A smart young JO: I am so outta here, but I know that saying so makes no difference

During the summer, the Best Defense is in
re-runs. Here are some favorites that ran in late 2012 and in 2013. This item originally
ran on April 25, 2013.
By "One Gone Cat
"
Best Defense guest columnist
I thought of offering to write an
essay for you that gave my own reasons or that made my own arguments for how
the officer corps can be improved to retain the best and the brightest, but
thinking about it just made me angry. It made me angry because I knew it would
not make any difference, just as the countless opinion pieces written by
disgruntled junior officers and NCOs or concerned senior officers and NCOs
won't make any difference. The military is too inflexible, the senior officers
are too comfortable with the status quo, human resources command believes too
strongly in whatever crazy algorithm they have determining entry assignments,
and the civilian leadership is too intimidated by a bunch of men who just lost
two wars to force a change.
Writing about my experience won't
make a difference because senior leaders will look at it and say that it's an
anomaly, or that I don't have the ability yet to see the big picture, or that I
cannot reflect and see how things actually work very well, or maybe that I got
the career I deserved based on my abilities. I understand that they cannot
understand me, because I don't understand them.
I don't understand how the
military can go on pretending that we didn't lose the war in Iraq or that we're
not about to lose the war in Afghanistan. Withdrawing with honor can still be
losing. Lee withdrew with honor at Gettysburg. He also lost. He lost because
the conditions on the battlefield as he withdrew were not in his favor, but
they were in the favor of his enemy. The same is true of Iraq today. They might
argue that the American people did not support the resources needed to win in
Iraq or that the politicians made errors that could not be overcome by military
genius. I do not know if that is true, but if it is true, we still lost -- we
just should not blame generals.
I don't understand how senior
officers can avoid feeling ashamed that we seem to have no idea how to have a
smaller budget without damaging training and readiness. I guess the Marines
really are the best branch of service. The rest of us were simply propped up
with ever-increasing budgets, and we wasted more of the taxpayers' money during
the wars than anyone will ever know (no one will ever audit the amount wasted
on things like the rent-a-captain program).
I don't understand how the
chief of staff of the Army can have a plan for decreasing troop levels that
relies almost entirely on natural attrition without any discussion of a plan to
ensure that our best stay and our worst are separated from service.
I don't understand how they can
waste so much money on education for officers through ROTC, and then show no
desire to use the skills gained through specific degree programs. They should
get rid of scholarships at every private school in the country. Hell, get rid
of scholarships for everything but the cheapest state school in every state.
The military doesn't care if you learn anything in college, right? They have no
interest in recruiting and retaining officers with an intellectual bent. The
military might be right that the elite, highly selective schools are no better
than any other institution of higher learning. But I do know that the private
sector and the rest of the federal government want the elite college graduates
very badly, so let the kids go where they are wanted to work for employers
interested in developing their passion and offering them direction.
Sorry for the rant. I had to get
it out there. You seem like the right person to send it to, since my mentors
wouldn't appreciate the tone very much. It probably figures that a bunch of
guys trained in an Army that didn't want to admit it lost Vietnam are pretty
schooled in the art of self-delusion. But I became an Army officer because I
wanted to be among the best, not because I wanted to be part of a group so
adept at making excuses and criticizing anyone who doesn't want to stay in for
the glorious pension at the end of the rainbow of mediocrity.
"One Gone
Cat" is, for a bit longer, a U.S. Army officer. But guess what? The views
presented here are his own and do not necessarily represent those of the U.S.
Army or the Defense Department.
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