Military
conscripts in Norway will be given used underwear amid COVID-induced supply
chain crisis
BY
RACHEL PANNETT
• THE WASHINGTON POST • JANUARY
9, 2022
Coronavirus supply chain issues have hit fuel
supplies, led to shortages of masks, vaccines and electronic components, and
snarled up holiday gift deliveries. In Britain, truck driver shortages led to
fears last summer of pubs running dry.
Now, Norway’s military is facing a supply shortage
that is particularly personal: New recruits are being asked to wear previously
used undergarments — including socks, bras and underwear — returned by
conscripts after they complete their service.
The plan was originally meant to be voluntary, as
the pandemic led to delivery delays. But officials have now made it mandatory
to hand over all clothing and equipment for laundering and reuse upon
graduation, Norwegian state broadcaster NRK reported.
Norway, a NATO member that shares a northern
border with Russia, introduced compulsory military service for both men and
women in 2015. About 8,000 recruits complete the program each year, and initial
service generally lasts 12 to 19 months.
Until recently, the conscripts were allowed to keep undergarments such as underwear, wool socks and T-shirts, in addition to headgear and field boots, according to defense publication Forsvarets Forum, which first reported on the plan to recycle military kit.
Armed Forces spokesman Lt. Col. Vegard Norstad
Finberg told the defense publication that the garments are laundered and
checked for quality — with defective and worn items thrown away, and minor
damage is repaired.
The Norwegian Ministry of Defense didn’t
immediately respond to a request for comment on Sunday.
Eirik Sjøhelle Eiksund, a defense union spokesman,
told NRK that the reuse of clothes was “problematic” but that clothing
shortages also were leading to soldiers walking in woolen socks full of holes
in the country’s frigid north, after they were issued only a single pair for
their entire service.
A spokesman for the Armed Forces Logistics
Organization told NRK it was these kind of shortages the military was trying to
avoid with its plan for soldiers to return their undergarments after completing
their service.
In the United States, outside of basic training,
service members are free to choose what they wear under their uniforms.
The Marine Corps reportedly scrapped a male-only
underwear allowance last year after an investigation found disparities between
allowances given to male and female recruits. The previous allowance for men’s
underwear wasn’t exactly enough to buy fancy briefs; it was 72 cents per year,
according to military news organization Military.com.
A spokesman for the Marine Corps Uniform Board,
Master Sgt. Andrew Pendracki, told Military.com at the time that underwear was
issued to Marines in their initial sea bag and undergarments were considered
personal items to be purchased at the individual’s expense following recruit
training.
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