'Top Gun: Maverick' and the Pentagon recruitment drive

June 27, 2022
Issue 
Top Gun Maverick 2022
With Top Gun: Maverick, the collaboration between the Pentagon and the film鈥檚 producers is unerring and nakedly evident. Image: IMDB

Hollywood, like the United States media, has not been spared the influential hand of government. Under the mask of various projects, the defence establishment has sought to influence the narrative of 鈥淔reedom Land鈥檚鈥 pursuits, buying a stake in the way exploits are marketed or, when needed, buried.

The extent of such collaboration, manipulation and interference can be gathered in the 2017 book聽.聽 In it, Matthew Alford and Tom Secker argue that a number of operations mounted by the Pentagon, the Cental Intelligence Agency and the Federal Bureau of Investigation聽were designed to further 鈥渧iolent, American-centric solutions to international problems based on twisted readings of history鈥.

The US Air Force (USAF) has its own Entertainment Liaison Office in Hollywood, run by director Lieutenant Colonel Glen Roberts. 鈥淥ur job,鈥 in 2016, 鈥渋s to project and protect the image of the US Air Force and its Airmen in the entertainment space鈥. Propaganda is not a word he knows, even though he is its most ardent practitioner. He describes the involvement of his office across scripted or unscripted television, movies, documentaries, reality TV, award and game shows, sporting events and video games. Its purpose: 鈥渢o present the Air Force and its people in a credible, realistic way鈥 and provide the entertainment industry with 鈥渁ccess to Airmen, bases and equipment if they meet certain standards set by the Department of Defense鈥.

No more blatant has this link between celluloid, entertainment and the military industrial complex been evident than in the promotion of Top Gun. When it hit the cinemas in 1986, the US military received a wash of service academy applications, though finding exact recruitment figures linked to the film has not been easy. (This has not stopped publications such as Military History Now confidently that interest in US Navy flight training rose 500% that year.)

The film was, after all, nothing else than a relentless, eye-goggling advertisement (well, at least 100 minutes) for the US military, a sequence of swerves, testosterone jerks and puerile masculinity. 鈥淚t was probably the most realistic flying movie that I鈥檇 seen聽and it just left a mark on me,鈥 Air Force Chief of Staff General Charles Brown a gathering at the National Press Club in Washington聽last August. 鈥淚 was out of pilot training, and I was already going to fighters, so it was one of those where you kind of go 鈥榯hat鈥檚 pretty realistic鈥.鈥

Top Gun also served as something of a palette cleanser for US power, bruised by its failings in Indochina and hobbled by the 鈥淰ietnam Syndrome鈥. In of Roger Stahl, a communications academic based at the University of Georgia, 鈥淭he original Top Gun arrived just in time to clean up this image and clear the way for a more palatable high-tech vision of imperialism and ultimately the Persian Gulf War鈥.

With Top Gun: Maverick, the collaboration between the Pentagon and the film鈥檚 producers is unerring and nakedly evident. While Tom Cruise plays the role of a rule breaking pilot who lives up to his name, his production is distinctly obedient to the dictates of the US Navy.

It鈥檚 also worth noting that Cruise using the facilities of other defence ministries to shoot his films given his ties to the Church of Scientology. There has been no such trouble with the Pentagon. Both, it seems, have mutual fantasies to promote.

Documents obtained under Freedom of Information show that the movie only proceeded with the proviso of extensive defence involvement. The between the Department of Defense (DoD) and Paramount Pictures is explicit in outlining the role. The US Marine Corps expressly guaranteed providing 20 Marines from Marine Corps Air Station (MCAS) Miramar, California 鈥渢o appear as an official funeral detail for the filming sequence鈥 along with access to MCAS Miramar 鈥渢o enable actors the opportunity to experience flight simulator training. All aspects of familiarization and training will be captured by second production unit鈥.

In return for such access to equipment and facilities, along with necessary technical support and personnel, the DoD openly mentions assigning 鈥渁 senior staff, post-command Officer to review with public affairs the script鈥檚 thematics and weave in key talking points relevant to the aviation community鈥.

Clause 19 of the agreement reiterates the importance of the Pentagon鈥檚 role in the production process. A 鈥渧iewing of the roughly edited, but final version of the production聽(the 鈥榬ough cut鈥)鈥 was to be provided to the DoD, relevant project officers, and the DoD Director of Entertainment Media 鈥渁t a stage of editing when changes can be accommodated鈥. This would enable the 鈥淒oD to confirm that the tone of the military sequences substantially conforms to the agreed script treatment, or narrative description鈥. Any material deemed compromising would result in its removal.

The USAF has gone into an enthusiastic recruitment drive, hoping to inject some verve into the numbers. In of itself, this is unremarkable, given a shortage of pilots that was already being pointed out in March 2018. That month, Congress about a shortfall of 10%, equating to 2100 of the 21,000 pilots required to pursue the National Defence Strategy. Shortages were also being noted by the US Navy.

Recruitment stalls have mushroomed across movie halls. Navy spokesperson Commander Dave Benham . 鈥淲e think Top Gun: Maverick will certainly raise awareness and should positively contribute to individual decisions to serve in the Navy.鈥 With the film running throughout the country, the Navy鈥檚 recruitment goals for the 2022 financial year of 40,000 enlistees and 3800 officers in both active and reserve components may be that much easier.

Patriotic publications have also delighted in the recruitment pap of the new film, seeing it as eminently more suitable and chest-beating than advertising gimmicks such as the featuring Corporal Emma Malonelord. Released last year, it features an individual who operates the US Patriotic Missile Air Defence system.聽 From the outset, we are told about a 鈥渓ittle girl raised by two moms鈥 in California. 鈥淎lthough I had a fairly typical childhood, took ballet, played violin, I also marched for equality. I like to think I鈥檝e been defending freedom from an early age.鈥

The video is also pap of a different type. It shows that those freedom loving types in defence can also be musical, balletic products of lesbian unions and peaceful protest. 鈥淓mma鈥檚 reason for joining up is selfish,鈥 a sneering piece in The Federalist. 鈥淭here is zero in the video to inspire any kind of bravery, sacrifice, duty, honor, integrity, excellence, teamwork聽or respect.鈥 Senator Ted Cruz in his assessment:聽鈥淗oly crap. Perhaps a woke, emasculated military is not the best idea.鈥

Best leave it to the likes of Cruise the patriot scientologist, lubricated with tips and much assistance from the Pentagon, to give their version of service in the US military. Even if it is deceptive, controlled tripe.

[Binoy Kampmark lectures at RMIT University. Email: bkampmark@gmail.com.]

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