"Army of One" A Senior NCO's Perspective
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"Army of One" A Senior NCO's Perspective Expand / Collapse
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Posted 11/27/2003 12:02 PM


Trooper

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"Army of One"
A Senior NCO's Perspective

by CSM Don Purdy (USA Ret)
(CSM Prudy was a 1994 inductee in the Ranger Hall of Fame http://www.trrausa.com/dhmor_inductees.htm )

1) Some senior NCOs are nothing more than bootlickers, who sing the "Army of One" song to their superior officers everyday. Commanders need to hear the good, bad and the ugly, and then be given good solid recommendations. They need their senior NCOs to be TRAINERS. LEAD BY EXAMPLE. DO as the troops do. LEAD FROM THE FRONT. GET IN THE DIRT. This bullshit of "I have done that" is garbage. What you are doing now is what counts. Quit worrying about your next assignment. Focus on your mission now. Your mission is to train soldiers for war, and it's damned hard work. If you do it right you will leave the Army in worse shape physically than when you came in. BE HARD BUT FAIR. You must have MORAL COURAGE.

2) Training is just a word they can't spell. Chief trainer means chief bootlicker. TICKET PUNCHERS.

3) "Moral courage" means telling your commander what he wants to hear these days. I was condemned by my peers and superiors for speaking up, and telling it like it was. I was called a relic from the past that should be put in a glass case. I was focused on training for war not peace. Discipline was my watchword, and the soldiers did not decide what punishment was right or wrong where I served as CSM. I was the Chief Trainer. The buck stopped with me. I participated in all training and lead by example. I was told by a Division CSM that I would never serve above BN level because I was too intrusive. That means I scared commanders with the truth. The next thing he asked was why do you train with your soldiers? The question was shocking, but the answer was simple. When I speak everyone listens. That went over his head like a tent. I carried a rifle not a pistol, and I damn well knew how to use that weapon and my soldiers knew how to use their weapons as well.

4) Combatives are important. Boxing, wrestling, and bayonet fighting are not antiquated. CQB is just what it means, Close Quarter Battle. MOUT, Trench systems, and bunkers must be cleared, and you had better be aggressive and prepared to do bayonet or hand to hand fighting. When others were laughing at my unit for doing these, my soldiers were prepared and understood what "fix bayonets" meant. They were aggressive and well disciplined. Substandard performers were put out immediately. My First Sergeants were not mail men or chow deliverers; they were the Chief Trainers of their companies.

5) We trained for war not peace. Live fires were a priority, and were not canned. Leaders and soldiers had to react. Maneuver elements maneuvered, and had to rely on the SBF not to shoot them but only the enemy. Bayonets were fixed and there were dummy targets for the soldiers engage with those bayonets. Re-supply missions were planned and executed. The battlefield had to be policed of casualties, and equipment by any means available, even if it meant driving vehicles cross country, or physically carrying the wounded. Reload drills, dead gunner drills, and crew drills were executed over, and over, and over again. These were executed day and night. NODS went on your face when the sun went down. They weren't hanging around your neck. We executed live fires at night with NODS in the woods, and the live fires were not canned. Raids, ambushes, search and attack were all executed at night up to company size. This took us over one year to get to that level. Mortars could hit their targets. Units could move silently day or night, and didn't get lost. We did not rely on GPS. WE USED MAPS AND COMPASSES. We lived out of our rucksacks, slept on the ground, in all types of weather from the BN CMDR on down. Frostbite, and heat casualties were not common because we trained to live and fight in the same environment. We did not look like bums. We shaved every day, wore our equipment properly, camouflaged our faces (and hands when necessary), soldiers knew how to maintain themselves and their equipment in the field, and uniformity was important. Soldiers knew what a cat hole was and trash was carried in their rucks, not thrown on the ground or buried for the hogs to dig up. Uniforms were worn properly. The companies received one hot meal a day and understood how to conduct tactical feeding. Our cooks knew how to function in the environment. The combat trains did not live in tents. Their perimeter was secure, weapons were clean, and noise and light discipline were maintained. Cooks, clerks, and all other support personnel knew how to use their weapons, and were trained on basic Infantry skills. Misfires were damn well rare and punishment was swift when it did happen. We suffered no live fire deaths because we trained properly, and used good old-fashioned common sense. We never had the soldiers execute missions they were not properly trained for. The NCOs trained the soldiers; the officers commanded. Our motto was "what ever you do, do it right!" Rate of sick call in the field was almost zero. Morale was high because of good, hard leadership from the front, and realistic, tough training. We even executed a day of live fire training during support cycles. You need a strong CSM who understands discipline and training. He can talk it and walk it.

6) There is no such thing as a good field soldier. You are either a soldier or not a soldier. Everything from appearance to police call is important. This bullshit about my space and my rights is just that: BULLSHIT. Barracks are not his or her home; it's a place for them to live. For saying this I was told I had a mess kit mentality. This individuality BS of "I need my own room" is garbage. We waste more money building these Condos so soldiers can feel good, and not be part of a team; its sickening. They should live in fire team bays. It builds cohesion. Key control alone is a nightmare. "Of course don't bother the poor soldier, just let him live like a pig. When he gets sick or you find out he or she is a drug dealer, blame
it on the NCO Corps even though you, the illustrious battalion commander and brigade commander, said 'leave the soldiers alone in their precious rooms.' " Soldiers are owed a place to sleep, their pay, and the best leadership and training that can be provided.

7) DISCIPLINE is the key. DRILL AND CEREMONY is the foundation of discipline. When I say fall in I want to hear your heals coming together. When I speak, you jump. All ceremonies should be executed with weapons so each unit can execute the 15-count manual of arms. Carrying a card around in your pocket does not develop good morals. Morals are developed through solid leadership not gimmicks and headgear.

8) You want to be politically correct, stay on the block. You want to be different or an individual looking to be a victim, stay on the block. If you're a pervert and proud of it, stay on the block. You want to be a soldier, then become part of a disciplined team. This is not a job, it's a profession. You're here to fight our country's war, not to be a gut-eating, self-serving individual. Senior Officers, and NCOs, I am telling you right now, if things don't change, you will have the blood of soldiers on your hands. There is an enemy out there who is determined, and he is not concerned about individual feelings, or time out. If you don't train them hard now, and demand from them now what in the hell do you think the enemy is going to do to them. If they can't take the heat in training, how are they going to take it on the battlefield? Technology, my ass, soldiers win wars. Be hard on them now or watch them die, or worse, break and run. BE HARD, BUT FAIR! Being fair does not mean they dictate punishment or babying them. A Russian General said "Hard on the training field, easy, on the battlefield". General Patton said "Leading from the rear is like trying to push spaghetti up hill." You want your soldiers to respect you not love you. When they look at you they should see a competent leader. The best compliment I ever received was from a soldier who was PCSing. I was a PLT Sergeant in the First Ranger Battalion. He said,"Sergeant Purdy, I hated to hear you come in, in the morning, and some times I just flat hated you, but I would follow you to hell with gasoline drawers on."

http://globalspecops.com/armyofone.html



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Post #14717
Posted 11/27/2003 12:58 PM


Seasoned Vet

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While it's always a good read, this has been posted at least twice that I know of.

Make The Voices Stop!
Post #85588
Posted 11/27/2003 1:02 PM


Trooper

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Beating my face as we speak !!!

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Post #85589
Posted 11/27/2003 1:24 PM


BS6's Dude

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Post this as many times as you like - It will ALWAYS be pertinent...

Hoo-YAH!



 
Post #85590
Posted 11/27/2003 1:57 PM


Regular Joe

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You know, I get gripped at almost daily because of my mentalitty. This Army of one, be all you can be, has all been crap. I have heard stories of the 60's and 70's Army and how it was. Well, when I came in in 97. The LAW was laid down. There was no if ands or buts. Officers knew there lanes and NCO's kept them in them. My LT and I are always at each other because of my leadership. I was raised hard in the Army so I am hard on the soldiers but I have found out that soldiers remeber the good and the bad NCO's and I have yet to hear one bad comment about me. I never toot my own horn but I feel soldiers need hard love. If they didnt then they would have stayed home.

We need hard NCO's that are straight to the face and Officers who support them. If we can lose all the new fangled mottos and worried about makeing Joe into a fighting machine we would be "The force of Choice"


Post #85591
Posted 11/27/2003 2:10 PM


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Post it as much as ya want CSM Purdy is the Man!This needs to be drilled into every NCOs head untill they get it-Hooah!



sticky307
Post #85592
Posted 11/28/2003 3:26 AM


Detachment Sergeant

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quote:
Originally posted by BrianOKeeffe

Beating my face as we speak !!!
Why should that be, 1SG? I don't know how I missed the other postings, but this is the first time I've seen CSM Purdy's perspective.

This is a fabulous take on the way things need to be. It is also quite timely to me, as I have to admit that I have been coasting a little in my job from time to time. This passage particularly strikes me:
quote:
This bullshit of "I have done that" is garbage. What you are doing now is what counts. Quit worrying about your next assignment. Focus on your mission now. Your mission is to train soldiers for war, and it's damned hard work.
I have been guilty of feeling sorry for myself for being in legland, and concentrating only on getting back to Fort Bragg. I have on occasion stood before my troops, thinking "look at me; I'm a Master Parachutist, so therefore I'm cool." But the reality is this: I'm in charge of 60 soldiers who's mission is to ensure that North Korea doesn't get froggy, or that if it does, to prepare our forces with the best Indications and Warnings available, so as to defeat any NK threat. I've sorta fallen into a comfort zone as an administrator rather than a trainer. I'm glad that I read CSM Purdy's missive, as it refocuses me toward the job that I have to do now. What I realize is that if I'm not training my guys as hard as I can, I'm not only short-changing the Army, but my soldiers, as well. I say, thank you for the post.


   ALWAYS OUT FRONT
Post #85593
Posted 11/28/2003 7:19 AM