French soldiers condemned for having primary school pupils try out unloaded rifles

French soldiers have been criticised by the French MoD and local education authorities for having school pupils aged 10 and under try out unloaded assault rifles. There had been no similar outcry regarding similar armed forces activities in schools in the UK, which are driven by the UK MoD.

French soldiers have been criticised by the French Ministry of Defence and local education authorities for having pupils aged 10 and under try out unloaded assault rifles during a French Army visit to a primary school.

It is striking that there has been no similar outcry regarding similar armed forces activities in schools in the UK, which are driven by the UK MoD, rather than condemned by it.

At least some of the 11,000 armed forces to secondary schools that take place here each year involve students being shown military weaponry. A growing number of schools have a Cadet Force, which see students as young as 10 trained to use a rifle, and take part in mock battles. The annual Camo Day involves primary school pupils dressing up in armed forces uniform, being taught how to march, and being visited by members of the armed forces, who often come in armoured military vehicles.… Read more

Army officer recruitment drive in universities

A major new Army officer recruitment drive is targeting university students. Why is this acknowledged as ‘recruitment’, when similar activities in schools are not?

A major new Army officer recruitment drive, ‘With Heart, With Mind‘, is targeting university students.

The drive in universities is being widely reported in the media as ‘recruitment’, despite being little-different in its approach from many of the activites that the armed forces conduct in schools in colleges. Strikingly, in the last few years the armed forces and Ministry of Defence have repeatedly claimed – despite a large body of evidence to the contrary – that ‘the armed forces never visit schools for recruitment purposes’. As the current Army activities in universities show, armed forces ‘recruitment’ in the education is a process, rather than the specific act of students signing up then and there.

ForcesWatch are concerned about the sanitised, glamourised image of the Army that is apparently being put across to students.… Read more