The Responsibilities of
Generalship
Armies do not
fight wars; nations
fight wars. War is not a
military activity
conducted by soldiers,
but rather a social
activity that involves
entire nations. Prussian
military theorist Carl
von Clausewitz noted
that passion,
probability and policy
each play their role in
war. Any understanding
of war that ignores one
of these elements is
fundamentally flawed.
The passion of
the people is necessary
to endure the sacrifices
inherent in war.
Regardless of the system
of government, the
people supply the blood
and treasure required to
prosecute war. The
statesman must stir
these passions to a
level commensurate with
the popular sacrifices
required. When the ends
of policy are small, the
statesman can prosecute
a conflict without
asking the public for
great sacrifice. Global
conflicts such as World
War II require the full
mobilization of entire
societies to provide the
men and materiel
necessary for the
successful prosecution
of war. The greatest
error the statesman can
make is to commit his
nation to a great
conflict without
mobilizing popular
passions to a level
commensurate with the
stakes of the conflict.
Popular
passions are necessary
for the successful
prosecution of war, but
cannot be sufficient. To
prevail, generals must
provide policymakers and
the public with a
correct estimation of
strategic probabilities.
The general is
responsible for
estimating the
likelihood of success in
applying force to
achieve the aims of
policy. The general
describes both the means
necessary for the
successful prosecution
of war and the ways in
which the nation will
employ those means. If
the policymaker desires
ends for which the means
he provides are
insufficient, the
general is responsible
for advising the
statesman of this
incongruence. The
statesman must then
scale back the ends of
policy or mobilize
popular passions to
provide greater means.
If the general remains
silent while the
statesman commits a
nation to war with
insufficient means, he
shares culpability for
the results.
However much
it is influenced by
passion and probability,
war is ultimately an
instrument of policy and
its conduct is the
responsibility of
policymakers. War is a
social activity
undertaken on behalf of
the nation; Augustine
counsels us that the
only purpose of war is
to achieve a better
peace. The choice of
making war to achieve a
better peace is
inherently a value
judgment in which the
statesman must decide
those interests and
beliefs worth killing
and dying for. The
military man is no
better qualified than
the common citizen to
make such judgments. He
must therefore confine
his input to his area of
expertise — the
estimation of strategic
probabilities.
The correct
estimation of strategic
possibilities can be
further subdivided into
the preparation for war
and the conduct of war.
Preparation for war
consists in the raising,
arming, equipping and
training of forces. The
conduct of war consists
of both planning for the
use of those forces and
directing those forces
in operations.
To prepare
forces for war, the
general must visualize
the conditions of future
combat. To raise
military forces
properly, the general
must visualize the
quality and quantity of
forces needed in the
next war. To arm and
equip military forces
properly, the general
must visualize the
materiel requirements of
future engagements. To
train military forces
properly, the general
must visualize the human
demands on future
battlefields, and
replicate those
conditions in peacetime
exercises. Of course,
not even the most
skilled general can
visualize precisely how
future wars will be
fought. According to
British military
historian and soldier
Sir Michael Howard, "In
structuring and
preparing an army for
war, you can be clear
that you will not get it
precisely right, but the
important thing is not
to be too far wrong, so
that you can put it
right quickly."
The most
tragic error a general
can make is to assume
without much reflection
that wars of the future
will look much like wars
of the past. Following
World War I, French
generals committed this
error, assuming that the
next war would involve
static battles dominated
by firepower and fixed
fortifications.
Throughout the interwar
years, French generals
raised, equipped, armed
and trained the French
military to fight the
last war. In stark
contrast, German
generals spent the
interwar years
attempting to break the
stalemate created by
firepower and
fortifications. They
developed a new form of
war — the blitzkrieg —
that integrated
mobility, firepower and
decentralized tactics.
The German Army did not
get this new form of
warfare precisely right.
After the 1939 conquest
of Poland, the German
Army undertook a
critical
self-examination of its
operations. However,
German generals did not
get it too far wrong
either, and in less than
a year had adapted their
tactics for the invasion
of France.
After
visualizing the
conditions of future
combat, the general is
responsible for
explaining to civilian
policymakers the demands
of future combat and the
risks entailed in
failing to meet those
demands. Civilian
policymakers have
neither the expertise
nor the inclination to
think deeply about
strategic probabilities
in the distant future.
Policymakers, especially
elected representatives,
face powerful incentives
to focus on near-term
challenges that are of
immediate concern to the
public. Generating
military capability is
the labor of decades. If
the general waits until
the public and its
elected representatives
are immediately
concerned with national
security threats before
finding his voice, he
has waited too long. The
general who speaks too
loudly of preparing for
war while the nation is
at peace places at risk
his position and status.
However, the general who
speaks too softly places
at risk the security of
his country.
Failing to
visualize future
battlefields represents
a lapse in professional
competence, but seeing
those fields clearly and
saying nothing is an
even more serious lapse
in professional
character. Moral courage
is often inversely
proportional to
popularity and this
observation in nowhere
more true than in the
profession of arms. The
history of military
innovation is littered
with the truncated
careers of reformers who
saw gathering threats
clearly and advocated
change boldly. A
military professional
must possess both the
physical courage to face
the hazards of battle
and the moral courage to
withstand the barbs of
public scorn. On and off
the battlefield, courage
is the first
characteristic of
generalship.
Failures of Generalship
in Vietnam
America's
defeat in Vietnam is the
most egregious failure
in the history of
American arms. America's
general officer corps
refused to prepare the
Army to fight
unconventional wars,
despite ample
indications that such
preparations were in
order. Having failed to
prepare for such wars,
America's generals sent
our forces into battle
without a coherent plan
for victory. Unprepared
for war and lacking a
coherent strategy,
America lost the war and
the lives of more than
58,000 service members.
Following
World War II, there were
ample indicators that
America's enemies would
turn to insurgency to
negate our advantages in
firepower and mobility.
The French experiences
in Indochina and Algeria
offered object lessons
to Western armies facing
unconventional foes.
These lessons were not
lost on the more astute
members of America's
political class. In
1961, President Kennedy
warned of "another type
of war, new in its
intensity, ancient in
its origin — war by
guerrillas, subversives,
insurgents, assassins,
war by ambush instead of
by combat, by
infiltration instead of
aggression, seeking
victory by evading and
exhausting the enemy
instead of engaging
him." In response to
these threats, Kennedy
undertook a
comprehensive program to
prepare America's armed
forces for
counterinsurgency.
Despite the
experience of their
allies and the urging of
their president,
America's generals
failed to prepare their
forces for
counterinsurgency. Army
Chief of Staff Gen.
George Decker assured
his young president,
"Any good soldier can
handle guerrillas."
Despite Kennedy's
guidance to the
contrary, the Army
viewed the conflict in
Vietnam in conventional
terms. As late as 1964,
Gen. Earle Wheeler,
chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, stated
flatly that "the essence
of the problem in
Vietnam is military."
While the Army made
minor organizational
adjustments at the
urging of the president,
the generals clung to
what Andrew Krepinevich
has called "the Army
concept," a vision of
warfare focused on the
destruction of the
enemy's forces.
Having failed
to visualize accurately
the conditions of combat
in Vietnam, America's
generals prosecuted the
war in conventional
terms. The U.S. military
embarked on a graduated
attrition strategy
intended to compel North
Vietnam to accept a
negotiated peace. The
U.S. undertook modest
efforts at innovation in
Vietnam. Civil
Operations and
Revolutionary
Development Support
(CORDS), spearheaded by
the State Department's
"Blowtorch" Bob Kromer,
was a serious effort to
address the political
and economic causes of
the insurgency. The
Marine Corps' Combined
Action Program (CAP) was
an innovative approach
to population security.
However, these efforts
are best described as
too little, too late.
Innovations such as
CORDS and CAP never
received the resources
necessary to make a
large-scale difference.
The U.S. military
grudgingly accepted
these innovations late
in the war, after the
American public's
commitment to the
conflict began to wane.
America's
generals not only failed
to develop a strategy
for victory in Vietnam,
but also remained
largely silent while the
strategy developed by
civilian politicians led
to defeat. As H.R.
McMaster noted in
"Dereliction of Duty,"
the Joint Chiefs of
Staff were divided by
service parochialism and
failed to develop a
unified and coherent
recommendation to the
president for
prosecuting the war to a
successful conclusion.
Army Chief of Staff
Harold K. Johnson
estimated in 1965 that
victory would require as
many as 700,000 troops
for up to five years.
Commandant of the Marine
Corps Wallace Greene
made a similar estimate
on troop levels. As
President Johnson
incrementally escalated
the war, neither man
made his views known to
the president or
Congress. President
Johnson made a concerted
effort to conceal the
costs and consequences
of Vietnam from the
public, but such
duplicity required the
passive consent of
America's generals.
Having
participated in the
deception of the
American people during
the war, the Army chose
after the war to deceive
itself. In "Learning to
Eat Soup With a Knife,"
John Nagl argued that
instead of learning from
defeat, the Army after
Vietnam focused its
energies on the kind of
wars it knew how to win
— high-technology
conventional wars. An
essential contribution
to this strategy of
denial was the
publication of "On
Strategy: A Critical
Analysis of the Vietnam
War," by Col. Harry
Summers. Summers, a
faculty member of the
U.S. Army War College,
argued that the Army had
erred by not focusing
enough on conventional
warfare in Vietnam, a
lesson the Army was
happy to hear. Despite
having been recently
defeated by an
insurgency, the Army
slashed training and
resources devoted to
counterinsurgency.
By the early
1990s, the Army's focus
on conventional
war-fighting appeared to
have been vindicated.
During the 1980s, the
U.S. military benefited
from the largest
peacetime military
buildup in the nation's
history. High-technology
equipment dramatically
increased the mobility
and lethality of our
ground forces. The
Army's National Training
Center honed the Army's
conventional
war-fighting skills to a
razor's edge. The fall
of the Berlin Wall in
1989 signaled the demise
of the Soviet Union and
the futility of direct
confrontation with the
U.S. Despite the fact
the U.S. supported
insurgencies in
Afghanistan, Nicaragua
and Angola to hasten the
Soviet Union's demise,
the U.S. military gave
little thought to
counterinsurgency
throughout the 1990s.
America's generals
assumed without much
reflection that the wars
of the future would look
much like the wars of
the past —
state-on-state conflicts
against conventional
forces. America's swift
defeat of the Iraqi
Army, the world's
fourth-largest, in 1991
seemed to confirm the
wisdom of the U.S.
military's post-Vietnam
reforms. But the
military learned the
wrong lessons from
Operation Desert Storm.
It continued to prepare
for the last war, while
its future enemies
prepared for a new kind
of war.
Failures of Generalship
in Iraq
America's
generals have repeated
the mistakes of Vietnam
in Iraq. First,
throughout the 1990s our
generals failed to
envision the conditions
of future combat and
prepare their forces
accordingly. Second,
America's generals
failed to estimate
correctly both the means
and the ways necessary
to achieve the aims of
policy prior to
beginning the war in
Iraq. Finally, America's
generals did not provide
Congress and the public
with an accurate
assessment of the
conflict in Iraq.
Despite
paying lip service to
"transformation"
throughout the 1990s,
America's armed forces
failed to change in
significant ways after
the end of the 1991
Persian Gulf War. In
"The Sling and the
Stone," T.X. Hammes
argues that the Defense
Department's
transformation strategy
focuses almost
exclusively on
high-technology
conventional wars. The
doctrine, organizations,
equipment and training
of the U.S. military
confirm this
observation. The armed
forces fought the global
war on terrorism for the
first five years with a
counterinsurgency
doctrine last revised in
the Reagan
administration. Despite
engaging in numerous
stability operations
throughout the 1990s,
the armed forces did
little to bolster their
capabilities for civic
reconstruction and
security force
development. Procurement
priorities during the
1990s followed the Cold
War model, with
significant funding
devoted to new fighter
aircraft and artillery
systems. The most
commonly used tactical
scenarios in both
schools and training
centers replicated
high-intensity
interstate conflict. At
the dawn of the 21st
century, the U.S. is
fighting brutal,
adaptive insurgencies in
Afghanistan and Iraq,
while our armed forces
have spent the preceding
decade having done
little to prepare for
such conflicts.
Having spent
a decade preparing to
fight the wrong war,
America's generals then
miscalculated both the
means and ways necessary
to succeed in Iraq. The
most fundamental
military miscalculation
in Iraq has been the
failure to commit
sufficient forces to
provide security to
Iraq's population. U.S.
Central Command
(CENTCOM) estimated in
its 1998 war plan that
380,000 troops would be
necessary for an
invasion of Iraq. Using
operations in Bosnia and
Kosovo as a model for
predicting troop
requirements, one Army
study estimated a need
for 470,000 troops.
Alone among America's
generals, Army Chief of
Staff General Eric
Shinseki publicly stated
that "several hundred
thousand soldiers" would
be necessary to
stabilize post-Saddam
Iraq. Prior to the war,
President Bush promised
to give field commanders
everything necessary for
victory. Privately, many
senior general officers
both active and retired
expressed serious
misgivings about the
insufficiency of forces
for Iraq. These leaders
would later express
their concerns in
tell-all books such as
"Fiasco" and "Cobra II."
However, when the U.S.
went to war in Iraq with
less than half the
strength required to
win, these leaders did
not make their
objections public.
Given the
lack of troop strength,
not even the most
brilliant general could
have devised the ways
necessary to stabilize
post-Saddam Iraq.
However, inept planning
for postwar Iraq took
the crisis caused by a
lack of troops and
quickly transformed it
into a debacle. In 1997,
the U.S. Central Command
exercise "Desert
Crossing" demonstrated
that many postwar
stabilization tasks
would fall to the
military. The other
branches of the U.S.
government lacked
sufficient capability to
do such work on the
scale required in Iraq.
Despite these results,
CENTCOM accepted the
assumption that the
State Department would
administer postwar Iraq.
The military never
explained to the
president the magnitude
of the challenges
inherent in stabilizing
postwar Iraq.
After failing
to visualize the
conditions of combat in
Iraq, America's generals
failed to adapt to the
demands of
counterinsurgency.
Counterinsurgency theory
prescribes providing
continuous security to
the population. However,
for most of the war
American forces in Iraq
have been concentrated
on large
forward-operating bases,
isolated from the Iraqi
people and focused on
capturing or killing
insurgents.
Counterinsurgency theory
requires strengthening
the capability of
host-nation institutions
to provide security and
other essential services
to the population.
America's generals
treated efforts to
create transition teams
to develop local
security forces and
provincial
reconstruction teams to
improve essential
services as
afterthoughts, never
providing the quantity
or quality of personnel
necessary for success.
After going
into Iraq with too few
troops and no coherent
plan for postwar
stabilization, America's
general officer corps
did not accurately
portray the intensity of
the insurgency to the
American public. The
Iraq Study Group
concluded that "there is
significant
underreporting of the
violence in Iraq." The
ISG noted that "on one
day in July 2006 there
were 93 attacks or
significant acts of
violence reported. Yet a
careful review of the
reports for that single
day brought to light
1,100 acts of violence.
Good policy is difficult
to make when information
is systematically
collected in a way that
minimizes its
discrepancy with policy
goals." Population
security is the most
important measure of
effectiveness in
counterinsurgency. For
more than three years,
America's generals
continued to insist that
the U.S. was making
progress in Iraq.
However, for Iraqi
civilians, each year
from 2003 onward was
more deadly than the one
preceding it. For
reasons that are not yet
clear, America's general
officer corps
underestimated the
strength of the enemy,
overestimated the
capabilities of Iraq's
government and security
forces and failed to
provide Congress with an
accurate assessment of
security conditions in
Iraq. Moreover,
America's generals have
not explained clearly
the larger strategic
risks of committing so
large a portion of the
nation's deployable land
power to a single
theater of operations.
The
intellectual and moral
failures common to
America's general
officer corps in Vietnam
and Iraq constitute a
crisis in American
generalship. Any
explanation that fixes
culpability on
individuals is
insufficient. No one
leader, civilian or
military, caused failure
in Vietnam or Iraq.
Different military and
civilian leaders in the
two conflicts produced
similar results. In both
conflicts, the general
officer corps designed
to advise policymakers,
prepare forces and
conduct operations
failed to perform its
intended functions. To
understand how the U.S.
could face defeat at the
hands of a weaker
insurgent enemy for the
second time in a
generation, we must look
at the structural
influences that produce
our general officer
corps.
The Generals We Need
The most
insightful examination
of failed generalship
comes from J.F.C.
Fuller's "Generalship:
Its Diseases and Their
Cure." Fuller was a
British major general
who saw action in the
first attempts at
armored warfare in World
War I. He found three
common characteristics
in great generals —
courage, creative
intelligence and
physical fitness.
The need for
intelligent, creative
and courageous general
officers is
self-evident. An
understanding of the
larger aspects of war is
essential to great
generalship. However, a
survey of Army three-
and four-star generals
shows that only 25
percent hold advanced
degrees from civilian
institutions in the
social sciences or
humanities.
Counterinsurgency theory
holds that proficiency
in foreign languages is
essential to success,
yet only one in four of
the Army's senior
generals speaks another
language. While the
physical courage of
America's generals is
not in doubt, there is
less certainty regarding
their moral courage. In
almost surreal language,
professional military
men blame their recent
lack of candor on the
intimidating management
style of their civilian
masters. Now that the
public is immediately
concerned with the
crisis in Iraq, some of
our generals are finding
their voices. They may
have waited too long.
Neither the
executive branch nor the
services themselves are
likely to remedy the
shortcomings in
America's general
officer corps. Indeed,
the tendency of the
executive branch to seek
out mild-mannered team
players to serve as
senior generals is part
of the problem. The
services themselves are
equally to blame. The
system that produces our
generals does little to
reward creativity and
moral courage. Officers
rise to flag rank by
following remarkably
similar career patterns.
Senior generals, both
active and retired, are
the most important
figures in determining
an officer's potential
for flag rank. The views
of subordinates and
peers play no role in an
officer's advancement;
to move up he must only
please his superiors. In
a system in which senior
officers select for
promotion those like
themselves, there are
powerful incentives for
conformity. It is
unreasonable to expect
that an officer who
spends 25 years
conforming to
institutional
expectations will emerge
as an innovator in his
late forties.
If America
desires creative
intelligence and moral
courage in its general
officer corps, it must
create a system that
rewards these qualities.
Congress can create such
incentives by exercising
its proper oversight
function in three areas.
First, Congress must
change the system for
selecting general
officers. Second,
oversight committees
must apply increased
scrutiny over generating
the necessary means and
pursuing appropriate
ways for applying
America's military
power. Third, the Senate
must hold accountable
through its confirmation
powers those officers
who fail to achieve the
aims of policy at an
acceptable cost in blood
and treasure.
To improve
the creative
intelligence of our
generals, Congress must
change the officer
promotion system in ways
that reward adaptation
and intellectual
achievement. Congress
should require the armed
services to implement
360-degree evaluations
for field-grade and flag
officers. Junior
officers and
noncommissioned officers
are often the first to
adapt because they bear
the brunt of failed
tactics most directly.
They are also less wed
to organizational norms
and less influenced by
organizational taboos.
Junior leaders have
valuable insights
regarding the
effectiveness of their
leaders, but the current
promotion system
excludes these
judgments. Incorporating
subordinate and peer
reviews into promotion
decisions for senior
leaders would produce
officers more willing to
adapt to changing
circumstances, and less
likely to conform to
outmoded practices.
Congress
should also modify the
officer promotion system
in ways that reward
intellectual
achievement. The Senate
should examine the
education and
professional writing of
nominees for three- and
four-star billets as
part of the confirmation
process. The Senate
would never confirm to
the Supreme Court a
nominee who had neither
been to law school nor
written legal opinions.
However, it routinely
confirms four-star
generals who possess
neither graduate
education in the social
sciences or humanities
nor the capability to
speak a foreign
language. Senior general
officers must have a
vision of what future
conflicts will look like
and what capabilities
the U.S. requires to
prevail in those
conflicts. They must
possess the capability
to understand and
interact with foreign
cultures. A solid record
of intellectual
achievement and fluency
in foreign languages are
effective indicators of
an officer's potential
for senior leadership.
To reward
moral courage in our
general officers,
Congress must ask hard
questions about the
means and ways for war
as part of its oversight
responsibility. Some of
the answers will be
shocking, which is
perhaps why Congress has
not asked and the
generals have not told.
Congress must ask for a
candid assessment of the
money and manpower
required over the next
generation to prevail in
the Long War. The money
required to prevail may
place fiscal constraints
on popular domestic
priorities. The quantity
and quality of manpower
required may call into
question the viability
of the all-volunteer
military. Congress must
re-examine the
allocation of existing
resources, and demand
that procurement
priorities reflect the
most likely threats we
will face. Congress must
be equally rigorous in
ensuring that the ways
of war contribute to
conflict termination
consistent with the aims
of national policy. If
our operations produce
more enemies than they
defeat, no amount of
force is sufficient to
prevail. Current
oversight efforts have
proved inadequate,
allowing the executive
branch, the services and
lobbyists to present
information that is
sometimes incomplete,
inaccurate or
self-serving. Exercising
adequate oversight will
require members of
Congress to develop the
expertise necessary to
ask the right questions
and display the courage
to follow the truth
wherever it leads them.
Finally,
Congress must enhance
accountability by
exercising its
little-used authority to
confirm the retired rank
of general officers. By
law, Congress must
confirm an officer who
retires at three- or
four-star rank. In the
past this requirement
has been pro forma in
all but a few cases. A
general who presides
over a massive human
rights scandal or a
substantial
deterioration in
security ought to be
retired at a lower rank
than one who serves with
distinction. A general
who fails to provide
Congress with an
accurate and candid
assessment of strategic
probabilities ought to
suffer the same penalty.
As matters stand now, a
private who loses a
rifle suffers far
greater consequences
than a general who loses
a war. By exercising its
powers to confirm the
retired ranks of general
officers, Congress can
restore accountability
among senior military
leaders.
Mortal Danger
This article
began with Frederick the
Great's admonition to
his officers to focus
their energies on the
larger aspects of war.
The Prussian monarch's
innovations had made his
army the terror of
Europe, but he knew that
his adversaries were
learning and adapting.
Frederick feared that
his generals would
master his system of war
without thinking deeply
about the ever-changing
nature of war, and in
doing so would place
Prussia's security at
risk. These fears would
prove prophetic. At the
Battle of Valmy in 1792,
Frederick's successors
were checked by France's
ragtag citizen army. In
the fourteen years that
followed, Prussia's
generals assumed without
much reflection that the
wars of the future would
look much like those of
the past. In 1806, the
Prussian Army marched
lockstep into defeat and
disaster at the hands of
Napoleon at Jena.
Frederick's prophecy had
come to pass; Prussia
became a French vassal.
Iraq is
America's Valmy.
America's generals have
been checked by a form
of war that they did not
prepare for and do not
understand. They spent
the years following the
1991 Gulf War mastering
a system of war without
thinking deeply about
the ever changing nature
of war. They marched
into Iraq having assumed
without much reflection
that the wars of the
future would look much
like the wars of the
past. Those few who saw
clearly our
vulnerability to
insurgent tactics said
and did little to
prepare for these
dangers. As at Valmy,
this one debacle,
however humiliating,
will not in itself
signal national
disaster. The hour is
late, but not too late
to prepare for the
challenges of the Long
War. We still have time
to select as our
generals those who
possess the intelligence
to visualize future
conflicts and the moral
courage to advise
civilian policymakers on
the preparations needed
for our security. The
power and the
responsibility to
identify such generals
lie with the U.S.
Congress. If Congress
does not act, our Jena
awaits us.
ARMY LT. COL. PAUL
YINGLING is deputy
commander, 3rd Armored
Calvary Regiment. He has
served two tours in
Iraq, another in Bosnia
and a fourth in
Operation Desert Storm.
He holds a master's
degree in political
science from the
University of Chicago.
The views expressed here
are the author's and do
not necessarily reflect
those of the Army or the
Defense Department.