ScoopDaily: Dying Youth Mobilize Peers

The victims of the Fort Hood massacre were some of the army's youngest heroes.

ByABC News
November 20, 2009, 12:06 PM

Nov. 21, 2009 -- How casualties of young people at war affect the political mobilization of their peers back home.

When President Obama spoke at last week's memorial for the victims of the Fort Hood massacre that took place on Nov. 6, he was honoring some of the army's youngest heroes. Five of the 13 soldiers killed in the tragedy were under the age of 24, the youngest only 19 years old. The fact is, casualties in this age group are sadly commonplace—more than half of all U.S. military casualties in Iraq and Afghanistan were soldiers between 18 and 24 years old. But what those soldiers didn't know was that their deaths, the largest number of American casualties since the war in Vietnam, may have spurred a new era of increased political participation among young people, the likes of which hasn't been seen since our parents protested Vietnam 35 years ago.

As of August 2008, a combined 4,683 American had died in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, according to statistics published by the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD). Approximately 51.9 percent of those deaths were soldiers between 18 and 24 years old. * At the same time, political participation among members of the same demographic was at an all-time high. Young voters consistently rated the war in Iraq as one of their chief concerns (other than the economy), and between 22 and 24 million voters aged 18-29 voted in the 2008 presidential election last November, according to an exit poll analysis released by CIRCLE, a non-partisan research center at Tufts University.

Coincidence? Col. Thomas A. Kolditz, head of the department of behavioral sciences and leadership at West Point, doesn't think so. "Our political awareness comes from a level of commitment of the perceived importance [of the wars] in Iraq and Afghanistan," he said. "People in this age cohort have a very well-developed service orientation—they are interested in service and civic-mindedness—so I think they can be a very powerful political force."

Kolditz noted that the military is 2/3 the size that it was even 20 years ago, which means that fewer Americans have a direct connection to anyone who is serving overseas. However, that doesn't mean that they care any less about the fate of troops that are currently serving. And while last November young people differed in terms of how they wanted their president to act militarily once in office—approximately 2/3 voted for now-President Obama, and the remaining third voted for Senator McCain—the desire to support their troops remained the same across party lines.

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