I once found
myself in a tough situation. A senior of
mine, in my direct chain of command was providing me guidance that was:
1. In some cases unethical
2. In some cases directly violated regulations
3.
In some cases was simply unreasonable
The unethical and
regulation issues were very cut and dry, and in hindsight the ‘unreasonable’
direction came after a few weeks of me pushing back on the ethics and regulations. The problem was, in the military
there is little recourse for a junior whose boss is being unreasonable, after
all … this is the military. I don’t have
to like my boss to know I am required by regulations to obey lawful orders, even
if they are not reasonable. I tried to
tactfully let my senior know that their newest guidance was going to cause
extreme hardship on their people for no good reason other than to ... cause
hardship ... and that it was unreasonable.
My senior responded by stating there was an obvious disconnect between
their style and my style and wanted to know what the issue was, so I honestly
answered that I was not comfortable with the history of unethical direction and
the direction to violate regulations.
My boss was obviously surprised with my candor. Near the end of what was a really uncomfortable situation I
was advised that I needed to learn to “play the game”, my simple response was
that my understanding of things is that … at this stage in my career I thought
I was expected to be a professional and not play games.
Looking back on
the situation in hindsight, I find myself wondering about that statement: “play the game.” How does this statement
relate to my status as an officer, my status as a leader? How does this align with my personal ethics?
How many people exhibit an overt sense of
loyalty to an individual vice their oath?
How many people demonstrate a self-preserving desire to not rock the
boat and as a result do not stand up and exhibit character? What is the point of the authority of a
commissioned officer or the authority of our senior enlisted if the people
filling those billets are more concerned about their next evaluation and upward
mobility than doing the right thing, for the right reasons … even when no one is
watching? Are you willing to compromise
rules for simple expediency or to gain favor with your boss? Are you “playing the game” to advance your
career?
I recently read
the report on the relief of the Commanding Officer of the USS COWPENS (http://www.scribd.com/doc/235869122/Cowpens-Gombert-Combined-Min) and see
that officers and senior enlisted on that ship ignored their duties for the
sake of getting things done and not rocking the boat. Yes, they completed the deployment without incident,
in some cases a testament to the dedication of the people, and in some cases
due to blind luck. Do the ends, above
all, justify the means? I would argue they
do not. While the primary focus of military
leadership is mission accomplishment immediately followed by troop welfare (“Mission
first, Sailors always”) unless we are in a ‘rounds impacting my position’ or a ‘water
rushing through the bulkhead’ type situation, a ‘git ‘er done’ mentality can be
problematic and how we get things done is vitally important. Aboard subs, ships and
planes I picked up the phrase “procedural compliance." My earnest question to any
leader: are you overly concerned with procedural
compliance in logs, maintenance records and/or uniforms but not in your own
ethical conduct or the ethics of your subordinate leaders? Do you expect your subordinates to “play the
game” so that they get things done and move along?
I do not argue nor
endorse the systematic extinction of the creative risk-taker or pushing the
limits to accomplish hard tasks. I do
however argue that at some point, we should expect that leaders – of all ranks
-- are ethical. If we are willing in the
relative comfort of a garrison environment, with bake sales and lattes … when
lives are not on the line … to be loose with our personal ethics how can we
expect that we will suddenly step up to the proverbial plate when the situation
is truly a hard & tough situation that may result in our own injury or death or that of our personnel? It may be a harsh
comparison, it may be one that most people will never have to make; I have
been there and had to make those decisions and can attest that hard times do
not suddenly develop character; hard times test character. Hard times will beat you down, hard times
will physically and mentally exhaust you and you may even question why you are
staying the course … but I have yet to see a sudden epiphany of principled ethical
dogma when the going is truly rough. Are
you “playing the game” because the situation is not “life and death” and you
tell yourself you will do the right thing when the situation really needs you
to?
Does concern for
your career make you pause when a senior is going the wrong way or about to
make a really bad call? Are you more
willing to tactfully correct a senior that is not your immediate supervisor or
evaluator? If so, you are allowing
careerism to get in the way of your role as an adviser and a leader and
ultimately of your oath. I want to
succeed and hate to fail, but are you adding to a surplus of people who are
addicted to success when you should be addicted to integrity?
2 comments:
First,
Thank you for opening your thoughts here up to comments. I appreciate it. I plan to do well by it. Nonetheless, it is raining hard in the desert and I miss the rain so much I need to walk in it. 30 years in California after a lifetime elsewhere, one grows to miss the rain.
You call to mind a lawyer who once worked for me. He would not disengage from any disagreement with the CO. I'll be the first to admit the CO was not the brightest bulb. In fact, he was pretty dim but NOBODY wins when a junior scores a "win" against the CO.
In my post to you which was lost because of the rules placed on posting, I had a few things to say:
I can't recap them since they are gone. Nonetheless
Who told you they were unethical? My nephew believes coal fired electrical power plants are unethical.
Who told you they violated the regulations? I have a specific reason for asking because I had CPOs and officers who didn't have a single solitary clue about the regulations. I'll grant you, they thought they knew them but they didn't. What specific regulations are you talking about? From the UCMJ, or MCM, cite them.
Unreasonable is not a JO call. To give you a for instance. I had to proud E6 that told me, the night before we got underway to head into a minefield that it made no sense to put back together the #2 DIESEL generator because the head was badly scored and we should eschew the labor and wait a couple of weeks for the part.
Was I unreasonable when I pointed out that we might need that power plant, badly damaged though it was if we lost the primary generator in the minefields? As it happens, rule number 34 is to Expect the Worst and prepare for it. If you prepare for it, it won't happen,....mostly. We lost the primary but we had the backup.
Now that you are reachable, for the nonce, I'd be happy to post. I go to Colorado for a bit in an hour but perhaps.
I would like to thank you for shifting to a more open format. Passwords have meaning. They should not be demanded lightly.
regards, Curtis
As far as who told me that the direction was unethical and violated regulations, the DoD Ethics Manual specifically addressed the issue and the governing instruction on the other also forbade what I was being told to do; no interpretation was needed. I asked the senior to provide me an email with the direction or memo for the record and both requests were denied. Again, this was not combat, not a vital underway evolution with propulsion on the line, this was a garrison / office environment.
I will agree, way to many people rely on "what I was told" vice knowing what instructions actually say.
Later it was confirmed by a JAG and Flag officer that I was correct. I didn't want to be 'right' and zing the boss ... but being senior doesn't give anyone a free pass to ignore ethics or regulations. One of my DDG CO's once told the collected Khakis that if he gave us direction that violated procedural compliance to log it and that he would sign it ... that lesson stuck. I feel strongly that if my boss is going to give me direction that could get me in legal trouble or possibly foul my career, they should be willing to attach their name to the orders; I would be willing to do the same for a junior of mine.
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