Posted on Aug 15, 2016
CW3 Matt Hutchason
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I served 20 1/2 years (10 USMC/10 1/2 Army), and even though my latter years were Army, there was much about big Army things I didn't know. I did notice, though, that a few years ago, the Army began naming all of their major training commands and some support commands as "------ Center of Excellence". My question is what was the rationale used to begin naming things like that? For example, Ft. Rucker used to be USAAVNC (US Army AViatioN Command). It's now called US Army Aviation Center of Excellence and Fort Rucker. Did big Army leadership believe that this new name would somehow improve the skill of students coming out of there? With the Army's new "expeditionary" posture, did that play a part in the renaming? Just always wondered that.
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SPC Member
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I wondered that when I was at Fort Benning, the Maneuver Center of Excellence and later at Fort Lee the Sustainment Center of Excellence. My brother was at Fort Sill, the Fires Center of Excellence.

I guess the naming makes sense, Benning is Maneuver because of Infantry and Armor. Even the new crest for it is a combination of an Infantry and an Armor crest. Fort Lee is home of the Quartrmaster School so Sustainment makes sense. Then Fort Sill is Artillery so Fires works I guess.

Other than that, I know nothing about it.
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SCPO Investigator
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Edited >1 y ago
Can you spell liberal and progressive? Center for Excellence is a not-so-subtle attempt by the PC crowd to give the military a softer, gentler, and touchy-feely kind of curb appeal. It all fits with the dumbing down, lowering of standards, and squishy good shoes take on the new militaries the civvies and some top brass are trying to rapidly implement. It sucks. I'm so glad that I am retired and drawing the Big Bucks!!!
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CW5 Regimental Chief Warrant Officer
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Corporate terms being applied to military institutions. Apparently someone said that words mean something and just by a name change we would have efficacy applied. Frankly, I bet it had something to do with a funding line.
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