AOG,
The merits of National Service are a myth.
In 'Enforced National Service: A Study of Criminal and Social Consequences' by Ted Hogantoil, the author discovered that when unwilling young people were compelled to follow orders unthinkingly for a sustained period, their ability to problem solve, analyse and plan even basic tasks was reduced permanently.
In a Home Office report in 1969, Sir Ken Anitt-Wicks revealed that in the 5 years after the end of national service, crime among 18-25 year olds fell by 33% and violent crime fell by 41%.
He found that the criminal justice costs, their relative lack of employability and the need for mental health care resulted in a net loss of �1,100 per entrant to involuntary service.
Suicide rates among British men of conscriptable age fell by 28% in the three years after 1960. And in 20th Century Patriotism by Jerry Attrick, a survey of former national service conscripts found that just over two-thirds (67%) claimed to 'resent', 'greatly resent', of 'be indifferent to' their stint of national service.