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Young Officers Join the Debate Over Rumsfeld
Thom Shanker and Eric Schmitt, New York Times
April 23, 2006
WASHINGTON,
April 22 — The revolt by retired generals who publicly criticized
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld has opened an extraordinary debate
among younger officers, in military academies, in the armed services'
staff colleges and even in command posts and mess halls in Iraq.
Junior and midlevel officers are discussing whether the war plans for
Iraq reflected unvarnished military advice, whether the retired
generals should have spoken out, whether active-duty generals will feel
free to state their views in private sessions with the civilian leaders
and, most divisive of all, whether Mr. Rumsfeld should resign.
In recent weeks, military correspondents of The Times discussed those
issues with dozens of younger officers and cadets in classrooms and
with combat units in the field, as well as in informal conversations at
the Pentagon and in e-mail exchanges and telephone calls.
To protect their careers, the officers were granted anonymity so
they could speak frankly about the debates they have had and have
heard. The stances that emerged are anything but uniform, although all
seem colored by deep concern over the quality of civil-military
relations, and the way ahead in Iraq.
The discussions often flare with anger, particularly among many
midlevel officers who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan and face the
prospect of additional tours of duty.
"This is about the moral bankruptcy of general officers who lived
through the Vietnam era yet refused to advise our civilian leadership
properly," said one Army major in the Special Forces who has served two
combat tours. "I can only hope that my generation does better someday."
An Army major who is an intelligence specialist said: "The history I
will take away from this is that the current crop of generals failed to
stand up and say, 'We cannot do this mission.' They confused the
cultural can-do attitude with their responsibilities as leaders to
delay the start of the war until we had an adequate force. I think the
backlash against the general officers will be seen in the resignation
of officers" who might otherwise have stayed in uniform.
One Army colonel enrolled in a Defense Department university said an
informal poll among his classmates indicated that about 25 percent
believed that Mr. Rumsfeld should resign, and 75 percent believed that
he should remain. But of the second group, two-thirds thought he should
acknowledge errors that were made and "show that he is not the
intolerant and inflexible person some paint him to be," the colonel
said.
Many officers who blame Mr. Rumsfeld are not faulting President Bush
— in contrast to the situation in the 1960's, when both President
Lyndon B. Johnson and Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara drew
criticism over Vietnam from the officer corps. (Mr. McNamara, like Mr.
Rumsfeld, was also resented from the outset for his attempts to reshape
the military itself.)
But some are furiously criticizing both, along with the military
leadership, like the Army major in the Special Forces. "I believe that
a large number of officers hate Rumsfeld as much as I do, and would
like to see him go," he said.
"The Army, however, went gently into that good night of Iraq without
saying a word," he added, summarizing conversations with other
officers. "For that reason, most of us know that we have to share the
burden of responsibility for this tragedy. And at the end of the day,
it wasn't Rumsfeld who sent us to war, it was the president. Officers
know better than anyone else that the buck stops at the top. I
think we are too deep into this for Rumsfeld's resignation to mean much.
"But this is all academic. Most officers would acknowledge that we
cannot leave Iraq, regardless of their thoughts on the invasion. We
destroyed the internal security of that state, so now we have to
restore it. Otherwise, we will just return later, when it is even more
terrible."
The debates are fueled by the desire to mete out blame for the
situation in Iraq, a drawn-out war that has taken many military lives
and has no clear end in sight. A midgrade officer who has served two
tours in Iraq said a number of his cohorts were angered last month when
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said that "tactical errors, a
thousand of them, I am sure," had been made in Iraq.
"We have not lost a single tactical engagement on the ground in Iraq,"
the officer said, noting that the definition of tactical missions is
specific movements against an enemy target. "The mistakes have all been
at the strategic and political levels."
Many officers said a crisis of leadership extended to serious questions
about top generals' commitment to sustain a seasoned officer corps that
was being deployed on repeated tours to the long-term counterinsurgency
operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, while the rest of the government
did not appear to be on the same wartime footing.
"We are forced to develop innovative ways to convince, coerce and
cajole officers to stay in to support a war effort of national-level
importance that is being done without a defensewide, governmentwide or
nationwide commitment of resources," said one Army colonel with
experience in Iraq.
Another Army major who served in Iraq said a fresh round of
debates about the future of the American military had also broken out.
Simply put, the question is whether the focus should be, as Mr.
Rumsfeld believes, on a lean high-tech force with an eye toward
possible opponents like China, or on troop-heavy counterinsurgency
missions more suited to hunting terrorists, with spies and boots on the
ground.
In general, the Army and Marines support maintaining beefy ground
forces, while the Navy and Air Force — the beneficiaries of much
of the high-tech arsenal — favor the leaner approach. And some
worry that those arguments have become too fierce.
"I think what has the potential for scarring relations is the two
visions of warfare — one that envisions near-perfect situational
awareness and technology dominance, and the other that sees future war
as grubby, dirty and chaotic," the major said. "These visions require
vastly different forces. The tension comes when we only have the
money to build one of these forces. Who gets the cash?"
Some senior officers said part of their own discussions were about
fears for the immediate future, centering on the fact that Mr. Rumsfeld
has surrounded himself with senior officers who share his views and are
personally invested in his policies.
"If civilian officials feel as if they could be faced with a revolt of
sorts, they will select officers who are like-minded," said another
Army officer who has served in Iraq. "They will, as a result, get the
military advice they want based on whom they appoint."
Kori Schake, a fellow at the Hoover Institution who teaches Army cadets
at West Point, said some of the debates revolved around the issues
raised in "Dereliction of Duty," a book that analyzes why the Joint
Chiefs of Staff seemed unable or unwilling to challenge civilian
decisions during the war in Vietnam. Published in 1997, the book was
written by Col. H. R. McMaster, who recently returned from a year
in Iraq as commander of the Third Armored Cavalry Regiment.
"It's a fundamentally healthy debate," Ms. Schake said. "Junior
officers look around at the senior leadership and say, 'Are these
people I admire, that I want to be like?' "
These younger officers "are debating the standard of leadership," she
said. "Is it good enough to do only what civilian masters tell you to
do? Or do you have a responsibility to shape that policy, and what
actions should you undertake if you believe they are making mistakes?"
The conflicts some officers express reflect the culture of commander
and subordinate that sometimes baffles the civilian world. No class
craves strong leadership more than the military.
"I feel conflicted by this debate, and I think a lot of my colleagues
are also conflicted," said an Army colonel completing a year at one of
the military's advanced schools. He expressed discomfort at the
recent public criticism of Mr. Rumsfeld and the Iraq war planning by
retired generals, including Lt. Gen. Gregory S. Newbold, the former
operations officer for the Joint Chiefs, who wrote, in Time magazine,
"My sincere view is that the commitment of our forces to this fight was
done with a casualness and swagger that are the special province of
those who have never had to execute these missions — or bury the
results."
But the colonel said his classmates were also aware of how the Rumsfeld
Pentagon quashed dissenting views that many argued were proved correct,
and prescient, like those of Gen. Eric K. Shinseki, a former Army chief
of staff. He was shunted aside after telling Congress, before the
invasion, that it would take several hundred thousand troops to secure
and stabilize Iraq.
Others contend that the military's own failings are equally at fault. A
field-grade officer now serving in Iraq said he thought it was
incorrect for the retired generals to call for Mr. Rumsfeld's
resignation. His position, he said, is that "if there is a judgment to
be cast, it rests as much upon the shoulders of our senior military
leaders."
That officer, like several others interviewed, emphasized that while
these issues often occupied officers' minds, the debate had not hobbled
the military's ability to function in Iraq. "No impact here that I can
see regarding this subject," he said.
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