There's no doubt.... And we are not the ones saying this. Regular generals, serving generals, are saying that the regular forces are overqualified in terms of all the things they have to study or go through. If that pattern is implemented in the reserves, then you have the reservists also becoming overqualified.
Now, you have to distinguish between what is the qualification to go to war and serve in Afghanistan and what is the qualification to serve as a reservist in normal conditions in the country in regard to facing a domestic crisis. What we're saying is let's look at the minimum requirement to be a reservist. Let's establish how a reservist has to be trained to do the job that you people decide is the role of the militia. Then, after that, on a volunteer basis, anybody who has the time and the will and who wants to do that can continue with their qualifications.
Obviously, then, if you have to deploy these people in a theatre of operations in combat, then you increase the level of training, but you don't need the whole of the militia staff and instructors across the country to be trained for that purpose, which is the case in actuality and which then prevents young people, talented people, and ambitious people from joining the militia. Also, it creates the problem of succession at the units.