Space Industry and Business News  
Pentagon Drops Ideology

"Everybody knows that Rumsfeld mismanaged the occupation of Iraq. What many observers do not realize is that Rumsfeld mishandled every other facet of defense policy, too. It wasn't that his goals were wrong, but that his management skills were so poor."
by Loren B. Thompson
UPI Correspondent
Arlington VA (UPI) June 13, 2007
You don't need to be a defense expert to see the biggest lesson of Friday's leadership purge at the Pentagon. When you're in the military, losing wars is a bad career move. That's what America is doing in Iraq right now -- losing -- and the political system has had enough of the senior officers who presided over the debacle.

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said when he took over from the discredited Donald Rumsfeld that he wasn't planning to fire anybody, but it turns out that he doesn't have a choice. Congress is sick of the whole transformation and counter-terror crew, so they have to go. Once you get beyond the headlines, four other lessons are apparent.

First, the sea services are rising. As Peter Spiegel pointed out in Sunday's Los Angeles Times, officers from the sea services now thoroughly dominate the joint command structure. Although the departing Joint Chiefs chairman and vice chairman were both alumni of the Navy Department, they are being replaced by two more representatives of the sea services -- Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Mike Mullen and Gen. James Cartwright of the Marine Corps, currently head of the U.S. Strategic Command.

In the past, top joint staff positions rotated among all four services, but that practice is in abeyance. In addition, commands that traditionally were dominated by the other services, like Central Command and Southern Command, are now led by admirals. So if you thought the disappearance of the Soviet navy had made the sea services irrelevant, think again.

Second, England's empire is growing. The ascendancy of Navy alumni to top positions within the Pentagon isn't confined to uniformed personnel. While the Army and Air Force have seen their civilian service secretaries forced out during the Bush years, Navy Secretary Gordon England rose to become the deputy secretary of defense, running large swaths of the defense establishment so Gates could focus on Iraq.

England played a role in securing the top joint jobs for Mullen and Cartwright, and he also maneuvered the former naval acquisition chief, John Young, into the Pentagon's most senior acquisition post, replacing Rumsfeld protege Kenneth Krieg. The part of the story few people know is that England was a leading contender to succeed Rumsfeld as defense secretary -- he has longstanding ties to the Bush family -- and only lost out because of the need to bring in an outsider who could change course in Iraq.

Third, say goodbye to ideology. David Cloud certainly got it right in Saturday's New York Times when he described Mullen as a "low-key pragmatist." Mullen is known within the Navy as a consummate programmer who can rigorously link requirements to resources. He thus matches Gates' technocratic mindset in eschewing ideology for practical problem-solving.

Much of what has gone wrong for the Bush administration, both in its counter-terror policies and in its transformation agenda, is traceable to an excessive reliance on faith-based ideas. The new team at the Pentagon will be more concerned with what the numbers show than whether policies are politically correct. In the "red versus expert" vernacular of Mao's Cultural Revolution, the experts have won the struggle to control America's defense posture.

Fourth, professionalism triumphed. Everybody knows that Rumsfeld mismanaged the occupation of Iraq. What many observers do not realize is that Rumsfeld mishandled every other facet of defense policy, too. It wasn't that his goals were wrong, but that his management skills were so poor.

The Gates-England-Mullen team will have to pick up the pieces left by Rumsfeld's true believers and restore a measure of professionalism, not to mention civility, to a dispirited defense establishment. That will not be easy against the backdrop of Iraq, but the good news is that the next administration will inherit a close-knit and capable team of senior military leaders rather than the beleaguered survivors of a failed strategy.

Loren B. Thompson is CEO of the Lexington Institute, an Arlington, Va.-based think tank that supports democracy and the free market.

Source: United Press International

Related Links
Lexington Institute
Learn about the Superpowers of the 21st Century at SpaceWar.com
Learn about nuclear weapons doctrine and defense at SpaceWar.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Defence Treaty Guarantees Security In Post-Cold War Europe
Vienna (AFP) June 12, 2007
The Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE) treaty, which is being reviewed this week in Vienna at Russia's request, is one of the key post-Cold War security accords in Europe. The CFE was signed on November 19, 1990 in Paris by the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) and the Warsaw Pact -- two opposing blocs during the Cold War -- and was modified in 1999 to adapt it to the European security environment following the fall of the Soviet Union.







  • Rockwell Collins And ARINC Sign Agreement For Broadband Offering
  • Academic Group Releases Plan To Share Power Over Internet Root Zone Keys
  • Satellite Enables Mobile Wireless Broadband Services To Conventional Devices
  • Singapore Airlines Selects Rockwell Collins Satellite Communications

  • Dawn Spacecraft Never Damaged Set To Launch July 7
  • Proton-M Rocket With US Satellite To Lift Off July 7
  • Delta 2 Launch To Launch COSMO-SkyMed Satellite
  • Russia Launches Four Satellites Into Orbit For Globalstar

  • Airlines To Order Nearly 30,000 New Planes In Next 20 Years
  • Airlines Pledge Emissions Cuts But Warn EU Curbs Could Jeopardise Sector
  • Sandia And Boeing Collaborate To Develop Aircraft Fuel Cell Applications
  • Australia Fears Jet Flight Guilt Could Hit Tourism

  • KVH Receives Order For Fiber Optic Gyro-based TACNAV II Vehicle Navigation System
  • Northrop Grumman To Begin Developing New Satellite Communications System For B-2 Bomber
  • Boeing Demonstrates Integrated Voice, Data And Video Services With TSAT Tests
  • Boeing Completes Critical Wideband Global SATCOM Satellite Tests

  • The Growing Problem Of Space Junk
  • Thales To Provide S-Band Transponders Argentina Saocom and Aquarius Missions
  • ESA Takes Steps Toward Quantum Communications
  • Tether Origami

  • Hall Appoints Feeney To Top GOP Position On Space And Aeronautics Subcommittee
  • Dodgen Joins Northrop Grumman As Vice President Of Strategy For Missile Systems Business
  • Townsend To Lead Ball Aerospace Exploration Systems In Huntsville
  • NASA Nobel Prize Recipient To Lead Chief Scientist Office

  • NASA Satellites Watch as China Constructs Giant Dam
  • Kalam Calls For Development Of Satellite Systems For Entire Humanity
  • Boeing Launches Italian Earth Observation Satellite
  • Envisat Captures First Image Of Sargassum From Space

  • Albertis Seeks Share In Galileo Partner Hispasat As Surrey Welcomes EU Support
  • EU Agrees Galileo Needs Public Bailout
  • EU To Back Galileo Bailout And But Faces Tough Talks On New Funds
  • Latest AeroAstro Asset Tracking Satellite Downlink Decoder Ready For Deployment

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement