The Department of War (DOW) is receiving well-earned praise for reversing the military’s recruitment crisis. In FY2025, all the branches of the military met or exceeded their recruitment goals.

(The problem) is America’s retention crisis. Given the immensely complex tasks we demand of experienced enlisted service members and officers, the time and money it takes to replace the expertise required to perform these tasks, and how central this expertise is to modern warfighting, we cannot afford to keep hemorrhaging essential talent.

Despite spending nearly six billion dollars on recruiting and retention in recent years, including giving over 70,000 people retention bonuses, people are leaving the military at some of the highest rates of the last decade. For instance, 7% of Air Force officers and 11% of Airmen now leave the service each year, 350% and 550% above the national average, respectively.

Unsurprisingly, the more specialized and in-demand an officer’s skill-set is, the more likely the military is to lose them to the private sector. Four thousand troops left cyber jobs in 2024, despite DOW facing a 16% cyber position vacancy rate. While DOW does not publicly track how many AI experts it employs and loses each year, Georgetown University reports an intense shortage of uniformed personnel who understand both the mission and the emerging technology.

    • Skankhunt420@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      The U.S. Department of Defense is now also referred to as the Department of War, following an executive order signed by President Trump in September 2025. However, the official statutory name remains the Department of Defense until Congress makes a formal change.

      • BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today
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        2 hours ago

        The Dummy-in-Chief desperately wants a Nobel Peace Prize, but changes the name from Dept of DEFENSE to Dept of WAR, and doesn’t understand how that might not send the right message to the Nobel committee.

      • chunes@lemmy.world
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        16 hours ago

        It’s not a bootlicker take to want to call a spade a spade. Quite the opposite, I would think

      • dogslayeggs@lemmy.world
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        22 hours ago

        That’s not being a bootlicker. That’s stating the actual official policy of the DoW, disseminated to everyone who has a NIPR account and “proclaimed” in an executive order by the President. It isn’t official law as passed by Congress (yet), but nobody in this administration cares about the law. They are making everyone who works with the DoW call it the DoW.

        Yeah, I hate it so much and still call it the DoD in casual conversation at work, but “they” being the DoW did change the name even if Congress hasn’t.

    • mister_flibble@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      I understand the point you’re making but refuse to give them the satisfaction.

      Also let’s be real, there’s a distinct possibility it was changed because these dumbfucks can’t spell ‘defense’

      • IronBird@lemmy.world
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        10 hours ago

        idk, to me it seems like one of the few honest acts this administration has done. it’s always been the department of war, they just took the mask off