The short answer is yes.
Your premise is one that I don't entirely agree with. I think that not being open about your personal mental health challenges is prevalent within society. In fact, I think what we're seeing in the armed forces is that we're turning a corner where people ought to be—and if they're not they're encouraged to be—open and seek treatment and counselling, whatever it takes. At the front end, I think we're one of the organizations in the country that will take the notion of resilience, resilience training, and life skills and deliver those formally and professionally so that people can withstand the rigours of military service.
The fact is that it is absolutely correct to characterize the military the way you just did in the way we were. We've come from there. We want to move forward from that point. We will be dogged, I suspect, by a history in which we maybe weren't as careful in paying attention to this, but we are now, and people need to know that. That said, we still need the science to do better. We still need to be able to treat people. We need to value individuals and recognize that people recover from and manage mental health challenges.