How to handle toxic leaders? Try to work with them, or around them, or fire 'em all?


Recently all
the officers and NCOs
of a National Guard company deployed to Kosovo were
fired, apparently for hazing and such. Some 17 officers and sergeants in all
were given the big heave-ho. (Apparently Kosovo duty is now so boring that
discipline is becoming an issue there.) For those of you keeping score at home,
the hazed company is part of 3rd
Squadron, 108th Cavalry Regiment.
 



Meanwhile, Maj.
Darren Buss wondered
aloud about the issue of toxic leadership 
in a Leavenworth interview reviewing his time as a member of a troubled
advisory team in Iraq in 2008-09:




I tried to talk to
the team chief a couple of times throughout the deployment but his attitude was
kind of abrasive and standoffish. I tried to mitigate as best as I could. I
would address things on the side and maybe not tell him the reason why but say,
"Hey sir, can we try this instead?" Sometimes I succeeded but not
frequently. Most of the time I was just doing some damage control. That's one
of the challenges that I keep wondering about.



Toxic leadership is
one of these topics that is kind of a buzz in the Army right now. That's a
question that I keep asking; "If you have someone who appears to be a
toxic leader and doesn't listen, then what is your job as a subordinate if that
officer won't listen to you? Do you go external? Do you tell other
people?" We debated that several times. I don't know if I lacked the
intestinal fortitude or I couldn't figure out how doing so would solve the
problem and whether it would cause us to lose space with our Iraqi counterparts
and cause us mission failure. No. I never went external. Whether that was the
right decision, I don't know.




(HT to CB)

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Published on March 02, 2012 02:34
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