Special forces recruiting the operational need for targeted recruitment of first and second generation Americans

The purpose of this thesis is to analyze the operational impact of recruiting first generation Americans directly into Special Forces. Much as the draft inadvertently did during World War II, the Army could take much greater advantage than it has of first generation immigrants and naturalized citi...

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Main Author: Robichaux, Trevor O.
Other Authors: Simons, Anna
Published: Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/3765
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-37652015-06-11T03:59:19Z Special forces recruiting the operational need for targeted recruitment of first and second generation Americans Robichaux, Trevor O. Simons, Anna O'Connell, Robert Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.) The purpose of this thesis is to analyze the operational impact of recruiting first generation Americans directly into Special Forces. Much as the draft inadvertently did during World War II, the Army could take much greater advantage than it has of first generation immigrants and naturalized citizens. Special Forces (SF) could, in turn, target recruits from within this pool. That is one proposal this thesis makes. A second aim of this thesis is to explain why this makes sense in the 21st century. This thesis reviews the use of non-citizens from WWII to the present, while also highlighting certain features of doctrinal Special Forces (SF) missions. The aim is to draw on the past in order to preview the relevant usefulness of non-citizens today. The arguments to be presented here are conceptual in nature. They draw on the author's experiences as an SF recruiter and on extensive conversations with other recruiters currently serving in the Special Operations Recruiting Battalion (SORB). This thesis is not designed to criticize current recruitment methods. Instead, it explores ways to enhance what Special Forces already does in order to target the kinds of candidates whom the author believes will prove crucial to 21st century operations. 2012-03-14T17:39:21Z 2012-03-14T17:39:21Z 2008-12 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/3765 301577602 Approved for public release, distribution unlimited Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
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sources NDLTD
description The purpose of this thesis is to analyze the operational impact of recruiting first generation Americans directly into Special Forces. Much as the draft inadvertently did during World War II, the Army could take much greater advantage than it has of first generation immigrants and naturalized citizens. Special Forces (SF) could, in turn, target recruits from within this pool. That is one proposal this thesis makes. A second aim of this thesis is to explain why this makes sense in the 21st century. This thesis reviews the use of non-citizens from WWII to the present, while also highlighting certain features of doctrinal Special Forces (SF) missions. The aim is to draw on the past in order to preview the relevant usefulness of non-citizens today. The arguments to be presented here are conceptual in nature. They draw on the author's experiences as an SF recruiter and on extensive conversations with other recruiters currently serving in the Special Operations Recruiting Battalion (SORB). This thesis is not designed to criticize current recruitment methods. Instead, it explores ways to enhance what Special Forces already does in order to target the kinds of candidates whom the author believes will prove crucial to 21st century operations.
author2 Simons, Anna
author_facet Simons, Anna
Robichaux, Trevor O.
author Robichaux, Trevor O.
spellingShingle Robichaux, Trevor O.
Special forces recruiting the operational need for targeted recruitment of first and second generation Americans
author_sort Robichaux, Trevor O.
title Special forces recruiting the operational need for targeted recruitment of first and second generation Americans
title_short Special forces recruiting the operational need for targeted recruitment of first and second generation Americans
title_full Special forces recruiting the operational need for targeted recruitment of first and second generation Americans
title_fullStr Special forces recruiting the operational need for targeted recruitment of first and second generation Americans
title_full_unstemmed Special forces recruiting the operational need for targeted recruitment of first and second generation Americans
title_sort special forces recruiting the operational need for targeted recruitment of first and second generation americans
publisher Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/3765
work_keys_str_mv AT robichauxtrevoro specialforcesrecruitingtheoperationalneedfortargetedrecruitmentoffirstandsecondgenerationamericans
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