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"Kids With Guns"

NGOs - Non Government Organizations - have rediscovered the ancient practice of children in armies. They have started a campaign to expose this despicable practice and put a stop to it.

The UN passed a resolution in 2000 forbidding anyone under 18 from serving in the military. So far, 79 nations have signed the treaty, but only six have ratified it. The guesstimate of 300,000 children serving with armies is, for once, probably low. For a number of reasons, both historical and technical, the head count for kids in armies is probably higher now than it ever has been in the past. And the practice of children serving with armies has a long, long past.

For thousands of years, kids went off to war. The younger ones acted as servants, to help around the camp. The older ones, as they got bigger, worked their way into the fighting line. About all that anyone in Western nations knows of this is the medieval tradition of children serving as pages and squires, and ultimately becoming knights. That was for the children of the nobility. Commoner kids also had opportunities to become professional warriors if they survived to adolescence, avoiding death from the ill treatment they faced while living with callous soldiers and the rigors of living rough while the army was on campaign.

The 20th century changed all that. With smaller rifles and automatic weapons, kids could be armed and sent off to fight at an earlier age. As in the past, many young boys were fascinated with weapons and violence. "Running off to join the army" was around long before "running off to join the circus." There has never been a shortage of volunteers.

Starting in the 1930s, kid-size military rifles (the Russian SKS and 9mm machine pistols) began to appear in large quantities. After World War II, the Russian AK-47 showed up, and became the weapon of choice for child soldiers everywhere. With end of the Cold War, and the collapse of communist governments, millions of AK-47s suddenly appeared on world markets. At first, the AK-47s were so cheap that they were practically given away ("buy a rocket launcher and we'll throw in a free AK-47..."). Whereas in the past kids had to make themselves useful, and show they had a minimum of smarts and initiative before getting a weapon, the flood of AK-47s made it possible to arm the children much earlier in their military career (within hours or days, rather than weeks or months.) The hordes of children wielding AK-47s gave new meaning to the term "wild child." And these kiddie gunsels are more dangerous than the adults. Children are difficult to discipline under any conditions. But when the kid has an automatic weapon, childish petulance takes on a new meaning.

Until lighter weight weapons came along, the kids in the military were lightly armed (maybe a knife) and generally responsive to a smack upside the head. Once they got their guns, discipline became more harsh. One vivid example of this showed up in the 1963 movie, "Mondo Cane" ("It's a Dog's World"). This Italian "shockumentary" showed odd behavior from all parts of the world. It was all real; nothing was staged. In one scene, filmed in the camp of some African guerrillas, a ten-year-old kid is saying something to an adult that is apparently not appreciated. The adult pulls out a pistol and shoots the kid in the chest. The body flies back into the bush; all that can be seen are the kid's shoes - a lesson, no doubt, to other kids in the camp to show some respect to their elders.

In better-organized armies, children served as drummer boys until about a century ago. In some navies, kids can still serve as cabin boys, a tradition that goes back many centuries. When children like these are serving in an organized military unit, they have a degree of protection. At least they cannot be executed out of hand. The UN got into a snit with the United States and Britain, which have long allowed 17-year-old boys (and even younger in Britain) to join up with parental permission.

The UN didn't make much progress against the long standing recruiting practices of America and Britain. But the real target was guerrillas and irregulars who are waging war in a medieval fashion. That means these paramilitary units are living off the land. This has always meant stealing people as well as food and valuables. But guerrilla movements have always appealed to kids, mainly because of the ideological and revenge aspects.

Guerrillas know their attacks on the government will usually bring retaliation against the local civilians. Every time a father is killed by the soldiers, the older sons (and sometimes the daughters) feel compelled to seek revenge. In many parts of the world, the "blood feud" tradition is strong and there are few impediments to a kid joining the local guerrillas to avenge his kin. In these circumstances it's almost impossible for a 14-year-old not to volunteer. The UN/NGO campaign plays this down, if they play it at all. Instead, the incidents of guerrillas forcibly conscripting kids for military service is put out front. This may make for better PR, but ignoring local customs makes eliminating underage soldiering a lot more difficult.

Even if the guerrillas and bandits (sometimes it's difficult to tell the difference) were persuaded to stop taking kids, it's much more difficult to stop the kids from joining. Revenge, adventure, altruism and the thrill of wielding the power that comes from holding a gun will bring the underage recruits in for a long time to come.


Copyright-James F. Dunnigan-2001  

"Dirty Little Secrets" is syndicated by:


"Dirty Little Secrets"
by James F. Dunnigan

Jim Dunnigan



James F Dunnigan works as an advisor and lecturer to the Army War College, State Department, National Defense University, Naval Post Graduate School, CIA, and MORS.
He is the author of over one hundred historical simulations and fifteen books, including the modern military classic "How to Make War," which has been current and in print for 16 years selling over half a million copies.
He serves as a military analyst for NBC and MSNBC, and he also appears frequently as a military affairs commentator for ABC, CBS and CNN as he did throughout the Persian Gulf War.
Mr. Dunnigan served in the U.S. Army from 1961 to 1964, and is a graduate of Columbia University.




Jim Dunnigan @ MSNBC



Write to James Dunnigan at: Dunnigan@Paradigm-TSA.com



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