Posted on Mar 3, 2015
Survey of Army leaders: Military not headed in right direction
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Three in four (74 percent) active duty U.S. Army leaders perceive their service is not headed in the right direction, according to an independent Army-wide survey. That result is partially due to the Army’s “political correctness” and President Barack Obama’s new, but questionable national security strategy.
America’s battle-proven Army leaders either disagree (38 percent) or neither agree or disagree (36 percent) with the survey statement that their service is “headed in the right direction to prepare for the challenges of the next 10 years.” Leader hesitancy to agree with the statement was undoubtedly influenced by challenges beyond the Army’s control.
a very public budget battle to shrink the Army, and a shift in the nation’s security strategy that emphasizes naval and air forces at the expense of ground forces.
The Annual Survey of Army Leadership randomly sampled 16,800 commissioned and non-commissioned officers with a sampling error of +/-0.7 percent, which means there is a high degree of confidence in the results. The pollster was ICF International of Fairfax, Va.
Survey respondents identified the following reasons for not agreeing with the “right direction” statement.
First, 58 percent of those who did not agree with the “right direction” question cited as a reason the “Army is unable to retain quality leaders.” “Quality leaders” leave the Army for a variety of reasons which may be beyond the service’s control such as the economy.
Our all-volunteer Army relies on the good will of soldiers and their families to cope with today’s tough challenges. Some people are not suited for the wrenching difficulties associated with combat and back-to-back deployments. Further, even though Army leaders report high morale (59 percent) the service is struggling with morale-busting social problems: between 2006 and 2010 sex crimes increased 64 percent, domestic violence rose 33 percent and child abuse rose 43 percent.
Further, morale is lowest among junior noncommissioned officers and junior officers and stress is a problem for one-fifth of active duty leaders, according to the survey. Those factors possibly contribute to the Army’s highest ever suicide rates, which suggest a deeper problem related to retention as well. Last month was the worst since the Army began tracking suicide rates: 38 soldiers took their own lives, according to figures released by the Army.
Second, 53 percent of those who did not agree about the Army’s “right direction” statement complained about “ineffective leaders at senior levels.” The survey found only 20 percent of Army leaders believe the system identifies ineffective leaders and “places them in positions where leadership skills are not as important as in other positions.” Senior Army leaders should put in place mechanisms to correct this problem to include ushering “ineffective” leaders out of the service at the earliest opportunity.
Third, the “Army is too soft” (57 percent) and junior leaders are promoted “too soon” (46 percent) are two more reasons cited for not agreeing with the “right direction” statement. Both problems will likely go away with the Army’s anticipated transition to peace time operations which will inevitably slow promotions and tighten-up discipline.
Fourth and more problematic, 24 percent of Army leaders complained “political correctness or the influence of politics” was a reason they did not agree with the “right direction” statement. The survey concludes “senior Army leaders themselves felt the need to bow to ‘politically correct solutions’ to appease policy makers or to ‘play politics.’” This institutional problem requires serious introspection by senior Army leaders and Congressional oversight.
There were a number of obvious examples of “political correctness” in the Army over the past few years. The case of Major Nidal Hasan, the accused 2009 mass murderer at Fort Hood, Texas is cited as a “politically correct” case by Rep. Pete Hoekstra (R-Mich.) who publicly accused the White House of covering up Hasan’s terrorist attack.
Further, President Obama made repealing the military’s homosexual exclusion law a priority which compelled Army leaders to politically cower in spite of significant military readiness reasons to oppose. And political correctness apparently froze the lips of Army leaders who knew better when the administration recently ignored combat exclusions for women to assign them to frontline units and launched a “study” regarding the admission of women into Ranger School, a physically demanding small unit combat course.
Finally, 39 percent of respondents complained “resources/funding are insufficient” and 24 percent said downsizing the force “would significantly impact the Army’s ability to protect national interests abroad.” The Army faces tough fiscal and “downsizing” challenges because of budget cuts and the president’s strategic pivot.
Resources are tight because the administration chopped $487 billion out of the defense budget over the next 10 years reportedly to avoid cutting social programs. Further, there is angst among Army leaders who watch with trepidation the coming sequestration crisis created by the 2011 Budget Control Act that is poised to cut another $492 billion from the Pentagon beginning in 2013.
Rep. Buck McKeon (R-Calif.), chairman of the U.S. House of Representatives Armed Services Committee, warns further sequestration-driven defense cuts could “essentially freeze the Pentagon.” The Army is already scheduled to shrink from 570,000 troops to about 480,000 in the coming years and additional draconian troop reductions could occur if sequestration goes ahead.
Further, the Army is watching the emergence of President Obama’s air-sea strategic pivot to the Asia-Pacific region. The service rightly fears it will become the bill payer for the pivot even though Army conventional and special operations forces are uniquely suited to shape that environment.
Trashing our ground forces in a budget crisis to pay for air-sea assets is historically naïve. Inevitably the ground force becomes the primary antagonist in every war and that will continue to be true in the foreseeable future in spite of rosy promises from air and naval advocates.
Army Chief of Staff General Raymond T. Odierno said the Army leader survey results are taken seriously. The general clearly has some housecleaning to do in order to reverse the widespread perception the Army “is not headed in the right direction” and Congress must do its part to vaccinate the Army from “political correctness” and to protect the world’s best ground force from becoming the bill payer for the president’s unproven Asia-Pacific pivot.
(retrieved from http://humanevents.com/2012/08/28/survey-of-army-leaders-military-not-headed-in-right-direction/ 3/3/2015)
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America’s battle-proven Army leaders either disagree (38 percent) or neither agree or disagree (36 percent) with the survey statement that their service is “headed in the right direction to prepare for the challenges of the next 10 years.” Leader hesitancy to agree with the statement was undoubtedly influenced by challenges beyond the Army’s control.
a very public budget battle to shrink the Army, and a shift in the nation’s security strategy that emphasizes naval and air forces at the expense of ground forces.
The Annual Survey of Army Leadership randomly sampled 16,800 commissioned and non-commissioned officers with a sampling error of +/-0.7 percent, which means there is a high degree of confidence in the results. The pollster was ICF International of Fairfax, Va.
Survey respondents identified the following reasons for not agreeing with the “right direction” statement.
First, 58 percent of those who did not agree with the “right direction” question cited as a reason the “Army is unable to retain quality leaders.” “Quality leaders” leave the Army for a variety of reasons which may be beyond the service’s control such as the economy.
Our all-volunteer Army relies on the good will of soldiers and their families to cope with today’s tough challenges. Some people are not suited for the wrenching difficulties associated with combat and back-to-back deployments. Further, even though Army leaders report high morale (59 percent) the service is struggling with morale-busting social problems: between 2006 and 2010 sex crimes increased 64 percent, domestic violence rose 33 percent and child abuse rose 43 percent.
Further, morale is lowest among junior noncommissioned officers and junior officers and stress is a problem for one-fifth of active duty leaders, according to the survey. Those factors possibly contribute to the Army’s highest ever suicide rates, which suggest a deeper problem related to retention as well. Last month was the worst since the Army began tracking suicide rates: 38 soldiers took their own lives, according to figures released by the Army.
Second, 53 percent of those who did not agree about the Army’s “right direction” statement complained about “ineffective leaders at senior levels.” The survey found only 20 percent of Army leaders believe the system identifies ineffective leaders and “places them in positions where leadership skills are not as important as in other positions.” Senior Army leaders should put in place mechanisms to correct this problem to include ushering “ineffective” leaders out of the service at the earliest opportunity.
Third, the “Army is too soft” (57 percent) and junior leaders are promoted “too soon” (46 percent) are two more reasons cited for not agreeing with the “right direction” statement. Both problems will likely go away with the Army’s anticipated transition to peace time operations which will inevitably slow promotions and tighten-up discipline.
Fourth and more problematic, 24 percent of Army leaders complained “political correctness or the influence of politics” was a reason they did not agree with the “right direction” statement. The survey concludes “senior Army leaders themselves felt the need to bow to ‘politically correct solutions’ to appease policy makers or to ‘play politics.’” This institutional problem requires serious introspection by senior Army leaders and Congressional oversight.
There were a number of obvious examples of “political correctness” in the Army over the past few years. The case of Major Nidal Hasan, the accused 2009 mass murderer at Fort Hood, Texas is cited as a “politically correct” case by Rep. Pete Hoekstra (R-Mich.) who publicly accused the White House of covering up Hasan’s terrorist attack.
Further, President Obama made repealing the military’s homosexual exclusion law a priority which compelled Army leaders to politically cower in spite of significant military readiness reasons to oppose. And political correctness apparently froze the lips of Army leaders who knew better when the administration recently ignored combat exclusions for women to assign them to frontline units and launched a “study” regarding the admission of women into Ranger School, a physically demanding small unit combat course.
Finally, 39 percent of respondents complained “resources/funding are insufficient” and 24 percent said downsizing the force “would significantly impact the Army’s ability to protect national interests abroad.” The Army faces tough fiscal and “downsizing” challenges because of budget cuts and the president’s strategic pivot.
Resources are tight because the administration chopped $487 billion out of the defense budget over the next 10 years reportedly to avoid cutting social programs. Further, there is angst among Army leaders who watch with trepidation the coming sequestration crisis created by the 2011 Budget Control Act that is poised to cut another $492 billion from the Pentagon beginning in 2013.
Rep. Buck McKeon (R-Calif.), chairman of the U.S. House of Representatives Armed Services Committee, warns further sequestration-driven defense cuts could “essentially freeze the Pentagon.” The Army is already scheduled to shrink from 570,000 troops to about 480,000 in the coming years and additional draconian troop reductions could occur if sequestration goes ahead.
Further, the Army is watching the emergence of President Obama’s air-sea strategic pivot to the Asia-Pacific region. The service rightly fears it will become the bill payer for the pivot even though Army conventional and special operations forces are uniquely suited to shape that environment.
Trashing our ground forces in a budget crisis to pay for air-sea assets is historically naïve. Inevitably the ground force becomes the primary antagonist in every war and that will continue to be true in the foreseeable future in spite of rosy promises from air and naval advocates.
Army Chief of Staff General Raymond T. Odierno said the Army leader survey results are taken seriously. The general clearly has some housecleaning to do in order to reverse the widespread perception the Army “is not headed in the right direction” and Congress must do its part to vaccinate the Army from “political correctness” and to protect the world’s best ground force from becoming the bill payer for the president’s unproven Asia-Pacific pivot.
(retrieved from http://humanevents.com/2012/08/28/survey-of-army-leaders-military-not-headed-in-right-direction/ 3/3/2015)
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Posted 10 y ago
Responses: 10
I think the purpose of the US Army is to deter, fight, and win the nations wars through superior maneuver, firepower, and decisive initiative.
What we have been doing is:
Social experimentation
Stagnating in static bases
Restricting the application of firepower with ROEs that denude our superior capabilities in precision firepower in favor of direct fire engagements at close range
Centralize decision-making in Joint HQs, or worse the Embassy, or worse still Washington DC
Repress innovation
Do more with less
Slashing training budgets
Buying ships with no (OK, marginal) job - Littoral Combat Ship
Buying Submarines with no job
Buying Aircraft that don't work (F-35)
Trying to get rid of aircraft that work excellently (A-10)
Paying contractors to do jobs that should belong to the military (KP, security, building/grounds maintenance)
Fund foolish social experiments in foreign war zones such as Solar powered streetlights, Schools for Girls, Micro-grants to "small businesses, non-traditional agriculture, and on and on. Not that these are bad ideas per se, just that we use the military to introduce them into a non-permissive environment with severe social friction against such initiatives.
I can't tell at all what the strategic direction and posture of the US military is. As a result, we don't prioritize and resource well. We are spending $600 BILLION a year, and can't figure out how to pay for NTC rotations or ammunition?
Who is the enemy? Increasingly, ourselves.
What we have been doing is:
Social experimentation
Stagnating in static bases
Restricting the application of firepower with ROEs that denude our superior capabilities in precision firepower in favor of direct fire engagements at close range
Centralize decision-making in Joint HQs, or worse the Embassy, or worse still Washington DC
Repress innovation
Do more with less
Slashing training budgets
Buying ships with no (OK, marginal) job - Littoral Combat Ship
Buying Submarines with no job
Buying Aircraft that don't work (F-35)
Trying to get rid of aircraft that work excellently (A-10)
Paying contractors to do jobs that should belong to the military (KP, security, building/grounds maintenance)
Fund foolish social experiments in foreign war zones such as Solar powered streetlights, Schools for Girls, Micro-grants to "small businesses, non-traditional agriculture, and on and on. Not that these are bad ideas per se, just that we use the military to introduce them into a non-permissive environment with severe social friction against such initiatives.
I can't tell at all what the strategic direction and posture of the US military is. As a result, we don't prioritize and resource well. We are spending $600 BILLION a year, and can't figure out how to pay for NTC rotations or ammunition?
Who is the enemy? Increasingly, ourselves.
(4)
(0)
This is all a matter of opinion and perspective. As an older former Soldier, I tend think that back in the day everyone also thought we (me) were heading in the wrong direction. Heck, on 911 us old Soldiers were often discussing how the Soldiers in the Army then were not hard like we were, and would not do well. Boy did they prove me/us wrong.
Some perspective... Since WWII, what major sustained operations have we engaged in that were decisive, and had widespread popular US support... Only history will decide where contemporary operations will land. These are tough times, with no easy answers.
While I have no faith in the current administration, I do have faith in the SEC ARMY and CSA.
The only constant in the Army is change. I believe we will be just fine.
Some perspective... Since WWII, what major sustained operations have we engaged in that were decisive, and had widespread popular US support... Only history will decide where contemporary operations will land. These are tough times, with no easy answers.
While I have no faith in the current administration, I do have faith in the SEC ARMY and CSA.
The only constant in the Army is change. I believe we will be just fine.
(3)
(0)
I don't think the Army is going in the right direction, right now. In my opinion, that is due to a failure in leadership. I try to show my Soldiers, and Soldiers in my Platoon, how they should act as a Soldier by teaching them right from wrong. But for this to work, you have to get the Soldier's 100% attention. They seem to be more about "what's in it for me" than how can this help the unit. It really starts with the leadership though. If the Soldiers see their leadership acting that way, they'll act that way and it won't help out in the long run. So in my opinion, the leaders need to take a good hard look at themselves and fix themselves before trying to fix the Soldiers.
(2)
(0)
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