-Caveat Lector-

DefenseWatch "The Voice of the Grunt"
09-13-2004

Hack's Target

Balad's Gen. Jimmie
By David H. Hackworth

Bad outfits - military or civilian - are all about bad leadership: the top being
out of touch with the bottom, not setting the example or leading from the front.
It's a major reason why we lost the Vietnam War, why we're in such a mess in
Iraq, and why most of our senior Army leadership stinks - and, incidentally, why
so many of our country's corporations are going down the drain.



The widespread atrocities in Iraq would have ended with the first dog attack or
the first camera shot had Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez and the brass, hunkered down
in the Green Zone, bothered walking with and talking to their troops, applying
the best incentive in the world - the boss's footsteps.



And other roiling issues, such as the wave of mass rapes against American female
soldiers in Kuwait and Iraq, wouldn't have reached numbers so shocking that the
top Pentagon brass are still retching in recoil.



The current Army promotion system rewards mainly careerists like Sanchez -
well-educated, corporate-type slickies with MBAs in sucking up. The Army general
in Afghanistan who turned Tora Bora into a Waterloo, for example, has been
promoted and now runs the Army's personnel system.



Then there's Brig. Gen. James E. Chambers, the commanding general of 13th COSCOM
in Balad, Iraq, where morale is lower than clam dung. Chambers' latest exercise
in non-leadership was to have a unit in his command reschedule a memorial
service for a dead soldier originally set for Aug. 13. The reported reason: The
superstitious general was not about to incur bad luck by flying on the 13th.



I've previously blistered Chambers' command in this column for proposing to
charge soldiers three bucks a head to see movies at the newly rebuilt base
theater and nine uxorious bucks for a pizza while meanwhile failing to ensure
that truckers had sufficient armor on their vehicles to protect them from
guerrilla attacks.



Apparently, these probes are beginning to get to Gen. Jimmie, who recently put
out the word reminding everyone serving under him of the "regulatory
requirements for Information Security and proper Public Affairs information
release and dissemination," according to a source who's asked not to be
identified for fear of being burned at the stake.



"I immediately thought, 'I'll bet this is because Hack nailed ol' Jimmie again,
 " the whistle-blower writes. "Then this morning one of Jimmie's deputies said
at a staff meeting, 'It's to remind people they can't be writing to Hackworth
and s***.' I guess 'and s***' includes any attempts to exercise their rights
under Article One of the Bill of Rights - as well as embarrassing their CG."



Jimmie's big into protection - not only of his career, but also of his own
precious butt. To secure the latter, he had a ring of huge, concrete barriers
erected around his VIP trailer complex quarters a full two and a half months
before even 10 percent of his soldiers had any mortar or blast protection around
their digs. The "Texas barriers" were placed with no gaps between them except
for two breaks to allow the residents a walk-through - while nowhere else on
this general's base are any other soldiers afforded this airtight quality of
force protection.



Nope. Gen. Jimmie's soldiers try to survive with only one large ring - with many
gaps - around mini-zones consisting of some 40-50 trailers. So only one side of
any trailer on the perimeter gets any protection - unless you're lucky enough to
live on a corner. The rest of the trailers are shrapnel magnets, and - since
attacks against American forces across Iraq have increased from 25 a day a year
ago to 100 a day - enemy mortar attacks are an almost daily event.



Then there's the goat. One of the general's entourage introduced the animal into
the general's personal fortifications to keep the grass neatly trimmed around
Jimmie's headquarters. Things went trimmingly well until a troop complained,
citing the "no pet" rule, and the goat was relieved of duty and sent out to less
safe pastures.



All of the above might be somewhat amusing if these poorly led troops were at
Fort Hood and not in Iraq, where bad leadership can get our country's daughters
and sons killed in the flash of an incoming round!



--Eilhys England contributed to this column.



Col. David H. Hackworth (USA Ret.) is SFTT.org co-founder and Senior Military
Columnist for DefenseWatch magazine. For information on his many books, go to
his home page at Hackworth.com, where you can sign in for his free weekly
Defending America. Send mail to P.O. Box 11179, Greenwich, CT 06831. His newest
book is "Steel My Soldiers' Hearts."  © 2004 David H. Hackworth. Please send
Feedback responses to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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