This is the only thing truthful that you've manged to write. I'm a junior officer who is within a few years of retirement and have done more to support their sister services that most people in this group can begin to think about. WTF!?!?! Get off your high horse and take a second to read what has been said instead of feeling the need to publicly beat someone in this group down. I would've expected that little bit of respect from you based on some of your past posts in this group.
Where exactly did I ever complain about personal comfort? I didn't because it's not there! If fact, my personal comfort on most of the AF deployments I've been on were far worse. Honestly, if you didn't do the job I was sent to do, you have absolutely no clue as to how poorly the Army did training me to do what was expected. How would you feel daily working with soldiers who ventured into the highest risk areas when you knew that you were inadequately trained to do the job. I trained, advised, and worked outside the wire with Military Transition Teams for 7 months as an EW/counter IED specialist. What was my expertise in this area? I had none other than the 3 weeks of training I mentioned. You take it and try to make the best of it, but the sh1t was so outdated compared to what was going on in theater it was ridiculous. I honestly felt like I was being setup to fail. It was a daily struggle to keep up with what was going on with limited resources and stay on top of what was killing guys and how to best to counter it day to day. The worst thing was those guys looking to me as a technical expert on something well outside of my realm and believing that I could protect them from any roadside bomb they might happen upon. Was any of this in description of what the job entailed? Not just no, but hell no! I'm sure you'll take that as "complaining" but it's about providing the right expertise to best serve those Soldiers. So yes, the Army wasn't truthful and put their own people at greater risk by doing so.
Believe me, it got done and done well, but when it's your life on the line wouldn't you want someone who was adequately trained to do that job? Once again, where did I complain about comfort and a paycheck. Again, it's not there and you can't make it be there no matter how many times you read the post. In fact, I give those guys a lot of credit when I mention how many extended deployments they've endured in a short time. That takes a lot and even more so from their families.
My post was aimed at the couple of guys in this thread who are about to begin career #1 and are wanting to ask for career #2 before #1 has even started. They're about to throw away an opportunity that 99.999% of people will never have a chance at and that someone else would've given their left nut to be sitting in their shoes. I wasn't knocking the Army or the Marines, just that people join for different reasons and they should've weighed that before asking Big Blue for a shot. My point- don't put yourself in a position you might regret because this is the one and only time it'll be offered. If you want to experience that side, then there will be plenty of opportunities in the future after you've been through UPT. Maybe you can get past name calling games long enough to not have such a narrow minded view. That's what is causing the so-called self destruction of the AF that you feel is happening.
Like Apache mentioned above doing those things that are hard and doing the dirty work, it's not for everyone. I got to where I'm at now through the hard way and by taking on those things that are tough. I know the things that the average Soldier and Marine do are tough because I've done them as well with about 1% of the training they normally get. Being a MTT or BCT guy and kicking down doors on a daily basis isn't for me and that's why I made the choices I did. Doing those things though did give me the benefit of seeing and appreciating those ops from a perspective that most airmen will never see. I got to meet a lot of Iraqi citizens who believe in what we're doing for their country and show their gratitude for us being there. More airmen should take a trip out there beyond the comforts of their FOB and quit thinking that enforcing reflective belt policies and handing out towels is mission #1.
The life they lead uses their people up mentally, physically, and emotionally. This doesn't even go into the toll it takes on the families who are left behind everytime someone is sent on deployment after extended deployment. It's a travesty when the Army CoS gets on AFN and talks about how families are so important to him. His own soldiers cringe and roll their eyes in the same way I saw the AF do whenever a "He who shall not be named" commercial came on.
Either way you take what I had to say, I respect the hell out what those guys do. Ashamed, young, or foolish..not hardly.