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robotic
05-28-2005, 11:48 PM
'Class of 9-11' Graduates From West Point (http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20050529/ap_on_re_us/west_point_graduation)

WEST POINT, N.Y. - Graduating U.S. Military Academy cadets — who came here just weeks before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks — were told Saturday they were a special group forged by historic events.

Gen. Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, called the class "one of the few since the early days of the Vietnam War who came to West Point in peace time, saw the nation transition to war and chose to stay, knowing you would raise your right hand and take an oath and swear to defend the constitution of a nation that was still at war."

The Class of 2005 is nicknamed the "Class of 9-11" and, ironically, the number of graduates was 911.

The class spent almost all of the past four years drilling and studying under what West Point Superintendent Lt. Gen. William Lennox called "the shadow of war." About seven in 10 of the new second lieutenants who threw their caps in the air are expected to be in combat in Iraq or Afghanistan within a year.

After the ceremony, a number of the newly commissioned officers said the double blow of the Sept. 11 attacks and a boot camp-like introduction to West Point did little to deter them from pursuing their careers.

"At first, we were thinking, 'Is this it? Is this the real thing?'" said 2nd Lt. Laura Watson of Slippery Rock, Pa. "Other than one little thought, that's all. I knew I was ready for it."

Robert Milmore of Cornwall, N.Y. said the attacks strengthened his resolve.

"Everyone's a little nervous but ready to go out there and do it," he said.

Myers, the outgoing Joint Chiefs chairman, told cadets that the attacks and resulting global battles have braced them to serve an evolving Army engaged in a struggle in which failure is not an option.

"I'm sure those events shaped every day of your past four years and gave you a clear sense of purpose and a heightened sense of resolve," he said.

Lennox reminded the cadets of that "seemingly harmless September morning" four years ago.

"Think about how much the world has changed since that day," Lennox said. "And think about how much you have changed since that day."

hooligan
05-28-2005, 11:53 PM
I think the world's been the same, but the "American"'s perception of the world has shifted.

Sebro
06-07-2005, 07:19 PM
I think the world's been the same, but the "American"'s perception of the world has shifted.

Agreed

Faithless
01-07-2007, 01:40 AM
A grim stat about West Point grads and the Iraq action:

War's grim reality hits West Point (http://www.recordonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070107/NEWS/701070346)
By Greg Bruno | Times Herald-Record | gbruno@th-record.com | January 07, 2007

...

As the war in Iraqi marches into a fourth year, and plans for sending more troops materialize in Washington, West Point graduates are facing a grim phenomenon: They are dying at a faster rate than in any war in recent history.

Since 2003, 40 graduates have been killed in Iraq. And statistics don't reveal a single explanation for the comparative spike in casualties. Reports show that graduates have died in accidents, been killed by snipers and roadside bombs, and even been murdered by their own men.

"It used to be, in linear conflicts like Vietnam, Korea, you had to be in armor, infantry, aviation or field artillery to be exposed," said Maj. Paul Hayes, a former West Point military instructor who served in the Middle East in 2003.

"Now, if you look at the guys who have been killed, they've been a mix of everything. What branch you are doesn't matter."

Of the 58,000 Americans killed in action during a decade and a half in Vietnam, 273 were military academy graduates — less than half a percent. The four-year Korean War saw similar ratios for graduates.

But in Iraq, a war increasingly fought in the urban confines of a hostile insurgency, roughly 1.3 percent of the more than 3,000 Americans killed were commissioned as second lieutenants at West Point.

That's three times the percentage of Vietnam, six times World War II — and more than 20 times World War I.

...

mizhi
01-07-2007, 01:09 PM
For this to be more meaningful you'd have to compare the ratio of officers to enlisted. I suspect that, compared to the armies of WWI, II, Korea, and Vietname, the number of officers per enlisted soldier is greater. Put it this way, in WWII, say I had 1 officer per 200 enlisted. Now, the ratio is probably more like 1 per 100.