Mr Trump reportedly referred to the fallen marines from Belleau Wood as “suckers”.
On Memorial Day in 2017, Mr Trump visited Arlington National Cemetery with his then-future (and now former) White House chief of staff, retired marine general John Kelly.
Gen Kelly’s son Robert was killed in Afghanistan in 2010, and is buried at Arlington. Standing next to his grave, Mr Trump reportedly turned to Gen Kelly and said: “I don’t get it. What was in it for them?”
Trump's thinking here likely is sociopathic, as others have said, but.... yeah, I also agree, but probably for different reasons than Trump is thinking.
I get the argument that the soldiers aren't responsible for the wars they're sent to. Politicians are. And yes, soldiers in the 60's and earlier were drafted.
But soldiers are no longer drafted, and if someone decides to join the military, that is likely to be the most defining decision of their entire lives. The evidence has been pretty well available and widely known for at least 30 years that if you join the U.S. military anymore, you are very likely to be involved in doing bad things. I came across loads of records of the U.S. military being involved in terrible things while writing history reports in my mid-teens in the late 90's with nothing but the high school library for sources. That took a *little bit* of effort. Now you almost certainly have a smart phone by the time you're making this decision and can literally just look up the Wikipedia page for U.S. war crimes in 10 seconds. Anybody who joins the military since the elimination of the draft either made such a decision without putting any effort into seriously evaluating it first, or they're really terrible at looking up information, or worse.
When there is a draft, yes, it's more of a grey area. When there isn't, and the activities of a country's military have been consistent for generations, there's less of an excuse, imo. I really don't understand how troop worship culture persists today, and continues to portray soldiers as victims. Don't join, and you won't be a victim. If you join and then claim there's no way you could have known you'd be involved in war crimes or that your life would be ruined a bunch of different ways... yeah... you're a sucker. I know that will offend a lot of people. But seriously. ****Why would you join**** Like, fuck, the only reason I can think of is economic hardship, and I do cut people slack for that one, but... get into crime, I guess? You're putting yourself in danger either way, but at least you'd have more control over your ethical destiny and probably a cleaner conscious. Not to mention the countless stories out there of veterans getting screwed out of their promised benefits. If you think military work is going to be your path to an early retirement with material security, sure, maybe it will work out for you (if the ethical compromise is worth that to you). It does for many. But maybe you should also wonder why 10% of homeless people are veterans...
A military recruiter called me in my late teens. I spent 5 minutes just repeating "Not interested" until they hung up. They never bothered me again. That was around 2000. Easiest decision I ever made in my life, and the last 20 years have shown it to be extremely correct. My only regret is not being as witty as some kids today, who tell recruiters "Sorry, I don't want to work for an oil company."