Just thought I would share. Trinity Church, birthplace of Columbia University. I work in the Trinity Building in the Architects and Planners office of my firm. Downstairs, affixed to my building, is a plate designating it as the spot where the American Institute of Architects was founded. Great things have been done all around us, inspiration just has to be observed to be found.
Monthly Archives: November 2012
Soldier Surprises
Just cleaning up some study space and I ran across a copy of “The Wealth of Nations” by Adam Smith. In Iraq my facility was secure and was jot permitted any “non-military necessity reading materials”. I can not function without reading material laying around, so I bent the rules in what I considered acceptable, willing to take the heat. A quiet, rather backward, Soldier once asked if he could take my copy of “Guns, Germs, and Steel” by Jared Diamond back to the FOB to read. He had been randomly picking it up for a week, so I let him. A few days later I asked how he liked it and he told me he was going to buy a copy for himself. I told him to keep it, rather impressed based on what little I knew of him that he was interested. This is bad of me to say, but based on my experience with him to this point I wasn’t even sure he could understand half the words in the book.
A week later he stopped me on the FOB going into the CP and handed me a book. It was the only book he had brought with him, and it was one of his favorites. “The Wealth of Nations”. I met him for lunch a few days later and he spoke eloquently and genuinely informed on his subject. He even started discussing Hayek by the end of lunch. When he was in his element, he was on. I was touched that he could open up to me, upset with myself for discounting his abilities based solely on behavior, and wished that other Soldiers in the platoon could look to him as an inspiration, rather as the dumb kid.
Last I heard he had finished an honors program and was on to study engineering at NJIT. Need to find him.
Ethics in the Military
I generally have a lot to say about what I perceive as a lack of formal relevant ethics training during my military career. Save 3 or 4 “ethical leadership discussions” during Infantry Officer Basic, I can’t recall a single ethics brief or training that did not solely concentrate on what you can and can’t do with a GSA vehicle, when you are allowed to keep an airline bump, and what is considered an acceptable personal stop during a duty day. Don’t remember much about leadership ethics training at the Maneuver Captain’s Course. Certainly have never received it at an Officer Professional Development activity at the Battalion or Brigade level. The USAF Squadron Officer’s School did a better job by having many professional discussions, everything from Janowitz and Sarkesian to Toner. Much of what we rely on is that our profession is supposed to be self correcting; the members believe too much in the honor and duty to allow bad apples to rise to the top without having at least been corrected. Not sure if it has ever worked that way, but I fee sure that it is not necessarily the best way.
Ralph Peters seems a bit of an extremist most of the time to me, but here he nails it: Instead of going easier on the generals, they should face harsher penalties than the captains. Generals know better. But their sense of entitlement has murdered their sense of duty, honor, country. In his op-ed today for the NY Post he gets it right when describing the failures of GEN (LTG) Ward, D/CIA Petraeus, and BG Sinclair, but he fails to address any more than the sense of entitlement at the General Officer level. He describes other GOs closing ranks around Ward and protesting his loss of rank at retirement based on his reduced retirement benefit. For abuse of power and the public’s trust he should be censured, not defended.
SECDEF Panetta has ordered a review in ethics training, but again this is concentrating more on public image and fiduciary responsibility that it is establishing a core ethical foundation. “Beyond mere compliance with the rules, I also expect senior officers and civilian executives to exercise sound judgment in their stewardship of government resources and in their personal conduct,” Panetta said. “An action may be legally permissible but neither advisable nor wise.”
To Peter’s point, SECDEF’s seemingly reactive CYA review of ethics training (though the article states that this was in the works before the Petraeus break, timing is everything…) does not address a core leadership trait that is not being sufficiently reinforced. Peters mentions “entitlement”. My Soldiers know that I am very quick to knock them down a notch on humility. We have built over the past few years the sense of entitlement that goes with being told “we are special”. Advocacy groups and merchants both use the “1% or .45%” numbers that have been bandied about to show what a special segment of the population service members are. Leaders pump their Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, and Marines with a “you are a warrior, a descendent of Sparta” tributes with very little reflection as to what those words mean, or the expectations that go along with them. We teach Privates from day one that they are special, in many ways more special than other mere citizens (at least we haven’t gone full Starship Troopers yet), because they have volunteered to do something that has the very real potential of being very, very dangerous. These Privates come to expect being lauded. They expect special treatment. And they become the Sergeant Majors, as the Second Lieutenants become the Generals, that expect that they do deserve what they believe they have coming. It is OWED to them. This sense of entitlement permeates every level of what we do and leads to ethical lapses of individuals that are at the heart a lapse in the system.
Andrew Exum created a little controversy when he discussed what is owed a professional Army, but he was right in addressing that we need to take a hard look at how we are convincing our Soldiers today about who and what they are. His best example, and one I have seen first hand, is an airline asking for uniformed service members to board first ahead of a mother with infant. How screwed up are our priorities when this is the expectation we are setting in our Soldier’s heads?
I have had the unfortunate experience of having to counsel depressed Soldiers, and during discussions several have mentioned that they didn’t understand that it would be so hard post-deployment as they returned to the civilian job market and their lives. “Don’t we deserve better?” was a common question. We all probably do, but it doesn’t mean we are entitled to better by way of service. Selfless Service is an Army core value. Maybe we need to remind ourselves about that every once in a while.
Hurricane Sandy, and a good social media story
I spent a couple of weeks on state active duty in order to assist in the hurricane response, primarily in Hoboken. The city was swamped, with storm surge flooding out major infrastructure, leaving many to shelter in place in cold dark high rise buildings. Our mission was to rescue residents trapped by high water, then to support the city, FEMA, and the multiple civilian and volunteer agencies in assisting these sheltered residents. Though tempers could flare from all sides due to frustration, seeing the community pull together, especially during a election week, was heartening. We definitely learned some lessons on how to continue to improve responses to a civil disaster. DVIDS video below:http://www.dvidshub.net/video/161800/serve-and-protect#.UKUOdqWr80s
Social media definitely came into play during my mission. A resident came to ask if there was anything we could do to help her contact her 90 year old grandmother in law living on Coney Island. They had not been able to contact her since the beginning of the storm. It was a long shot that I could do anything, but I took the information and told her no promises. I used Facebook messenger to contact a friend in Afghanistan who’s civilian job back home is as a logistics planner for the NYC Office of Emergency Management. I was looking only for a reference as to who I could pass the info on to, but within an hour she had made contact with her friends back in the city, and within 2 hours we had the grandmother on the phone with her family. She was OK, just in the dark, and the family was relieved. All the while I was trying to find a way to maintain consistent communication with my Battalion HQ 40 miles away while in a satellite canyon where my FBCB2 wouldn’t catch signal, and with an insufficient antenna group to get radio range. Cell phone towers inconsistent, power inconsistent, Facebook saved the day. S6 should work that into the PACE plan. First person account from the resident: http://womensworkoutdaily.wordpress.com/2012/11/04/power-is-finally-restored-update/
Random other clips:
http://www.dvidshub.net/video/159891/underwater-hoboken-residents-rescued#.UKUT2qWr80s
Random thoughts on terrain
Working on a post and paper on drones and targeted killing, I started thinking about how terrain and the plain of combat has been redefined from the old days of lines on maps to today’s “global” war on terror-whatever it has been rebranded. Generally my responsibility to brief terrain consists of actual in your face terrain-where me and my fellow Infantrymen will fight. The best cinematic terrain brief I have seen is BG Buford at the Lutheran Seminary in Gettysburg: http://youtu.be/LzZOp-nPho8 This is wargaming and terrain analysis at its simplest.
As we engage in the global war, how do I explain terrain and the enemy’s effect on it? Just a random thought.
Opening
Seems that one way to get ahead in academia and professional life is to have a blog. I haven’t really received that much advice, other than “have a blog”. Trolling other people’s work for some time I have been fascinated and bored, usually at the same time, except for those rare “life” blogs where the author blends policy, thoughts, and personal life to get a whole picture of why the words are on the page in the order they are. My hope for this blog is that I master that blend and create a readable and enjoyable blog. Comments always welcome!
