Short-arm inspection

Last updated
Painting by Carel Weight of British Army recruits undergoing medical inspection, 1942 (Imperial War Museum art collection) Recruit's Progress- Medical Inspection Art.IWMARTLD2909.jpg
Painting by Carel Weight of British Army recruits undergoing medical inspection, 1942 (Imperial War Museum art collection)

The term "short-arm inspection" is a military euphemism referring to the routine medical inspection of male soldiers' penises ("short arms") for signs of sexually-transmitted diseases and other medical problems. [1]

Contents

The precise origin of the term is uncertain; however, American [2] and Australian troops are known to have used the term during the First World War. [3]

Examples

The practice within the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II was described by an anonymous American soldier, who had been forced to work as a truck driver while held as a prisoner of war, and who came into daily close contact with Japanese soldiers. [4]

When a Jap G.I. turns in with a venereal disease, he gets a good beating and loses what few privileges have been allowed to him. For this reason, they go to civilian doctors or to drug stores, and try to doctor themselves. Many of them are infected. Short-arm inspection is held only on rare occasions. In fact, there was only one such inspection during the time I was a prisoner.

American, former prisoner of war (1945)

In literature

The practice of short-arm inspection was described in Earle Birney's novel Turvey, a comic account of Canadian soldiers during World War II.

After the ordained blanket line-ups and personnel quickies, the new arrivals were given a short-arm inspection. Although this was already Turvey's fourth since enlistment, it was the first since hospitalization and he awaited his turn with some apprehension. The twenty silent soldiers were paraded by a silent corporal into a small room smelling of lysol. They shuffled in a single line past the RAP [ Regimental Aid Post [5] ] Sergeant ... The sergeant had the reputation of being the fastest and merriest short-arm inspector in the Canadian Army. [6]

References

  1. merriam-webster.com
  2. Evans, Martin Marix (2014). American Voices of World War I: Primary Source Documents, 1917-1920. Routledge. pp. 11–12. ISBN   978-1135969783 . Retrieved 17 September 2014.
  3. Glossary of WWI slang: S, at the Australian National Dictionary Centre (via archive.org); version archived May 22, 2007
  4. "The Japanese G.I." Intelligence Bulletin. III (5). Military Intelligence Service, War Department: 9. January 1945.
  5. Library and Archives Canada. "Military abbreviations used in service files". library-archives.canada.ca. Archived from the original on 2025-07-10. Retrieved 2025-07-15.
  6. Birney, Earle (1949). Turvey: a military picaresque. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart.