Proceedings and Its Others
Hi,
I was wondering what people think are the equivalent(s) (if any) to USNI Proceedings. I think of AWC Parameters and NWC Review as roughly comparable, to each other, but not to Proceedings; Military Review is less abstract and wide-ranging than each of the three publications already named. Without going through the various other publications, I think of Proceedings as arguably unique with respect to how varied its content - in terms of article length, topics covered, viewpoints published, etc. - is.
I don't ask purely out of curiosity - I'm trying to write a paper on how bureaucracies respond to challenges (such as the collapse of the USSR, or the encroachment represented by Goldwater-Nichols). As such, I'm thinking of using Proceedings as a source for what "the Navy" (yes, I know, it is not a monolith) "thought" about those challenges. I'll probably compare the Navy to one or more of the other services. If people could identify what they thought of as similar publications along some of the dimensions named, that would be very helpful.
And while as noted above, I'm not asking out of curiosity, perhaps the relative merits and features of the various publications might prove interesting fodder for posting.
Regards
Jeff
I subscribed to Proceedings for almost 30 years
but let it lapse about five years ago due to what I though was a distressing trend toward political correctness and too many articles 'written' by too many FlagOs. It may or may not have changed since then but they lost me. that said, it is still a unique publication and a valuable one and arguably the best of all the US service journals in my opinion.
Army magazine has been a party line pub for years -- occasionally to an almost sickening extent -- but the last few issues have been better; hopefully, that's an indicator of much needed change.
The Marine Corps Gazette is still a good publication and has been pretty consistent over the years.
Hmm. Differing viewpoints, perhaps
Quote:
Originally Posted by
mmx1
I don't know if qualifies as politically correct, but Capt. Kelly's piece in the July Proceedings, "Rewriting the Rules of War" did not endear me to the magazine's editorial choice.
. . .
This is something I expect out of the Weekly Standard, not a professional military journal.
Captain Kelly is merely stating fact; as such he is NOT being politically correct. Good for him. Good for Proceedings for publishing it. Professional discussion is their reason d'etre.
His point is absolutely correct, no matter how abhorrent you may find it. I do not find it all abhorrent but I do accept that the US today is unwilling to wage war properly or fully for a variety of reasons barring a war of national survival. We have made, rightly or wrongly, a conscious choice to attempt to use limited war as a method of enforcement of will. My belief is that is an unwise choice but it's been the norm since 25 June 1950. History shows that it has not done well as a methodology.
The problem, of course, is that other nations (and a number of non-state actors) have realized this self imposed limitation and are taking full advantage of it. Captain Kelly just makes the point that such self imposed limitations are in fact playing into the hands of these contemporary and probable future opponents.
The counterpoint is that many in this country would object to a short, very violent and fully engaged war as being brutal and unnecessary -- when in fact, that approach would almost certainly cause fewer overall casualties and less damage to everyone and everything involved (including the poor civilians caught in the crossfire) than does the IMO foolish attempt to 'limit' war -- a process that will invariably lead to a protracted, few casualties but environmentally and politically damaging in all respects conflict of dubious (at best...) resolution.
Not to mention the domestic political legacy of divisiveness that descends into bitterness from each of these so-called limited wars... :(
I think valid professional discourse calls for statements of fact and not the 'nice' and accepted views of society at large or of the military heirarchy. That discourse should lead to selections of courses of action and tweaks to doctrine that will be acceptable to the broader society. If certain precepts, unpalatable to some are omitted from the discussion, then they will not be properly considered and thus may reappear by default at a later time because no one knew that the precepts were judged unsuitable.
As evidence of that let me offer that all the counterinsurgency techniques -- and all the problems with detainee operations and interrogation -- that were learned the hard way in Viet Nam were largely ignored in those professional journals from 1975 until 2003. I suggest we saw the results of that and did not like what we saw...
That those lessons were ignored with rare exceptions was political correctness of a different kind, in that case, obeisance to the desires of the senior leadership to avoid counterinsurgency as it was hard and messy. Good try but as they say, the other guy gets a vote.
The Weekly standard is an avowedly political publication, it and its merits or failures are not really germane to anything on this board.
If the focus of a professional journal is to discuss all aspects of the profession, to omit some articles or topics because they may be offensive to some is to stifle discussion. That is political correctness.
Is that what you wish?
Didn't read the article, only saw the quote you
provided so I can't comment on what he said or how he said it. I would note that not everyone is a great writer and some have difficulty putting heartfelt thoughts in a coherent to others format.
However based on what you did quote, I have to say that IMO Captain Kelly's first paragraph is essentially correct, as is the second. Whether they have any relevance to the rest of his article or to the world today is another matter entirely. In any event, I can see his point on the topic and I see yours. I suggest that it's a difference in background and outlook that creates the dichotomy and that, while you can condemn his if you wish, that had the two of you talked in person, it might come across differently...
His third paragraph though is I believe important and correct. Let me give you some examples. When a soldier is killed or several are, units today hold a memorial service. Fine in this war; wasn't possible in WW II, Korea or Viet Nam due to the speed of activity and the sheer number of casualties. That is a gesture of respect for the fallen and it is certainly well meant -- it is also potentially a combat distractor. Every death is now investigated; that also is not possible in a large war for the same reasons and is also a combat distractor (not least as the Investigator[s] intervie anyone with knowledge of the incident). In short, just these two simple examples are indicative of a trend that has potential harmful effects. The troops get used to them and in a tough, fast war, they won't see them; thus I submit they are a bad practice.
Armed forces are a reflection of the society from which they come. We have, over the last 60 year become a much kinder and gentler nation. Unfortunately, at base level, war has not become one nanogram more kind or gentle.
Other factors like the constraints imposed by the desire to hold civilian casualties to an absolute minimum which drives the choice of 'limited' war -- a decision that paradoxically generally serves to prolong combat and thus increase casualties of all types on both sides and exacerbate battle damage. It may not be apparent to you but to many troops serving in Afghanistan and Iraq, the ROE and the presence of the media are frequently constraints on action because the kids are afraid they're going to get a court Martial for doing what they should do. It's also noteworthy that the British troops in Iraq have surfaced the same complaint. Many of those rules; the investigations and memorial services I cited above; dozens of other things like clearing targets with Lawyers; those things are not necessarily imposed by opponents of this war but they are things the system does in an attempt (foolishly and fruitlessly, I believe) to placate those opponents. Those things do in fact have a softening impact on most -- not all (fortunately) -- units in the Armed forces
We let the troops get too kind and gentle and they will suffer; that's his point.
All that gets way off the issue -- that issue is that Captain Kelly is expressing his gripes with the system. That may be unprofessional to you but professionals are people also. You can gripe in this professional forum that he's being political because he griped in another professional forum that politics and correctness were ruining the armed forces. Seems a fair trade to me.
And you certainly don't have to read Proceedings if you don't want to.
You and I can differ as well...
Quote:
Originally Posted by
LawVol
I just read this piece from Capt Kelly and found it incredibly short-sighted, especially for an O-6. It gives no thought to the strategic aspect of war. He seems quite willing to toss out the strategic goals in favor of allowing "young men barely out of high school who are still maturing and whose values are still in the formative stage" to form our response to international law. One the one hand he appears to excuse some of this conduct because of the nature of the situation and those in it, but then praises the result for the same reason. He's trying to play both sides.
. . .
. . .
What the Captain terms as political correctness is not that but a fact of war. Wasn't it Clausewitz that said that war is a continuation of politics by other means? Doesn't this mean, then, that war is inherently political? That aside, political decisions will always factor into war decisions because of the strategic implications of tactical actions. I would have thought that Abu Graihb would have taught that lesson. Fighting war in the way the Captain seems to want would merely prolong the fight as more and more enemies would be created. One can only hope that this opinion is in the extreme minority.
I think you're reading into his essay what you wish to instead of reading what he said.
I had not read the article but I've seen a number of comments like yours that tend to excoriate anyone who suggests that judging the actions of people engaged in comment is best restricted to those that have been there -- as opposed to just expressing any opinion on those actions which anyone can do.
So I went to the Proceediongs website and purchased the article. As an aside, it was not clear anywhere in that process whether he was a Navy Captain or a Captain, USMC. Shocking, I know but Marines can and do write for publication.
You comment that he gives no thought to the strategic aspect of war; yet to me, his first paragraph does exactly that:
Quote:
"Before going to war again, our leaders must first decide on what we mean to accomplish and how far we are willing to go to win. Otherwise, we will again subject our troops to unnecessary confusion, stress, and personal risk, as we did in Vietnam and are doing now in Iraq."
Seems like an extremely valid -- and strategic -- premise to me.
You then stage a polemic against his admittedly impassioned rhetoric in the body of the article but I suggest that he's merely expressing the frustration that many on the ground in Iraq live with on a daily basis. You choose to see it as an assault on liberal values but it seems to me to be simply a statement of reality. Soldiers are emphatically not police officers and the goals and the mores are quite different -- and they should be. Have to be, in fact.
I have three sons, all have been soldiers, one still is and the other two are cops and they know the difference and behave accordingly.
In any event, I do not see the body of his essay as an attack on anyone. His final paragraph is simply another statement of fact:
Quote:
"Today, opponents of this war are attempting to infuse political correctness and civilian ethical standards into our troops who do the fighting for them. If they go too far, they may end up destroying the military warrior culture altogether. That should worry Americans greatly, because the jihadists are under no such moral constraints."
You may not agree with him. Let me suggest that the reverse of that would be to attempt to infuse purely military with no civilizing restraints processes on the civilian law enforcement community. I certainly would not agree with that. Nor, I suspect, would you.
We are, as I've noted earlier, a far more kind and gentle society than we were even 30 years ago. That is progress and I'm glad that is so. Yet as Captain Kelly says, our current opponents are not so inclined and it is indeed possible to proceed to far down a given path and reach a point of no return. He's merely suggesting that is not a desirable outcome.
Which should be obvious.
Same chord or same misreading?
Thanks. All us ORFs are possibly excessively