January18, 2007:
The Swiss Army is having a hard time maintaining its numbers. Young
men are less interested, and less fit, to defend the country. Currently, about
forty percent of young men are unfit for service.
For
over a century, all the young men in Switzerland underwent military training,
and remained ready, for a decade or more, to move, within hours, to fight any
invaders. No more. The end of the Cold War, and the disappearance of any direct
military threat has made army service less attractive. Add to that a declining
birthrate, and you have a rapidly shrinking Swiss army. In World War II, the
Swiss mobilized 850,000 trained troops. Today, they would have to struggle to
muster 40 percent of that.
The
trend is not good. In 2005, 39 percent of the 33,000 20 year olds eligible
service, were found unfit. For most of them, it was weight (they were fat) or
simply out of shape. Another five percent didn't make it through the four month
basic training. Similar results were encountered with the 36,000 young men
called up in 2006.
One
of the problems is attitude. A generation ago, it was considered a disgrace to
be found unfit for duty. But a generation ago, teenagers were in better
physical shape, and part of that was an effort to avoid rejection by the army.
No more. While a lot of Swiss still consider it a big deal to serve, a growing
number do not. Those who do get accepted, undergo about a year of training, and
then are in the active reserves for ten years. After that, they still have that
military experience to fall back on if there is a national emergency that requires
trained soldiers.