Sgt Leprechaun
08-12-07, 09:56 AM
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
August 11, 2007
Pg. 2
It's Impossible To 'Read' New Uniforms Of Army Officers
By Harry Levins
Now that we're at war, you see something you rarely saw in peacetime - soldiers wearing field uniforms in airports and hotels.
And if you look closely at Army officers, you may notice that the new uniforms lack something found on older uniforms - branch insignia.
Time was when an officer wore his rank on his right collar. On the left collar, he wore his branch insignia - crossed rifles for infantry, for example, or a castle for engineers.
Now, the collar is bare. The rank has been moved to a tab dangling down the shirt's front. The branch insignia is nowhere to be seen.
The result: It's impossible to "read" an officer's field uniform.
I called the Department of the Army to ask why. Nobody had an answer, although they agreed (off the record) with my own theory:
Stripping away the branch insignia makes soldiers more like Marines.
Back when Army officers still displayed their branches, I asked a Marine colonel why his service made it so hard to "read" a uniform. Aviators excepted, Marines show no clues to their military specialities. Why?
"Because we're all plain-and-simple Marines," the colonel said.
He explained, "If you ask a soldier what he does, he'll say, 'I'm infantry,' or 'I'm airborne,' or 'I'm a tanker.' If you ask a Marine what he does, he'll say, 'I'm a Marine.'"
I suspect that the Army's decision to strip away the branch insignia is a way of prodding officers to see one another as soldiers first and specialists second.
Back in my soldiering days as a lieutenant in Germany in 1964-65, I proudly pinned the crossed rifles of the infantry on my left collar tab and donned a scarf that was colored the powder blue of the infantry.
Mind you, few of us going through the Infantry School at Fort Benning, Ga., had wanted to be in the infantry.
But even though few wanted the infantry, everybody respected the infantry. For the first time in my life, I was macho. I could look down my nose at captains and majors wearing the insignia of, say, the Finance Corps, or the Quartermaster Corps.
I'm guessing that the new uniform is an effort to dampen branch rivalries and get soldiers to thinking of themselves as soldiers.
Oh - those colored scarves are long gone. Too bad. On the day I learned that I'd drawn the infantry, I said, "Infantry? Aw, (bleep)!"
I was unaware that standing behind me was a major of artillery from the ROTC faculty.
He leaned over my shoulder and said with a malicious grin:
"Look at it this way, Levins - the scarf will go good with your eyes."
August 11, 2007
Pg. 2
It's Impossible To 'Read' New Uniforms Of Army Officers
By Harry Levins
Now that we're at war, you see something you rarely saw in peacetime - soldiers wearing field uniforms in airports and hotels.
And if you look closely at Army officers, you may notice that the new uniforms lack something found on older uniforms - branch insignia.
Time was when an officer wore his rank on his right collar. On the left collar, he wore his branch insignia - crossed rifles for infantry, for example, or a castle for engineers.
Now, the collar is bare. The rank has been moved to a tab dangling down the shirt's front. The branch insignia is nowhere to be seen.
The result: It's impossible to "read" an officer's field uniform.
I called the Department of the Army to ask why. Nobody had an answer, although they agreed (off the record) with my own theory:
Stripping away the branch insignia makes soldiers more like Marines.
Back when Army officers still displayed their branches, I asked a Marine colonel why his service made it so hard to "read" a uniform. Aviators excepted, Marines show no clues to their military specialities. Why?
"Because we're all plain-and-simple Marines," the colonel said.
He explained, "If you ask a soldier what he does, he'll say, 'I'm infantry,' or 'I'm airborne,' or 'I'm a tanker.' If you ask a Marine what he does, he'll say, 'I'm a Marine.'"
I suspect that the Army's decision to strip away the branch insignia is a way of prodding officers to see one another as soldiers first and specialists second.
Back in my soldiering days as a lieutenant in Germany in 1964-65, I proudly pinned the crossed rifles of the infantry on my left collar tab and donned a scarf that was colored the powder blue of the infantry.
Mind you, few of us going through the Infantry School at Fort Benning, Ga., had wanted to be in the infantry.
But even though few wanted the infantry, everybody respected the infantry. For the first time in my life, I was macho. I could look down my nose at captains and majors wearing the insignia of, say, the Finance Corps, or the Quartermaster Corps.
I'm guessing that the new uniform is an effort to dampen branch rivalries and get soldiers to thinking of themselves as soldiers.
Oh - those colored scarves are long gone. Too bad. On the day I learned that I'd drawn the infantry, I said, "Infantry? Aw, (bleep)!"
I was unaware that standing behind me was a major of artillery from the ROTC faculty.
He leaned over my shoulder and said with a malicious grin:
"Look at it this way, Levins - the scarf will go good with your eyes."