DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

One of the Marines’ toughest targets isn’t on the battlefield

January 9, 2026
in News
One of the Marines’ toughest targets isn’t on the battlefield
A young person watching a military recruiter on social media.
Matt Rota for BI
  • This post originally appeared in the Business Insider Today newsletter.
  • You can sign up for Business Insider’s daily newsletter here.

The Marine Corps touts itself as the few and the proud. Getting those few has never been harder, though.

Unlike other arms of the military, the Marines pride themselves on consistently hitting their enlistment goals. But that mission is becoming increasingly difficult despite an overall upswing in military recruitment.

From old-school methods feeling outdated to a dwindling birth rate, recruiters who are already stretched to the limit are facing more challenges, writes BI’s Kelsey Baker.

It’s the final installment in Kelsey’s fascinating four-part investigation into the Marine Corps recruiting practices that are “burning Marines,” according to one Great Plains sergeant. She spoke to nearly four dozen recruiters and officials and obtained documents from a Marine Corps investigation and two Marine Corps Inspector General reports.

Kelsey’s reporting found Marine Corps recruiters face an unusual degree of depression, emotional stress, and elevated risks of divorce, with 15 apparent suicides between 2015 and 2024.

Some of the challenges Marine recruiters face will sound familiar to anyone in sales.

They have a quota (enlisting two people a month) and deal with frustrating tracking tools that can slow down the process (Military Health System Genesis).

It’s one thing to try to get an executive to buy some software, but it’s another convincing a high schooler to sign an enlistment contract.

The situation can even become hostile, with three recruiters telling Kelsey they had guns pulled on them when visiting homes of potential enlistees.

In some cases, the pressure to meet targets led recruiters to falsify records and forge signatures. It’s an issue that didn’t just impact the rank-and-file recruiters, but higher-ups in the Marine Corps, as well.

The Marine Corps told Kelsey in a statement that the overwhelming majority of recruiters complete their tours successfully. “We are not yet where we ultimately want to be,” the service said. “But trends are undeniably moving in the right direction.”

In the meantime, the military is getting creative with attracting enlistees. BI’s Jake Gabbard observed US Army influencers at Fort Knox. You can watch the video here.

However, while the discourse primarily focuses on who is making weapons for the military, the real question is whether there will eventually be anyone left to operate them in the first place.

Read the original article on Business Insider

The post One of the Marines’ toughest targets isn’t on the battlefield appeared first on Business Insider.

‘There is something coming’: Senator sounds grim warning as big city braces for ICE
News

‘There is something coming’: Senator sounds grim warning as big city braces for ICE

by Raw Story
January 10, 2026

Gallego calls for ICE reforms as Phoenix braces for possible immigration enforcement sweep by Jerod MacDonald-Evoy, Arizona Mirror January 9, ...

Read more
News

Minnesota Woman Dies After Shark Bite in U.S. Virgin Islands

January 10, 2026
News

‘Looks bad’: MAGA Rep’s wife bought over $50K in Bitcoin same day he pushed crypto tax cut

January 10, 2026
News

Trump declares war on soaring credit card interest rates

January 10, 2026
News

‘Extremely rude’ Ashley Tisdale blasted by lawyer as ‘toxic’ mom group drama rages on

January 10, 2026
Ohio woman believes Trump-supporting license plate made her car a target in alleged shooting

Ohio woman believes Trump-supporting license plate made her car a target in alleged shooting

January 10, 2026
‘Deeply disturbing’: Senate Republican demands ICE probe after deadly shooting

Supreme Court’s ‘ruling for the ages’ directly led to ‘splattered blood’ in MN: expert

January 10, 2026
‘Deeply disturbing’: Senate Republican demands ICE probe after deadly shooting

Supreme Court’s ‘ruling for the ages’ directly led to ‘splattered blood’ in MN: expert

January 10, 2026

DNYUZ © 2025

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2025