Book contents
- Uncertain Warriors
- Military, War, and Society in Modern American History
- Uncertain Warriors
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 The Post-Vietnam Recovery, Operation Desert Storm and the Veneration of the Volunteer Soldier
- 2 Gender, Sexuality and the Profession of Arms
- 3 Warriors Who Don’t Fight
- 4 Downsizing, Recruiting and Debates over Military Service
- 5 Technological Transformation and the American Soldier
- 6 The Warrior Ethos
- Epilogue
- Index
Epilogue
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 October 2023
- Uncertain Warriors
- Military, War, and Society in Modern American History
- Uncertain Warriors
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 The Post-Vietnam Recovery, Operation Desert Storm and the Veneration of the Volunteer Soldier
- 2 Gender, Sexuality and the Profession of Arms
- 3 Warriors Who Don’t Fight
- 4 Downsizing, Recruiting and Debates over Military Service
- 5 Technological Transformation and the American Soldier
- 6 The Warrior Ethos
- Epilogue
- Index
Summary
The Epilogue examines how trends from the 1990s continued to develop in the following decade. These included the growing civil–military gap, even as the American public lauded the troops as heroes; tensions between notions of the soldier as a male warrior and more inclusive visions of soldiers might be; and the question of what roles soldiers might be asked to take on. First, it explores how soldiers began to talk about themselves as ‘Spartans’, referencing their separate status as a warrior caste. It also examines how popular culture and the military itself began to increasingly venerate Special Forces ‘operators’, using these images to sell products as diverse as video games, fitness regimes and coffee blends, but also to reinforce notions of American soldiers as quasi-supermen, capable of incredible feats. Finally, it examines a cultural phenomenon that cut against the grain of ‘Spartan’ and ‘operator’ images: the ‘Fobbit’ – a term that refers to the personnel deployed to Forward Operating Bases but who avoided combat by remaining at the base, a description that then broadened to describe all sorts of personnel who deployed overseas but didn’t face the prospect of combat.
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- Uncertain WarriorsThe United States Army between the Cold War and the War on Terror, pp. 251 - 269Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023