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Douglas C Rapé's avatar

Integrity between the leader and the led, the led and the leader is the single most important factor in the profession of arms. I simply must have total faith in what you say. It cannot be otherwise where lives are at stake; where victory or defeat occur or where the very fate of the nation rests on trust.

If a leader is not honest, trust is destroyed. But, it gets worse. When you insult subordinates with lies you insult them and denigrate their intellectual ability in that you believe they will be believe. Once that state is reached a unit begins to degrade rapidly.

I had the good fortune to serve under individuals who took this seriously. It did not even have to be mentioned. It was as natural as sunrise.

Over the last third of my career things were no longer so clear. The deception by omission was obvious at the highest levels of DoD. I once told a sympathetic senior: “ I follow orders. But, don’t make me pretend this is true. I know it is not and they know it is not. To pretend otherwise makes liars of us all.”

Eventually the force goes from skeptical to cynical. From a distance the structure looks solid. When you are much closer you can hear and see the termites.

The Corps needs a reset. A recommitment. Love and war are like no other human endeavors. Both rest on integrity and trust. Please correct me if my observations are inaccurate.

John Watkins's avatar

I wish that everyone could read Gen Krulaks writing on this. I learned about having integrity from my family, and it really hit home while in the Corps. Learning to be responsible for your actions and doing your best to lead your troops is a way of life. It was important in the Corps and in life.

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