Gotta get back in this a little...can't let the comments slide about the draftees, because I was one.
Got my notice in fall '65, appealed it because I thought I was in a draft-exempt job. Didn't work; wasn't a "declared" war. Signed up for an extra year to get into something other than the Infantry. Didn't work; first time I heard "needs of the service". But what I found was the niche in life I'd been born for, and stayed for a career, retiring as a Regular Army LtCol. No one has ever had cause to question my courage, honor, loyalty, or patriotism; nor do I question TNs or anyone else who served honorably.
The problem WASN'T the quality of the draftees. Studies showed there wasn't much difference between them and any other era except WWII...the last "good war". The problem was that the media turned against the war, the country turned against the war, and the administrations opted for "exit strategies" rather than a quest for victory. I can't pinpoint an exact turning point, but I know that by mid-'68, the attitude of draftees and enlistees and careerists, alike, changed. No one trusted the senior leadership of the military or the country. No one wanted to be the last ones killed in an unpopular war. Everyone who could, avoided the draft or got into safe assignments. Those things caused the problems, not the quality of the GIs I was around. In the early 70s, the problem manifested itself with the rampant drug use, disobedience, and disorder in the ranks. Many junior officers and NCOs were afraid to go into their unit areas after dark. Those were symptoms, not the underlying sickness.
Hundreds of thousands of midgrade officers, NCOs, and troops were involuntarily released or reduced in grade. Defense pay, benefits, and programs were cut in order to fund social programs. Thousands of people who needed treatment for physical and PTSD disorders were turned out to fend for themselves and ignored by the VA. Isn't it a good thing that no one is trying to do those things again, huh?
After Carter, things began to look up again, and Uncle Ronnie was a good man to serve under. I retired in '86 because of family issues. I'm still an ardent patriot.
But when times get tough, even otherwise good folks can get caught up in bad things. That's what I'm afraid of, because I've seen it.
Reliquary...aka
unrepentant knuckledragger.