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Organization and Personnel Management


This section examines the explicit, often written aspects of the people side of the military.  A tendency to equate "organization" with "organization chart" has led some to conclude that the formal, written elements of an organization are not important.  However, strategists have come to realize that some of these elements, such as individual rotation policies and 6-month command tours in Vietnam, can have a severe and negative effect on the factors that are important, such as trust, cohesion, leadership, and readiness.  So they must be considered in any examination of the role and utility of military force.

"Breaking the Phalanx:  A New Design for Landpower in the 21st Century." Colonel Doug MacGregor, USA, has prepared a briefing derived from his book Breaking the Phalanx (Praeger 1997).  PowerPoint 97 presentations:  Part 1, Why Organization Matters (145 KB), Part 2, Design of a New Army Structure (134 KB), and Part 3, Examples, Logistics, French & British Organization, and Summary (169 KB), Chinese Army View (88 KB). Also, Backup charts (675 KB) and  proposal for a Light Reconnaissance Strike Group (414 KB)

The Lewis Report:  Time to Regenerate, A GenX Response to Dr. Wong's Monograph.  Former Ranger officer Mark Lewis on why our best and brightest are bailing out in record numbers. Special to DNI, on the Leadership Page.

"Culture Wars," MAJ Donald E. Vandergriff's detailed study of the evolution of the US Army's personnel management system, its problems (including careerism, officer "bloat" and risk aversion), and what needs to be done to ensure that the Army remains an effective instrument of national policy into the 21st Century.

Recruiting done right.  The Peace Corps offers low pay (~$10/day, including relocation allowance), abysmal housing, no promotions, and no retirement plan.  Like the Marine Corps, you get adventure and the chance to make a difference.  Also like the Marine Corps, the PC is very selective and makes its recruiting goals.

Briefing by LTG Timothy J. Maude, DCSPER, on officer management and retention, 19 Oct 2000.  Retention has reached crisis conditions, especially among company grade officers, and particularly USMA graduates and ROTC DMGs.  The number of senior officers turning down command billets is unprecedented.

About the Comments (Full text of the references are available on Infowar)

 

Comments:

374
Kinder & Gentler Boot Camp - A "Hard Right" or an "Easy Wrong"?  July 24, 2000
372
Sayen Report: Officer Bloat Creates the Shortage of Captains, July 16, 2000
371
The Personnel Crisis is Not About Selling Fruit Loops, July 5, 2000
370
Bringing Back the Draft Won't Fix the "Marginalization" Problem, July 3, 2000
369
Why Personnel Problems Reflect the Marginalization of Soldiers From Culture and Society, June 27, 2000
368
Emails from the Field on the Personnel Crisis, June 27, 2000
367
Tillson Report Calls for Reform of the Personnel System, June 26, 2000
366
The Military's Personnel Death Spiral, June 26, 2000
365
Why the Army's Emerging Personnel Policies Will Not Stem the Exodus of Captains, June 26, 2000
285
Two Majors Sound Off on Question of Patchwork Solutions that Do Not Address the Fundamental Problem, June 15, 1999  
282
Should We Rely on Adequate Patchwork Solutions If They Do Not Address the Fundamental Problem?  June 7, 1999
281
11 Reasons Why Army Officers Don't Want to be Warriors, June 3, 1999
214
Leadership (VIII) 7 Irrelevant Reasons Why COHORT Failed …or Why the Army Hates Unit Cohesion, November 10, 1998