The Generals must take some of the
blame for Iraq.
Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company
Challenging the Generals /
By
FRED KAPLAN / August 26, 2007
On Aug. 1, Gen. Richard Cody, the United States Army’s vice chief of staff,
flew to the sprawling base at Fort Knox, Ky., to talk with the officers enrolled
in the Captains Career Course. These are the Army’s elite junior officers.
Of the 127 captains taking the five-week course, 119 had served one or two tours
of duty in Iraq or Afghanistan, mainly as lieutenants. Nearly all would soon
be going back as company commanders. A captain named Matt Wignall, who recently
spent 16 months in Iraq with a Stryker brigade combat team, asked Cody, the Army’s
second-highest-ranking general, what he thought of a recent article by Lt. Col.
Paul Yingling titled “A Failure in Generalship.” The article, a scathing
indictment that circulated far and wide, including in Iraq, accused the Army’s
generals of lacking “professional character,” “creative intelligence” and “moral
courage.”
Yingling’s article — published in the May issue of Armed Forces Journal — noted
that a key role of generals is to advise policy makers and the public on the
means necessary to win wars. “If the general remains silent while the statesman
commits a nation to war with insufficient means,” he wrote, “he shares
culpability for the results.” Today’s generals “failed to envision
the conditions of future combat and prepare their forces accordingly,” and
they failed to advise policy makers on how much force would be necessary to win
and stabilize Iraq. These failures, he insisted, stemmed not just from the civilian
leaders but also from a military culture that “does little to reward creativity
and moral courage.” He concluded, “As matters stand now, a private
who loses a rifle suffers far greater consequences than a general who loses a
war.”
General Cody looked around the auditorium, packed with men and women in uniform — most
of them in their mid-20s, three decades his junior but far more war-hardened
than he or his peers were at the same age — and turned Captain Wignall’s
question around. “You all have just come from combat, you’re young
captains,” he said, addressing the entire room. “What’s your
opinion of the general officers corps?”
Over the next 90 minutes, five captains stood up, recited their names and their
units and raised several of Yingling’s criticisms. One asked why the top
generals failed to give political leaders full and frank advice on how many troops
would be needed in Iraq. One asked whether any generals “should be held
accountable” for the war’s failures. One asked if the Army should
change the way it selected generals. Another said that general officers were
so far removed from the fighting, they wound up “sheltered from the truth” and “don’t
know what’s going on.”
Challenges like this are rare in the military, which depends on obedience and
hierarchy. Yet the scene at Fort Knox reflected a brewing conflict between the
Army’s junior and senior officer corps — lieutenants and captains
on one hand, generals on the other, with majors and colonels (“field-grade
officers”) straddling the divide and sometimes taking sides. The cause
of this tension is the war in Iraq, but the consequences are broader. They revolve
around the obligations of an officer, the nature of future warfare and the future
of the Army itself. And these tensions are rising at a time when the war has
stretched the Army’s resources to the limit, when junior officers are quitting
at alarming rates and when political leaders are divided or uncertain about America’s — and
its military’s — role in the world.
Colonel Yingling’s article gave these tensions voice; it spelled out the
issues and the stakes; and it located their roots in the Army’s own institutional
culture, specifically in the growing disconnect between this culture — which
is embodied by the generals — and the complex realities that junior officers,
those fighting the war, are confronting daily on the ground. The article was
all the more potent because it was written by an active-duty officer still
on the rise. It was a career risk, just as, on a smaller scale, standing up
and
asking the Army vice chief of staff about the article was a risk.
In response to the captains’ questions, General Cody acknowledged, as senior
officers often do now, that the Iraq war was “mismanaged” in its
first phases. The original plan, he said, did not anticipate the disbanding of
the Iraqi Army, the disruption of oil production or the rise of an insurgency.
Still, he rejected the broader critique. “I think we’ve got great
general officers that are meeting tough demands,” he insisted. He railed
instead at politicians for cutting back the military in the 1990s. “Those
are the people who ought to be held accountable,” he said.
Before and just after America’s entry into World War II, Gen. George Marshall,
the Army’s chief of staff, purged 31 of his 42 division and corps commanders,
all of them generals, and 162 colonels on the grounds that they were unsuited
for battle. Over the course of the war, he rid the Army of 500 colonels. He reached
deep into the lower ranks to find talented men to replace them. For example,
Gen. James Gavin, the highly decorated commander of the 82nd Airborne Division,
was a mere major in December 1941 when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. Today,
President Bush maintains that the nation is in a war against terrorism — what
Pentagon officials call “the long war” — in which civilization
itself is at stake. Yet six years into this war, the armed forces — not
just the Army, but also the Air Force, Navy and Marines — have changed
almost nothing about the way their promotional systems and their entire bureaucracies
operate.
On the lower end of the scale, things have changed — but for the worse.
West Point cadets are obligated to stay in the Army for five years after graduating.
In a typical year, about a quarter to a third of them decide not to sign on for
another term. In 2003, when the class of 1998 faced that decision, only 18 percent
quit the force: memories of 9/11 were still vivid; the war in Afghanistan seemed
a success; and war in Iraq was under way. Duty called, and it seemed a good time
to be an Army officer. But last year, when the 905 officers from the class of
2001 had to make their choice to stay or leave, 44 percent quit the Army. It
was the service’s highest loss rate in three decades.
Col. Don Snider, a longtime professor at West Point, sees a “trust gap” between
junior and senior officers. There has always been a gap, to some degree. What’s
different now is that many of the juniors have more combat experience than the
seniors. They have come to trust their own instincts more than they trust orders.
They look at the hand they’ve been dealt by their superiors’ decisions,
and they feel let down.
The gap is widening further, Snider told me, because of this war’s operating
tempo, the “unrelenting pace” at which soldiers are rotated into
Iraq for longer tours — and a greater number of tours — than they
signed up for. Many soldiers, even those who support the war, are wearying of
the endless cycle. The cycle is a result of two decisions. The first occurred
at the start of the war, when the senior officers assented to the decision by
Donald Rumsfeld, then the secretary of defense, to send in far fewer troops than
they had recommended. The second took place two years later, well into the insurgency
phase of the war, when top officers declared they didn’t need more troops,
though most of them knew that in fact they did. “Many junior officers,” Snider
said, “see this op tempo as stemming from the failure of senior officers
to speak out.”
Paul Yingling did not set out to cause a stir. He grew up in a working-class
part of Pittsburgh. His father owned a bar; no one in his family went to college.
He joined the Army in 1984 at age 17, because he was a troubled kid — poor
grades and too much drinking and brawling — who wanted to turn his life
around, and he did. He went to Duquesne University, a small Catholic school,
on an R.O.T.C. scholarship; went on active duty; rose through the ranks; and,
by the time of the 1991 Persian Gulf war, was a lieutenant commanding an artillery
battery, directing cannon fire against Saddam Hussein’s army.
“
When I was in the gulf war, I remember thinking, This is easier than it was at
training exercises,” he told me earlier this month. He was sent to Bosnia
in December 1995 as part of the first peacekeeping operation after the signing
of the Dayton accords, which ended the war in Bosnia. “This was nothing
like training,” he recalled. Like most of his fellow soldiers, he was trained
almost entirely for conventional combat operations: straightforward clashes,
brigades against brigades. (Even now, about 70 percent of the training at the
Captains Career Course is for conventional warfare.) In Bosnia, there was no
clear enemy, no front line and no set definition of victory. “I kept wondering
why things weren’t as well rehearsed as they’d been in the gulf war,” he
said.
Upon returning, he spent the next six years pondering that question. He studied
international relations at the University of Chicago’s graduate school
and wrote a master’s thesis about the circumstances under which outside
powers can successfully intervene in civil wars. (One conclusion: There aren’t
many.) He then taught at West Point, where he also read deeply in Western political
theory. Yingling was deployed to Iraq in July 2003 as an executive officer collecting
loose munitions and training Iraq’s civil-defense corps. “The corps
deserted or joined the insurgency on first contact,” he recalled. “It
was a disaster.”
In the late fall of 2003, his first tour of duty over, Yingling was sent to
Fort Sill, Okla., the Army’s main base for artillery soldiers, and wrote long
memos to the local generals, suggesting new approaches to the war in Iraq. One
suggestion was that since artillery rockets were then playing little role, artillery
soldiers should become more skilled in training Iraqi soldiers; that, he thought,
would be vital to Iraq’s future stability. No one responded to his memos,
he says. He volunteered for another tour of combat and became deputy commander
of the Third Armored Cavalry Regiment, which was fighting jihadist insurgents
in the northern Iraqi town of Tal Afar.
The commander of the third regiment, Col. H. R. McMaster, was a historian
as well as a decorated soldier. He figured that Iraq could not build its own
institutions,
political or military, until its people felt safe. So he devised his own plan,
in which he and his troops cleared the town of insurgents — and at the
same time formed alliances and built trust with local sheiks and tribal leaders.
The campaign worked for a while, but only because McMaster flooded the city with
soldiers — about 1,000 of them per square kilometer. Earlier, as Yingling
drove around to other towns and villages, he saw that most Iraqis were submitting
to whatever gang or militia offered them protection, because United States and
coalition forces weren’t anywhere around. And that was because the coalition
had entered the war without enough troops. Yingling was seeing the consequences
of this decision up close in the terrible insecurity of most Iraqis’ lives.
In February 2006, Yingling returned to Fort Sill. That April, six retired Army
and Marine generals publicly criticized Rumsfeld, who was still the secretary
of defense, for sending too few troops to Iraq. Many junior and field-grade
officers reacted with puzzlement or disgust. Their common question: Where were
these generals
when they still wore the uniform? Why didn’t they speak up when their
words might have counted? One general who had spoken up, Eric Shinseki, then
the Army
chief of staff, was publicly upbraided and ostracized by Rumsfeld; other active-duty
generals got the message and stayed mum.
That December, Yingling attended a Purple Heart ceremony for soldiers wounded
in Iraq. “I was watching these soldiers wheeling into this room, or in
some cases having to be wheeled in by their wives or mothers,” he recalled. “And
I said to myself: ‘These soldiers were doing their jobs. The senior officers
were not doing theirs. We’re not giving our soldiers the tools and training
to succeed.’ I had to go public.”
Soon after Yingling’s article appeared, Maj. Gen. Jeff Hammond, commander
of the Fourth Infantry Division at Fort Hood, Tex., reportedly called a meeting
of the roughly 200 captains on his base, all of whom had served in Iraq, for
the purpose of putting this brazen lieutenant colonel in his place. According
to The Wall Street Journal, he told his captains that Army generals are “dedicated,
selfless servants.” Yingling had no business judging generals because he
has “never worn the shoes of a general.” By implication, Hammond
was warning his captains that they had no business judging generals, either.
Yingling was stationed at Fort Hood at the time, preparing to take command of
an artillery battalion. From the steps of his building, he could see the steps
of General Hammond’s building. He said he sent the general a copy of his
article before publication as a courtesy, and he never heard back; nor was he
notified of the general’s meeting with his captains.
The “trust gap” between junior and senior officers is hardly universal.
Many junior officers at Fort Knox and elsewhere have no complaints about the
generals — or regard the matter as way above their pay grade. As Capt.
Ryan Kranc, who has served two tours in Iraq, one as a commander, explained to
me, “I’m more interested in whether my guys can secure a convoy.” He
dismissed complaints about troop shortages. “When you’re in a system,
you’re never going to get everything you ask for,” he said, “but
I still have to accomplish a mission. That’s my job. If they give me
a toothpick, dental floss and a good hunting knife, I will accomplish the mission.”
An hour after General Cody’s talk at Fort Knox, several captains met to
discuss the issue over beers. Capt. Garrett Cathcart, who has served in Iraq
as a platoon leader, said: “The culture of the Army is to accomplish the
mission, no matter what. That’s a good thing.” Matt Wignall, who
was the first captain to ask General Cody about the Yingling article, agreed
that a mission-oriented culture was “a good thing, but it can be dangerous.” He
added: “It is so rare to hear someone in the Army say, ‘No, I can’t
do that.’ But sometimes it takes courage to say, ‘I don’t have
the capability.’ ” Before the Iraq war, when Rumsfeld overrode the
initial plans of the senior officers, “somebody should have put his foot
down,” Wignall said.
Lt. Col. Allen Gill, who just retired as director of the R.O.T.C. program at
Georgetown University, has heard versions of this discussion among his cadets
for years. He raises a different concern about the Army’s “can do” culture. “You’re
not brought up in the Army to tell people how you can’t get things done,
and that’s fine, that’s necessary,” he said. “But when
you get promoted to a higher level of strategic leadership, you have to have
a different outlook. You’re supposed to make clear, cold calculations of
risk — of the probabilities of victory and defeat.”
The problem, he said, is that it’s hard for officers — hard for people
in any profession — to switch their basic approach to life so abruptly.
As Yingling put it in his article, “It is unreasonable to expect that
an officer who spends 25 years conforming to institutional expectations will
emerge
as an innovator in his late 40s.”
Yingling’s commander at Tal Afar, H. R. McMaster, documented a similar
crisis in the case of the Vietnam War. Twenty years after the war, McMaster wrote
a doctoral dissertation that he turned into a book called “Dereliction
of Duty.” It concluded that the Joint Chiefs of Staff in the 1960s betrayed
their professional obligations by failing to provide unvarnished military advice
to President Lyndon B. Johnson and Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara as they
plunged into the Southeast Asian quagmire. When McMaster’s book was published
in 1997, Gen. Hugh Shelton, then chairman of the Joint Chiefs, ordered all commanders
to read it — and to express disagreements to their superiors, even at personal
risk. Since then, “Dereliction of Duty” has been recommended reading
for Army officers.
Yet before the start of the Iraq war and during the early stages of the fighting,
the Joint Chiefs once again fell silent. Justin Rosenbaum, the captain at Fort
Knox who asked General Cody whether any generals would be held accountable
for the failures in Iraq, said he was disturbed by this parallel between the
two
wars. “We’ve read the McMaster book,” he said. “It’s
startling that we’re repeating the same mistakes.”
McMaster’s own fate has reinforced these apprehensions. President Bush
has singled out McMaster’s campaign at Tal Afar as a model of successful
strategy. Gen. David Petraeus, now commander of United States forces in Iraq,
frequently consults with McMaster in planning his broader counterinsurgency campaign.
Yet the Army’s promotion board — the panel of generals that selects
which few dozen colonels advance to the rank of brigadier general — has
passed over McMaster two years in a row.
McMaster’s nonpromotion has not been widely reported, yet every officer
I spoke with knew about it and had pondered its implications. One colonel, who
asked not to be identified because he didn’t want to risk his own ambitions,
said: “Everyone studies the brigadier-general promotion list like tarot
cards — who makes it, who doesn’t. It communicates what qualities
are valued and not valued.” A retired Army two-star general, who requested
anonymity because he didn’t want to anger his friends on the promotion
boards, agreed. “When you turn down a guy like McMaster,” he told
me, “that sends a potent message to everybody down the chain. I don’t
know, maybe there were good reasons not to promote him. But the message everybody
gets is: ‘We’re not interested in rewarding people like him. We’re
not interested in rewarding agents of change.’ ”
Members of the board, he said, want to promote officers whose careers look
like their own. Today’s generals rose through the officer corps of the peacetime
Army. Many of them fought in the last years of Vietnam, and some fought in the
gulf war. But to the extent they have combat experience, it has been mainly tactical,
not strategic. They know how to secure an objective on a battlefield, how to
coordinate firepower and maneuver. But they don’t necessarily know how
to deal with an enemy that’s flexible, with a scenario that has not been
rehearsed.
“
Those rewarded are the can-do, go-to people,” the retired two-star general
told me. “Their skill is making the trains run on time. So why are we surprised
that, when the enemy becomes adaptive, we get caught off guard? If you raise
a group of plumbers, you shouldn’t be upset if they can’t do theoretical
physics.”
There are, of course, exceptions, most notably General Petraeus. He wrote an
article for a recent issue of The American Interest, a Washington-based public-policy
journal, urging officers to attend civilian graduate schools and get out of
their “intellectual
comfort zones” — useful for dealing with today’s adaptive
enemies.
Yet many Army officers I spoke with say Petraeus’s view is rare among senior
officers. Two colonels told me that when they were captains, their commanders
strongly discouraged them from attending not just graduate school but even the
Army’s Command and General Staff College, warning that it would be a diversion
from their career paths. “I got the impression that I’d be better
off counting bedsheets in the Baghdad Embassy than studying at Harvard,” one
colonel said.
Harvard’s merits aside, some junior officers agree that the promotion system
discourages breadth. Capt. Kip Kowalski, an infantry officer in the Captains
Career Course at Fort Knox, is a proud soldier in the can-do tradition. He is
impatient with critiques of superiors; he prefers to stay focused on his job. “But
I am worried,” he said, “that generals these days are forced to be
narrow.” Kowalski would like to spend a few years in a different branch
of the Army — say, as a foreign area officer — and then come back
to combat operations. He says he thinks the switch would broaden his skills,
give him new perspectives and make him a better officer. But the rules don’t
allow switching back and forth among specialties. “I have to decide right
now whether I want to do ops or something else,” he said. “If I
go F. A. O., I can never come back.”
In October 2006, seven months before his essay on the failure of generalship
appeared, Yingling and Lt. Col. John Nagl, another innovative officer, wrote
an article for Armed Forces Journal called “New Rules for New Enemies,” in
which they wrote: “The best way to change the organizational culture
of the Army is to change the pathways for professional advancement within the
officer
corps. The Army will become more adaptive only when being adaptive offers the
surest path to promotion.”
In late June, Yingling took command of an artillery battalion. This means he
will most likely be promoted to full colonel. This assignment, however, was
in the works nearly a year ago, long before he wrote his critique of the generals.
His move and probable promotion say nothing about whether he’ll be promoted
further — or whether, as some of his admirers fear, his career will now
grind to a halt.
Nagl — the author of an acclaimed book about counterinsurgency (“Learning
to Eat Soup With a Knife”), a former operations officer in Iraq and the
subject of a New York Times Magazine article a few years ago — has since
taken command of a unit at Fort Riley, Kan., that trains United States soldiers
to be advisers to Iraqi security forces. Pentagon officials have said that these
advisers are crucial to America’s future military policy. Yet Nagl has
written that soldiers have been posted to this unit “on an ad hoc basis” and
that few of the officers selected to train them have ever been advisers themselves.
Lt. Col. Isaiah Wilson, a professor at West Point and former planning officer
in Iraq with the 101st Airborne Division, said the fate of Nagl’s unit — the
degree to which it attracted capable, ambitious soldiers — depended on
the answer to one question: “Will serving as an adviser be seen as equal
to serving as a combat officer in the eyes of the promotion boards? The jury
is still out.”
“
Guys like Yingling, Nagl and McMaster are the canaries in the coal mine of Army
reform,” the retired two-star general I spoke with told me. “Will
they get promoted to general? If they do, that’s a sign that real change
is happening. If they don’t, that’s a sign that the traditional
culture still rules.”
Failure sometimes compels an institution to change its ways. The last time
the Army undertook an overhaul was in the wake of the Vietnam War. At the center
of those reforms was an officer named Huba Wass de Czege. Wass de Czege (pronounced
VOSH de tsay-guh) graduated from West Point and served two tours of duty in
Vietnam,
the second as a company commander in the Central Highlands. He devised innovative
tactics, leading four-man teams — at the time they were considered unconventionally
small — on ambush raids at night. His immediate superiors weren’t
keen on his approach or attitude, despite his successes. But after the war
ended and a few creative officers took over key posts, they recruited Wass
de Czege
to join them.
In 1982, he was ordered to rewrite the Army’s field manual on combat operations.
At his own initiative, he read the classics of military strategy — Clausewitz’s “On
War,” Sun Tzu’s “Art of War,” B. H. Liddell Hart’s “Strategy” — none
of which had been on his reading list at West Point. And he incorporated many
of their lessons along with his own experiences from Vietnam. Where the old edition
assumed static clashes of firepower and attrition, Wass de Czege’s revision
emphasized speed, maneuver and taking the offensive. He was asked to create a
one-year graduate program for the most promising young officers. Called the School
of Advanced Military Studies, or SAMS, it brought strategic thinking back into
the Army — at least for a while.
Now a retired one-star general, though an active Army consultant, Wass de Czege
has publicly praised Yingling’s article. (Yingling was a graduate of SAMS
in 2002, well after its founder moved on.) In an essay for the July issue of
Army magazine, Wass de Czege wrote that today’s junior officers “feel
they have much relevant experience [that] those senior to them lack,” yet
the senior officers “have not listened to them.” These junior officers,
he added, remind him of his own generation of captains, who held the same view
during and just after Vietnam.
“
The crux of the problem in our Army,” Wass de Czege wrote, “is that
officers are not systematically taught how to cope with unstructured problems.” Counterinsurgency
wars, like those in Iraq and Afghanistan, are all about unstructured problems.
The junior and field-grade officers, who command at the battalion level and below,
deal with unstructured problems — adapting to the insurgents’ ever-changing
tactics — as a matter of course. Many generals don’t, and never
had to, deal with such problems, either in war or in their training drills.
Many
of them may not fully recognize just how distinct and difficult these problems
are.
Speaking by phone from his home outside Fort Leavenworth, Wass de Czege emphasized
that he was impressed with most of today’s senior officers. Compared with
those of his time, they are more capable, open and intelligent (most officers
today, junior and senior, have college degrees, for instance). “You’re
not seeing any of the gross incompetence that was common in my day,” he
said. He added, however, that today’s generals are still too slow to change. “The
Army tends to be consensus-driven at the top,” he said. “There’s
a good side to that. We’re steady as a rock. You call us to arms, we’ll
be there. But when you roll a lot of changes at us, it takes awhile. The young
guys have to drive us to it.”
The day after his talk at Fort Knox, General Cody, back at his office in the
Pentagon, reiterated his “faith in the leadership of the general officers.” Asked
about complaints that junior officers are forced to follow narrow paths to promotion,
he said, “We’re trying to do just the opposite.” In the works
are new incentives to retain officers, including not just higher bonuses but
free graduate school and the right to choose which branch of the Army to serve
in. “I don’t want everybody to think there’s one road map to
colonel or general,” he said. He denied that promotion boards picked candidates
in their own image. This year, he said, he was on the board that picked new brigadier
generals, and one of them, Jeffrey Buchanan, had never commanded a combat brigade;
his last assignment was training Iraqi security forces. One colonel, interviewed
later, said: “That’s a good sign. They’ve never picked anybody
like that before. But that’s just one out of 38 brigadier generals they
picked. It’s still very much the exception.”
There is a specter haunting the debate over Yingling’s article — the
specter of Gen. Douglas MacArthur. During World War II, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower
threatened to resign if the civilian commanders didn’t order air support
for the invasion of Normandy. President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Prime Minister
Winston Churchill acceded. But during the Korean War, MacArthur — at the
time, perhaps the most popular public figure in America — demanded that
President Truman let him attack China. Truman fired him. History has redeemed
both presidents’ decisions. But in terms of the issues that Yingling, McMaster
and others have raised, was there really a distinction? Weren’t both generals
speaking what they regarded as “truth to power”?
The very discussion of these issues discomforts many senior officers because
they take very seriously the principle of civilian control. They believe it
is not their place to challenge the president or his duly appointed secretary
of
defense, certainly not in public, especially not in wartime. The ethical codes
are ambiguous on how firmly an officer can press an argument without crossing
the line. So, many generals prefer to keep a substantial distance from that
line — to
keep the prospect of a constitutional crisis from even remotely arising.
On a blog Yingling maintains at the Web site of Small Wars Journal, an independent
journal of military theory, he has acknowledged these dilemmas, but he hasn’t
disentangled them. For example, if generals do speak up, and the president ignores
their advice, what should they do then — salute and follow orders, resign
en masse or criticize the president publicly? At this level of discussion,
the junior and midlevel officers feel uncomfortable, too.
Yingling’s concern is more narrowly professional, but it should matter
greatly to future policy makers who want to consult their military advisers.
The challenge is how to ensure that generals possess the experience and analytical
prowess to formulate sound military advice and the “moral courage,” as
Yingling put it, to take responsibility for that advice and for its resulting
successes or failures. The worry is that too few generals today possess either
set of qualities — and that the promotional system impedes the rise of
officers who do.
As today’s captains and majors come up through the ranks, the culture may
change. One question is how long that will take. Another question is whether
the most innovative of those junior officers will still be in the Army by the
time the top brass decides reform is necessary. As Colonel Wilson, the West Point
instructor, put it, “When that moment comes, will there be enough of
the right folks in the right slots to make the necessary changes happen?”
Fred Kaplan is the national security columnist for Slate and author of the
forthcoming book “Daydream Believers: How a Few Grand Ideas Wrecked American
Power.”
Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company