by Lieutenant Colonel Jeffrey N. Rule
United States Marine Corps
United States Army
War College, Class of 2013
“Machines don’t fight
wars. People do, and they use their minds.”
— Col John R. Boyd
Numerous
articles and books have recently appeared criticizing current leadership of the
Armed Services and their collective inability to think critically, to adapt, or
to innovate quickly — as well
as their lack of tactical, operational, or strategic agility.[1]
Additionally, many of the same critiques have emanated from the services for
decades — most notably during
and after the Vietnam War. Furthermore, there is a large body of literature in
the broad realm of “strategic studies” that seeks to offer insight and
knowledge about how to operate in the most fraught wartime environments
characterized by friction, uncertainty, disorder, fluidity, and complexity
regardless of the type of competition. From Sun Tzu’s time, through Clausewitz,
Liddell Hart, and to the modern era, those elements of the environment remain
constants in the nature of war.
All
U.S. military institutions understand these constants and have, through the
years, sought to comprehend and conquer them. The services have not sat idle:
their individual doctrines, educational institutions, and professional journals
abound with the need to create more adaptive and agile and thinking leaders — and have done so for quite some
time. So, why is there a constant criticism inside and outside the services for
collective failures in creating agile leaders able to cope successfully with
the inherent complexity and unpredictability of war?