Posted on Sep 27, 2013
CPT Aaron Kletzing
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As the military enters a significant downsizing period, it's important to talk through relevant issues and solutions. &nbsp;Enter your response below, and if it gets the most Up votes, you win a free iPad Mini and we will personally deliver your thoughts to our Advisory Board, which includes retired Generals George Casey and Norton Schwartz, the recent Chiefs of Staff of the Army and Air Force, respectively.<div><br></div><div>Tip: Get all your friends to vote Up your response by the end of the contest on Oct 7, 2013.</div>
Posted in these groups: 702767d5 Downsizing
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SFC Psd
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Im in a company that has more contractors than soldiers. I feel we need to let more civilians go. 
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SSG Lee Graley
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Downsizing the military is always at anytime a mistake. We should cut the budget by employing our soldiers to complete building project, staff hospitals and clinics, and any other jobs that our soldiers have the MOS to do and get them out of the motor pool. It's OK to subcontract when we had the budget but when we don't then cut the civilians that you have to pay more money for. It helps the soldier keep up their skills and cut spending. Ever cutting back on brave people that has volunteered to protect this country and our way of life is WRONG.
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Sgt Joseph Lorelli
Sgt Joseph Lorelli
11 y
Contracts cost less.
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LTC Engineer Officer
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The most important thing that should be done will shape all decisions that follow: make a "stop doing list".  This may sound silly and simple, but it will inform all subsequent decisions - many of which have been already addressed in this discussion.  

The first thing our leaders must do is re-evaluate the purpose and mission of the US military as we return to a "peacetime" military and describe those things which we are currently doing that we will not be doing in the future.  Clearly identify the core competencies that the military must provide to the nation and scrap those things that do not clearly support these competencies.  This must be clearly communicated to and approved by our civilian leadership, explained to all members of the military, and decisions made to trim the force while maintaining these competencies.



With these identified, other decisions will follow: what skill sets to retain in individuals, what important characteristics to include in evaluation reports and consider for promotion boards, what units to deactivate, what headquarters to close, what tasks to train and what to include in officer and NCO education.



None of these decisions can intelligently be made until it is agreed by our senior leadership what we will no longer do as we downsize.  This is the single most important thing that should be done to make this transition effective and keep our military focused on what is most important.

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CPT Infantry Officer
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We cannot afford to lose the experience and intelligence that fills our ranks now. Sweeping across the board cuts threaten to replicate the "brain drain" that occurred in the 90's. The short answer, at least IMO, is to increase the manning at our Training Centers, Professional Military Education (NCOES, OBC, CCC, ILE, etc.), and our commissioning sources (West Point, OCS, ROTC). I feel the focus would be on providing more slots for E6 through E8 and O3 through O5 in order to retain that critical knowledge base. If the Army is ever asked to grow again, these are the ranks/positions that cannot be rapidly produced. By creating these positions in those teaching/coaching/mentoring positions, we would not only position ourselves to keep experienced leaders, but we would also poise them to have a direct impact on the improvement of the force at the operational and tactical levels. Furthermore, the addition of these positions would allow for alternate pathways of career development.
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PO1 Kenneth Cary
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Educate those who will be downsized as to having a professional social media presence such as LinkedIn to be better prepared for the job search job.  Searching for a job is a full-time job & requires all your military soft skills & knowledge to get noticed and get the interview. 
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SGT Sean Whitenton
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Maintain combat effectiveness; I'm reading a lot of responses on here that seem to come right out Dilbert corporate speak. The thing- the only thing- that the military ever needs to emphasize is maintaining combat effectiveness. Unfortunately it ranks well down on the list of things that are emphasized by senior leadership.
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SPC Infantryman
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Looking at the military like any other corporation, if I were a controlling board member my suggestions would be this:  Offer those that want to leave a severance package, offer top performers incentives to stay.  Do a top-down assessment of all departments to ensure they exist to support the product we offer, which in this case is the ability to perform in combat.  If they they don't directly affect that, then integrate them into areas that do, reduce civilian contracts and shift to support MOS's, or cut completely.  Improve the promoting system by incorporating a two part process, one being: an assessment of knowledge in your area/mos with APFT included, two being: an assessment of your performance by your peers.  This would insure that fully capable leadership is being promoted, not just the physically fit that show up.  Liquidate all assets that aren't intuitive to the product, ie: auction all outdated, unused excess, or damaged equipment and donate a portion of the proceeds to Veteran charities.  Perform regular spending assessments (quarterly?)  for each area and recognize and reward top performing areas and intuitive ideas for reducing waste.  Do a cost assessment on base locations and start shopping around for better prices.  Also look to more strategic placements ie:  is it better to have a base at point A and another at point C or could we operate more efficiently with a single base in point B and be strategically effective.  Create a panel of combat Veterans and Leaders to assess what equipment and training is essential in todays combat environment and cut the unnecessary.  In the ever increasing technological world, seek to incorporate and streamline more user friendly systems that could eliminate the need for staffing and manpower for some of the more mundane and easily automated tasks.  Focus on a continuing effort to reduce waste as waste maintenance and disposal costs $$.  These are some of the things I've come up with after my initial response and putting more serious thought into it.
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SPC Alois J Lohn
SPC Alois J Lohn
11 y
Right on LT
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1SG Aviation Maintenance Nco
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Leadership is the key to making this an economically responsible Defense Force. Leaders, starting at the highest level, must begin a rigid and uncompromising level of sacrifice. Gone are the days of frivolous trips and lavish "Seminars" paid for with tax dollars. This level of frugality is contagious and will find its way down to the lowest levels of our military forces. We always have an economic strangle hold on budgets AFTER spending gets out of hand. It is time for the DoD and all government to be the example of frugality. We need a responsible and standardized level of spending and keep it that way. No more war time treasure chest of spending. Relevant and ready means always being trained and equipped to defend our nation at home and abroad, it just has to be done sensibly. We are asked to maintain our Arms and Equipment and as Soldier we will as long as leadership maintains their responsibility to fund necessary programs to maintain our forces. We need honest and educated decisions makers to determin what programs, combat equipment and support items are truly necessary to defend the current and future needs of our nation without compromising veteran's and current members of our Armed Forces.
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LCDR Academics Officer
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We are going through a downsizing similar to the Clinton Era. The most important thing to do is to not over work our people. We should do less with less, not more with less. We need to train smarter and utilize other units for support and enhancing our training. We need to get rid of people that are out of standards and that don't want to be there. In this way we can make the most with what we have.
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MAJ Combat Engineer
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The Navy and Air Force should retain their size because they are hard to build in a hurry. The Marine Corp should stay proportional to the demand for likely small scale contingency missions. The Army should shrink to the level that it can produce the highest level of pound-for-pound readiness in decisive action while sustaining the peacetime military engagement mission; then be optimized to grow rapidly when needed. This would be in-line with our traditions, present security demands, and economic reality. 

Ideally the active army should be small enough to necessitate full mobilization of the reserve component and selective service system to conduct major offensive land combat operations. This would restore the connectivity between the average citizen, their elected official, and the nations military; ensuring that only wars of vital national interest are politically possible because it would mean taking the whole nation to war... not just those in uniform at that moment. This check on adventurism would spur America to become better at leveraging other elements of its national power (Information, Diplomacy, and Economics) besides just military power.
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CPT Bill James
CPT Bill James
11 y
Oil Famine will collapse the Mexican border within this decade. It will require human skills and manpower to address the millions that will migrate north looking for food and water.
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LTC Aviation Combined Arms Operations
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11 y
I totally agree Don. If you haven't read "Breach of Trust" by Jaceovich I believe, please do. It is a great book by retired Army officer currently teaching history at Boston U.
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