Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Country headed into ‘toughest’ weeks, Trump warns

- By Lolita C. Baldor

WASHINGTON — Marine Gunnery Sgt. Kevin Meyer does his best recruiting face-to-face. He can look people in the eye, read their body language and get insight into whether they would make a good Marine.

But coronaviru­s quarantine­s have shut down most recruiting stations. So Meyer and other recruiters have turned to social media. And that has its drawbacks.

“They usually won’t run away if you’re talking to them in person,” said Meyer, noting that if they are online or on the phone, they can just hang up. “They just stop responding, and the conversati­on just ends without a conclusion.”

With the coronaviru­s pandemic worsening and the country turning to the military for help, America’s armed services are struggling to get new recruits as families and communitie­s hunker down. Recruiters scrounging for recruits online are often finding people too consumed with their own financial and health care worries to consider a military commitment.

The services could fall thousands short of their enlistment goals if the lockdowns drag on, forcing them to pressure troops to stay on to maintain military readiness.

“This is going to have somewhat of a corrosive effect on our ability to have the numbers of people that we really need,” said Maj. Gen. Lenny Richoux, director for personnel for the Joint Chiefs of Staff. “The concern, it is growing.”

He said the military is watching this day-to-day and knows that it could take “a very long time” to rebuild the force.

To entice prospects, recruiters are shifting to a softer sell, talking more broadly about service to the nation in difficult times. And they’re hoping to get a recruiting surge during the peak summer months.

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