(I'll try not to be too sarcastic here, but bear with me.)
Wait. What? You mean you talk to your soldiers and treat them like adults? That seems pretty contrary to the standing Army tradition of treating them like, discouraging criticial/independant thinking, and not expecting the worse from them.
For years now I have preached that the Army as a whole needs to reevaluate the way that it attempts to lead soliders. We as an organization ask much from our troops, including asking them to lay down their life for us. Why does it seems to be such a difficult concept to understand, that if we treat our soldiers like poeple, they will WANT to follow us.
The NCO creed talks about knowing your soldiers. This does not mean having a leaders book, and asking them to do without question. Actually get to know your troops, talk to them, hell, even be their friend. Conduct yourself in a manner that will earn their respect, not demand it. I have served in several leadership positions, and not once I have asked my troops to do something I would not do, nor have I raised my voice.
I explained the situation, gave them all the information that I had, and then asked them to get to work with me. Informed soldiers are "happy" soldiers. They may not like the task they are assinged, however, if you treat them with respect, they will do it because the like you as a person and respect your position as their leader.
This is coming from a 25 year old US Army VET MOS (31B) MP (Basic @ FT Leonard Wood MI.)
They need to drop all these silly new rules like *No cussing at the soldiers who are in basic training* Your sending us to war.... Don't sugar coat it, If we can take a bullet we can take a few fucks.
Don't limit training! The fact that we couldn't train outside because it was *To Cold* Was Bull. You think it's always warm in Afghanistan? You think the enemy is going to stay inside just because it's cold?
A soldier is a machine of war, regardless if it's Army, Navy, Air-force, or Marines. Start training us to be those machines, rather then half a machine.
MOS does play a large part in training, but EVERY soldier has a Basic Training phase right? That is where the soldier goes from Civilian, to Soldier and the people in charge of making the rules for it need to wake up and give us the respect of proper training.
Bring back the discipline that our forefathers had to endure, It sure as hell proved that it's successful in combat *WWII* I am not saying train them like it's those days again, but discipline us like it's those day again.
It would be barbaric to NOT prepare soldiers 100% for real combat.
2. Corrective Training. NCOs must be more creative in their enforcement of standards and use of corrective training. They must be willing to go the extra mile, and use corrective training that not only disciplines Soldiers, but trains them as well. As an NCO, and still, I make subordinates hand copy regulations (or portions thereof). The standards for accuracy and readability are high. They will get the idea, they learn the message, and the word spreads. Don't pull BS like making your subordinates show up 60 minutes early to a formation and then not show up yourself. That's hypocrisy.
3. Punishment. Use only as absolutely necessary. Overue of UCMJ is a clear sign of an unprepared leader. Too many Company Commanders are relying on UCMJ to establish discipline within the unit. All that does is bring down morale. If you going to use it, you must be willing to post it. Secrets breed contempt. Prevent the drain on morale by posting UCMJ and letting everyone discover the standards.