Why the  best and brightest young officers are leaving
  " ... These  problems are of vital concern, and are reasonably well understood in newsrooms  and on Capitol Hill. But the top uniformed and civilian leaders at the Pentagon  who think hardest about the future of the military have a more fundamental fear:  young officers—people like Matt Kapinos—are leaving the Army at nearly their  highest rates in decades. This is not a short-term problem, nor is it one that  can simply be fixed with money. A private-sector company or another government  agency can address a shortage of middle managers by hiring more middle managers.  In the Army's rigid hierarchy, all officers start out at the bottom, as second  lieutenants. A decline in officer retention, in other words, threatens both the  Army's current missions in Iraq and Afghanistan, and its long-term institutional  future. And though many senior Pentagon leaders are quite aware of the problem,  there's only so much they can do to reverse the decline while the United States  maintains large numbers of troops in Iraq.
 In the last four  years, the exodus of junior officers from the Army has accelerated. In 2003,  around 8 percent of junior officers with between four and nine years of  experience left for other careers. Last year, the attrition rate leapt to 13  percent. "A five percent change could potentially be a serious problem," said  James Hosek, an expert in military retention at the RAND Corporation. Over the  long term, this rate of attrition would halve the number of officers who reach  their tenth year in uniform and intend to take senior leadership roles. ...  "
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