Air Force Flinches on Arming Recruits with Working Guns …Again

Opinion

U.S. Air Force Basic Military Training trainees carry weapons at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland on August 2, 2024. (U.S. Air Force photo by Ava Leone)
U.S. Air Force Basic Military Training trainees carry weapons at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland on August 2, 2024. (U.S. Air Force photo by Ava Leone)

Well, here we go again. The United States Air Force had a brief moment of clarity—just a moment—when it looked like they might start treating their own recruits like real warfighters by letting them carry actual M4 rifles during basic training.

But predictably, that moment passed faster than a Beltway politician dodging accountability.

According to the Air Force’s top brass, arming trainees with real, live-fire-capable rifles throughout boot camp is just too hard. Too many “logistical challenges,” they say. Too much responsibility. Heaven forbid young Americans who sign up to wear the uniform actually handle the tools of war early on—tools they’ll be expected to be intimately familiar with when the real fight starts.

Instead, they’re sticking with glorified toys: inert M4s that look real, feel real, but don’t go bang. Maj. Gen. Wolfe Davidson, who oversees the whole training pipeline, confirmed they’re not moving forward with real rifles “in the near term.” You know what that means—it’s code for never, unless they get forced into it by reality.

Let’s be clear: The Marines do it. The Army does it. Hell, even most ROTC programs give their kids more trigger time. But the Air Force? Nope. They’re convinced a red-plastic-tipped dummy gun is enough to create a “warfighter mindset.”

And that’s the problem.

We’ve got high-ranking Air Force officials saying we’re on the brink of a near-peer war with China or Russia.

We’ve got high-ranking Air Force officials saying we’re on the brink of a near-peer war with China or Russia. They’re right. The next war won’t be fought from cushy air-conditioned offices—it’ll be brutal, ugly, and real. But if you believe that, and you still won’t arm the next generation of Airmen with anything more than a cosplay rifle, you’re not preparing for war. You’re playing pretend.

Security concerns? Too many weapons to store? Not enough instructors? Guess what—none of that stopped our grandfathers from winning WWII. They figured it out with clipboards, paper maps, and grit. But now, in the era of biometric locks and digital armories, the world’s most advanced Air Force can’t figure out how to responsibly issue a basic firearm to a grown adult?

Meanwhile, here’s what Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth had to say just three months ago in his Message to the Force:

“We will remain the strongest and most lethal force in the world… All of this will be done with a focus on lethality, meritocracy, accountability, standards, and readiness.”

So let’s ask the obvious: how exactly does marching around with a red-tipped plastic toy gun meet the Secretary’s call for lethality? How does locking a non-functioning rifle in a dorm room locker restore the warrior ethos?

It doesn’t.

This is what happens when political correctness meets the profession of arms. Instead of sharpening the spear, the Air Force dulled it—again.

Sure, they still make the recruits look like they’re carrying rifles. They march them around with fake M4s, let them break them down—oh wait, you can’t—and then practice holding them. It’s like handing someone a rubber knife and calling them a chef.

You can’t fake warfighting. And you sure as hell can’t fake the Second Amendment. That right—the one to keep and bear arms—isn’t just a civilian right. It’s a warrior’s foundation. If the Air Force can’t trust its own people with real rifles in basic training, maybe it shouldn’t be trusted to send them into combat either.

We’re raising a generation of soldiers, sailors, airmen, and marines to fight enemies who are armed to the teeth and trained from childhood. And instead of meeting that threat with strength, we’re stuffing red and blue plastic into warrior’s M4 barrels and calling it a day.

Lock and load, America. Because the people in charge of defending this country still think the scariest thing in a barracks is a loaded rifle.


About Tred Law

Tred Law is your everyday patriot with a deep love for this country and a no-compromise approach to the Second Amendment. He does not write articles for Ammoland every week, but when he does write, it is usually about liberals Fing with his right to keep and bear arms.

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CATME7

I spent 26 years in the USAF from 1982 – 2008 Security Police/Forces. We never ever carried our M16 Rifles while in BMTS. Not until technical school and even then, it was only range time or field training that we had an opportunity to carry them. I do agree all branches need to be the same when it comes to arming our service members.

Fang

I went through USAF basic at Lackland during the Vietnam war (1972) and we only touched an M16 on one day, at the range where we fired only. a few rounds in semi-auto mode. I never touched a firearm again in my 3 yrs 8 months of service. I was trained in electronics and, though I served on bomber bases, never used a firearm for work. Was it right? Hell no. We were only taught who to salute, to button our buttons, shine our shoes and march around in basic. They should be getting daily live fire with real M4s… Read more »

brnfree in CT

How STUPID!!! The Air Force top brass has NO brain matter between their stuffed ears!!!

Jaque

Sounds like the USAF is run be weanies not warfighters. I hope Hegseth forces a reversal of this policy and fires those who are behind it

Ledesma

I’m disappointed in the Chair Force. They need a few months on Parris Island.

StLPro2A

When the SHTF, there won’t be time to train a dumpling into a warfighter….RIP America… During VN basic, we carried real big boy ARs, no good guys were shot. Welcome to the dumbing down of America greatness. SH;RE;LMAO

FL-GA

They do each have to fire 70 rounds during their 4th week, and the non-firing replicas can be broken down and cleaned like REAL M4s, so at least some of the recruits will know how to operate a firearm. I do, however, think they should have actual, operating weapons to develop a soldier mindset. I feel the same about the Navy. Because of a permanent disability I received at age 16 I was exempt from the draft. However, years later I worked for a defense contractor doing mostly US Navy work. I was often with hundreds, sometimes thousands of Navy… Read more »

swmft

they want to maintain the video game readiness, of their clowns

Nurph

As a retired US Navy sailor, the only time I touched a firearm while active duty – unless I paid money out of my own pocket to do so – was twice in boot camp. We weren’t issued rifles to carry daily. It wasn’t event built into the training curriculum. Hell, we barely learned how to be a Sailor much less become a weapon expert! I say all of this to shed light on the fact that your “average recruit” won’t ever have an instance during their time in the military to actually use a firearm. They won’t be in… Read more »

shiftless

It’s hard to get air force guys to join our Legion funeral details because they aren’t interested in learning how the rifles work.