By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Feb. 9, 2014 – Recent lapses in military ethics
have Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey’s full attention, and he promises a military
campaign to reinvigorate the profession of arms.
The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff made the pledge in
statements he issued following Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel’s Feb. 7 news conference
on the issue.
“This challenge didn’t accumulate overnight, and it won’t be
solved overnight,” said.
Dempsey noted the importance of understanding the challenge
that ethical lapse pose to the military, adding that military officials must
continue to “see the challenge clearly and precisely.”
“Acts of crime, misconduct, ethical breaches, command
climate and stupidity each require a distinct solution,” he said. “But the
overall solution is attention to who we are as a profession. And that’s my
focus.”
The American people have high regard for their military, and
in most cases, the chairman said, that high regard is well-deserved.
“The overwhelming majority of our military leaders are
tremendous professionals and citizens who show up to serve, to bring their
best, and often sacrifice greatly,” he said. “There will always be those who
let down the team and the nation, and when they do, we will hold them
accountable.
“The trust of the American people, and frankly, the trust
our young troops place in us as leaders, is too important,” he continued. “We
can’t afford to let the transgressions of the few undermine the trust and
credibility of our entire profession.”
Dempsey began his campaign to highlight the profession of
arms even before he became chairman. He began looking at the effects of
prolonged war on the profession when he served as the commander of the Army’s
Training and Doctrine Command. This picked up speed when he served as the Army
chief of staff, and expanded when he became chairman.
During a recent interview, Dempsey said he views the campaign
in military terms – a campaign in the military vocabulary implies a series of
actions, all intended to converge on a desired outcome.
“The desired outcome in this campaign is that the force
rekindles its understanding and resolve as a profession and then recommits
itself to that which makes us a profession: our unique skills and attributes,
commitment to continuing education, and the agreement to live to a specific set
of values,” he said.
Still, the chairman said, it is not the war that caused these
ethical lapses. “It is the pace, and our failure to understand that at that
pace, we were neglecting the tools that manage us as a profession over time,”
he said.
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