be undercounted in DOD casualty figures due to a
reluctance to identify themselves by ethnicity.
Asians are underrepresented both among recruits and,
more dramatically, among casualties.
Bottom line: Blacks and Hispanics are overrepresented
among recruits, but underrepresented among casualties.
(Note that because of typical official obscurantism
about race, Hispanics are often double-counted, because
they can be of any race. What we really need to refute
Rangel is the “white non-Hispanic” military death
rate, but this is not provided. However, we can infer
that it may above the white non-Hispanic share of the
population from the fact that “non-Hispanics”
constitute 85.9 percent of the overall population and
93.12 percent of the combat death.)
This bifurcation does not impugn the bravery of Black
and Hispanic soldiers. Rather it points out the
opportunities the volunteer army affords minorities.
College-educated Blacks, for example, make up 12
percent of the officer corps, yet only 7.6 percent of
college graduates are Black. Black enlisted men are
under-represented in the military and Special Forces,
and over-represented in logistical support and
administrative occupations—skills that are valued in the
civilian world. A draft would obliterate those
advantages.
So which racial groups are disproportionately
casualties of the Iraq war?
Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islanders are the most
likely to be killed or wounded. They account for 1.02
percent of Iraq casualties, 4.5-times their population
share. They also volunteer at far greater rates than
other races.
Second place goes to American Indian/Alaska natives,
whose share of the dead and wounded is 1.36-times their
share of the population.
But the numbers involved are very small. Neither
group is large enough to provide a significant share of
soldiers.
Note, however, that both groups inhabit sparsely
populated, predominately rural, regions of the
country—and that, rather than race per se, may be the
key.
Heritage finds that rural areas contribute far more
recruits relative to population than urban areas.
Completely urbanized areas have 39.1 percent of the
population but accounted for 27.3 percent of recruits in
2005, producing a 0.70 recruit/population ratio. As
urbanization decreases the recruit/population rises,
reaching 1.56 in the most rural parts of the country.
The urban/rural death gap is the subject of a study
sponsored by the
University of New Hampshire’s Carsey Institute,
which specializes in overlooked parts of the country.
Among the findings: "The death rate for rural
soldiers (24 per million adults aged 18 to 59) is 60
percent higher than the death rate for those soldiers
from cities and suburbs (15 deaths per million)."
[William O’Hare and Bill Bishop, "U.S. Rural
Soldiers Account for a Disproportionately High Share of
Casualties in Iraq and Afghanistan," Carsey
Institute, Fall 2006.
PDF]
One of the study’s authors, demographer William
O’Hare, is quoted:
"…..The opportunity
differential between rural and urban America is probably
higher now than at any time in the past. Our study
highlights the price some young folks and their families
are paying for lack of opportunity in rural America."
[Rural
America Pays the Price for War in Iraq,
Alternet.org, By Tom Engelhardt, January 27, 2007]
Unfair? Maybe. But it’s the economy, not race,
stupid.
Edwin S. Rubenstein (email
him) is President of
ESR Research Economic Consultants in Indianapolis.