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Thread: Breaking News! Rumsfeld is stepping down!

  1. #21
    Small Wars Journal SWJED's Avatar
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    Default Early News Reports...


  2. #22
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    Default Gates of Defense

    Robert Gates has done a pretty good job at Texas A&M. (The campus is about 30 miles from my house.) A&M has a strong military tradition. It sent more lieutenants to World War II than any other school. While it is no longer mandatory to be a member of the Corps of Cadets, they still make up an important part of the student body. A&M also houses the Bush 41 presidential library and it hosts numerous events on current affairs about the hotspots around the world.

    I think he will do fine, if the opponents of the war do not decide to make him a piniata, like they did Rumsfeld.

    He has already had one of the toughest jobs in the country--trying to find a winning football coach for Texas A&M.

  3. #23
    Council Member zenpundit's Avatar
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    Default Gates

    I heartily endorse the selection of Robert Gates and encourage SWC members to check out his memoir.

    Gates is a tough but not unreasonable manager. His time at CIA under Casey gave him a deep look at covert and special operations and his service on the NSC gives a much broader perspective. Gates was not a " staff guy" but a key presidential adviser and an adviser to other principals. Some gravitas here.

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    Council Member Culpeper's Avatar
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    In my opinion Rumsfield did a great job in the beginning where conventional warfare was the stronger point of the sword. I don't know if he was doing a good job switching to counterinsurgency tactics or not. Maybe someone here could could elaborate fuller on this matter. Thanks.

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    Default It was a nine inning game...

    Quote Originally Posted by Culpeper View Post
    In my opinion Rumsfield did a great job in the beginning where conventional warfare was the stronger point of the sword. I don't know if he was doing a good job switching to counterinsurgency tactics or not. Maybe someone here could could elaborate fuller on this matter. Thanks.
    ... we declared 'game won' in the fourth. Zinni was spot on and warned us that 'regime change' is not an end state. Great tactics equate to sand in the wind unless there is a strategy to achieve a defined end state.

  6. #26
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    Default Rumsfeld - Gates News Roundup...

    Way too many links to post here individually - go here to the SWJ Daily News Links for:

    Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld

    • Press Conference by the President - White House News Transcript
    • Bush Replaces Rumsfeld After Republican Defeat - Voice of America
    • Bush, Rumsfeld Agree: ‘Timing Right for New Leadership at Pentagon’ - AFPS
    • Rumsfeld to Step Down as Defense Secretary - Washington Post
    • Rumsfeld Resigns Under Pressure - Washington Times
    • A Meek Departure From the War Cabinet - Washington Post
    • Rumsfeld Resigns as Defense Secretary - New York Times
    • Rumsfeld Resigns; Bush Vows to ‘Find Common Ground’ - New York Times
    • Rumsfeld Resigns as Secretary of Defense - Stars and Stripes
    • Rumsfeld Resigns After Democrat Victory - London Daily Telegraph
    • Rumsfeld and Bush: Casualties of Iraq - London Times
    • Shake-Up, Part 2: Rumsfeld Departs - Christian Science Monitor
    • Rumsfeld Resigns As Secretary of Defense - Associated Press
    • Rumsfeld Quits After Democrats Ride Iraq to Win - Reuters
    • Rumsfeld Out as Bush Takes Election Blame - Agence France-Presse
    • Rumsfeld Replaced After Poll Loss - BBC News
    • Rumsfeld’s Resignation Decided Yesterday, Bush Tells Reporters - AFPS
    • Bush Changes Tunes on Rumsfeld Staying - Associated Press
    • Rumsfeld Departure Shakes Bush Administration - BBC News
    • Rumsfeld Sought New Role for Pentagon - Los Angeles Times
    • Rumsfeld, A Newsmaker Who's Certainly Hard to Follow - Washington Post
    • Rumsfeld a Forceful, Divisive Pentagon Chief - Reuters
    • Rumsfeld Worked to Transform Defense Department During Tenure - AFPS
    • Rumsfeld: Long Public and Private Career - Associated Press
    • Profile: Donald Rumsfeld - BBC News
    • Exit Strategy, Post-Rumsfeld - Los Angeles Times Editorial
    • Rumsfeld’s Departure - New York Times Editorial
    • The Verdict on Rumsfeld - Boston Globe Editorial
    • The Defense Secretary We Had - Washington Post Commentary
    • "Like Rumsfeld, Only Smaller" - Tech Central Station Commentary
    • Why Master Tactician Had to Fall on His Sword - London Times Commentary
    • Casualty of Own 'War on Terror' - London Daily Telegraph Commentary
    • I Question The Timing, And The Sanity - Captain's Quarters Blog
    • Mr. Rumsfeld Out, But Problems Remain - Westhawk Blog
    • Rumsfeld Resigns - Belmont Club Blog
    • Rumsfeld Resigns – With Analysis - Austin Bay Blog


    Secretary of Defense Nominee Robert Gates

    • Gates Expected to Make Changes at Pentagon - Voice of America
    • Gaining Military’s Trust Is Early Step - New York Times
    • Robert Gates Lauded As Breaker of Barriers - Washington Post
    • Robert Gates, a Cautious Player - New York Times
    • Nomination Offers ‘Fresh Perspective' - USA Today
    • Gates Faces Major Challenges - New York Times
    • The Man Who'll Replace Rummy - Time Magazine
    • Defense Secretary Nominee Boasts Strong Intelligence Background - AFPS
    • Biographical Information on Robert Gates - Associated Press
    • Profile: Robert Gates - BBC News

  7. #27
    Council Member slapout9's Avatar
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    Default Question?

    Dave, you have just been promoted to the new position of 5 star general. What would be your strategy for Iraq?

  8. #28
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    Default First up...

    Quote Originally Posted by slapout9 View Post
    Dave, you have just been promoted to the new position of 5 star general. What would be your strategy for Iraq?
    Fire myself and hire a slew of Iron Majors and Strategic Corporals to take my place...

  9. #29
    Council Member slapout9's Avatar
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    And your orders sir?

  10. #30
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    Default Troops Fear Rumsfeld's Exit Will End Their Iraq Mission

    10 November London Times - Troops Fear Rumsfeld's Exit Will End Their Iraq Mission by Martin Fletcher.

    Half of America and the upper echelons of the US military may be cheering Donald Rumsfeld’s resignation from the post of Defence Secretary, but there was no rejoicing yesterday among those most directly affected by his decisions: the frontline soldiers in Iraq.

    Troops expressed little pleasure at the departure of the man responsible for their protracted deployment to a hostile country where 2,839 of their comrades have died.

    Indeed, some members of the 101st Airborne Division and other troops approached by The Times as they prepared to fly home from Baghdad airport yesterday expressed concern that Robert Gates, Mr Rumsfeld’s successor, and the Democrat-controlled Congress, might seek to wind down their mission before it was finished.

    Mr Rumsfeld “made decisions, he stuck with them and he did what he thought was right, whether people agreed with it, liked it, or not”, Staff Sergeant Frank Notaro said. He insisted that Iraq was better off now than before the war.

    Staff Sergeant Michael Howard said: “It’s a blow to the military. He was a good Secretary of Defence. He kept us focused. He kept the leaders focused. It’s going to be hard to fill his shoes.”

    But one US army colonel, who did not want to be named, said that such positive views were uncommon in the higher ranks of the US military. “We are the ones closer to the problem. We are the ones who have the broader picture,” he said.

    The colonel criticised Mr Rumsfeld for sending too few troops to Iraq, and for refusing to listen to the advice of his generals. He noted that General Eric Shinseki, the former US Army Chief of Staff, was dismissed for demanding more troops, while General John Abizaid, the commander of Central Command, was the sole general to have differed publicly with Mr Rumsfeld and survived...

  11. #31
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    Default News, Editorials, Commentary and Blog Roundup...


  12. #32
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    Default Gates Insight: Recent Speech at Texas A&M

    12 November Washington Post - How (Not) to Run the Pentagon. Robert Gates speech excerpt from 8 September 2006.

    It is a fact of life in institutions that leaders come and go. Sometimes when they leave, there is regret among the professionals and staff who remain. More often, the celebrations begin before the departing executive's taillights are out of sight. Some leaders arrive with ambitious agendas and seek to impose them by fiat -- unilaterally and from above. They usually provoke either paralyzing opposition and internal warfare, or see the reversal of every action immediately after their departure...

    I have long believed that the secret to successful leadership of public institutions -- especially in leading change -- is the involvement in decision-making of those who carry out the institution's mission: involvement in setting the agenda, involvement in shaping options, involvement in decisions, and involvement in implementation.

  13. #33
    Council Member Uboat509's Avatar
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    Default

    While we are on the subject of new SECDEFs what does everybody think about Max Boot as SECDEF? He has reluctantly accepted the Neocon label but he is no partisan cheerleader. He really seems to have a handle on the military and he is unafraid to say what he thinks even if it is not in keeping with the party line.

    SFC W

  14. #34
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    Default Gates May Rein In Pentagon Activities

    14 November Washington Post - Gates May Rein In Pentagon Activities by Walter Pincus.

    The nomination of Robert M. Gates as secretary of defense has begun to ease concerns in the intelligence community about the rapid growth of Pentagon intelligence activities since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, said experts inside and outside the government and on Capitol Hill.

    Gates, a former CIA director, has a long history of opposing expansive Pentagon intelligence activities. He has voiced unease about roles being taken over by Pentagon personnel, in part because more than 80 percent of all intelligence spending is now done by Defense Department agencies.

    Donald H. Rumsfeld, the outgoing defense secretary, has vastly expanded Pentagon intelligence activities, increasing operations overseas and creating a new position and a new agency to handle military intelligence...

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    Default Gates management style at Texas A&M

    This post links an interesting article from Texas Monthly that was written before his nomination was announced. There is much talk about transformation and how he got the Deans and the faculty involved in decisions. The article hit the news stands about the time his nomination was announced.

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    Default The Army We Need

    19 November New York Times editorial - The Army We Need.

    One welcome dividend of Donald Rumsfeld’s departure from the Pentagon is that the United States will now have a chance to rebuild the Army he spent most of his tenure running down.

    Mr. Rumsfeld didn’t like the lessons the Army drew from Vietnam — that politicians should not send American troops to fight a war of choice unless they went in with overwhelming force, a clearly defined purpose and strong domestic backing. He didn’t like the Clintonian notion of using the United States military to secure and rebuild broken states.

    And when circumstances in Afghanistan and Iraq called for just the things Mr. Rumsfeld didn’t like, he refused to adapt, letting the Army, and American interests, pay the price for his arrogance.

    So one of the first challenges for the next defense secretary and the next Congress is to repair, rebuild and reshape the nation’s ground forces. They need to renew the morale and confidence of America’s serving men and women and restore the appeal of career military service for the brightest young officers.

    That will require building a force large enough to end more than three years of unsustainably rapid rotations of units back into battle, misuse of the National Guard, overuse of the Reserves and conscription of veterans back into active service.

    Congress also needs to work harder at rebuilding the links between the battlefront and the home front that a healthy democracy needs. That does not require reinstating the draft — a bad idea for military as well as political reasons. It requires a Congress willing to resume its proper constitutional role in debating and deciding essential questions of war and peace...
    More at the link...

  17. #37
    Council Member slapout9's Avatar
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    Default Question

    Dave, in the article he recommends the USMC be increased to 180,000 and concentrate on the tactical assault force in readiness mission. What does the USMC think about that in view of it's history with small (irregular warfare)?

  18. #38
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    Default We shall see..

    Quote Originally Posted by slapout9 View Post
    Dave, in the article he recommends the USMC be increased to 180,000 and concentrate on the tactical assault force in readiness mission. What does the USMC think about that in view of it's history with small (irregular warfare)?
    Like any large organization there are many different opinions on the end-state size of the Corps. My personal opinion is I would like to at least see our size grow to compensate for the Marines now asssigned to MARSOC.

    As has been stated on this board previously by some, increasing "gunfighter" manpower levels is a tricky business in that there has to be a corresponding increase in the support structure.

    We just changed over Commandants so we might hear more on this issue in the near future....

  19. #39
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    Default CMC Speaks

    Quote Originally Posted by SWJED View Post
    We just changed over Commandants so we might hear more on this issue in the near future....
    22 November AFPS - Ops Tempo May Require Larger Marine Corps, Commandant Says

    The Marine Corps may have to grow to keep up a tempo of operations that has caused individual and institutional stress in the force, the service's commandant said here today.

    At a roundtable discussion with the Pentagon press corps, Gen. James Conway said working to alleviate the individual and institutional strain on the Marine Corps is his major goal as commandant.

    Marines spend seven months deployed to Iraq and seven months home. In 2003, the general told reporters, he said the stress would show by the third deployment. “I was wrong,” he said today. Turnover in the units has bought the Corps some time, he explained. By the time a unit makes its second deployment, only about 40 to 50 percent of the unit’s Marines had served in the unit’s the first deployment. By the third deployment, that percentage drops to about 10 percent, he said.

    Some units are preparing for their fourth deployment. “Virtually no one in those units went the first time,” he said.

    If the current deployment trend continues, Conway said, Marines and their families may leave the service. “The young families, Marines (and) sailors may say it’s more than they are willing to bear,” he said.

    The Marine Corps would like to see a seven-month deployment followed by 14 months at home station, the commandant said. In peacetime, the deployment tempo is six months deployed, 18 months at home.

    In addition to the stress on individual Marines and their families, Conway said, the Marine Corps as an institution is also strained. “Progressively over time, our Marine Corps has become a good counterinsurgency-capable force, but we’re not providing to the nation some of the other things we should be able to do,” he said. “We are not sending battalions like we used to for mountain warfare training, the jungle training. We’re not doing combined arms exercises that we used to do for the fire and maneuver. (These are) activities that we have to be prepared to do.”

    Conway said the Marine Corps mission includes these contingencies, but the training time is not available. He said the Corps could do whatever mission it is assigned, but there is an increased risk. “We may not deploy as quickly as we once did, we may not have quite the training that we once had, but we would be able to do the mission,” he said.

    The Corps can ease these stresses and strains two ways, Conway said. “One is reducing the requirement,” he said. “The other is growing the force for what we call the Long War.”

    The Marine Corps currently has 180,000 troops. Conway would not say how much the service would have to grow to make the 1-to-2 ratio for deployment/home station time possible.

    Yet even in Iraq, the Corps could surge troops in if called upon, he said. “If that requirement is levied on us, we will provide,” the commandant said. But that, Conway said, would affect the Corps in the long term. “Anything that increases that requirement simply has long-range consequences on that rotation scheme and force generation model,” he said.

    Turning to the war in Iraq, Conway said Marines in Anbar province are seeing some successes. The province is still a dangerous place, he acknowledged, “but there are still some positive things that we see happening out there.”

    Tribal leaders in the far west around the Syrian border city of Qaim are stepping up and taking on al Qaeda in Iraq, he said, and it is relatively peaceful in that area. In other areas of the province, he said, 400 local Sunni Arabs have volunteered for the police force. Even in Ramadi, local Iraqis want to “exorcise al Qaeda from the city,” the general said.

  20. #40
    Council Member Uboat509's Avatar
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by SWJED View Post
    14 November Washington Post - Gates May Rein In Pentagon Activities by Walter Pincus.
    I overlooked this one earlier. If it is true then all my support for his nomination just evaporated. The reason so much of the intelligence is generated by the DOD is because we are better at it for reasons that I cannot go into here. I would really hate to see us hamstrung by CIA parochialism. I sincerely hope that this article is overstated.

    SFC W

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