In
fairness, the Pentagon is busy. It is fighting three
wars — Afghanistan, Iraq and against global terror. It
is transforming itself. It is coping with the
congressionally mandated Quadrennial Defense Review
and the latest round of the politically radioactive
base realignment and closure process. Understandably,
with this huge educational system that does a pretty
fair job as is, making change has been a lower
priority. That is a waste of a colossal opportunity.
A few points regarding education and the Department of
Defense must be understood. First, education and
"training" are too often mistakenly used
interchangeably. You train people to shoot rifles and
to drive, ships, tanks and aircraft. You teach and
educate people to be leaders, commanders and thinkers.
Education is about learning. It must be oriented on
what is learned not on courses attended. As Gen. John
Jumper, chief of staff of the Air Force is fond of
noting, his master's degree in business was mandated
by the requirement for an advanced degree, not what he
actually learned or could use effectively during his
long and distinguished career.
Second, across government, the Department of Defense
has unique educational capabilities. These extend from
sending potential service academy applicants to
preparatory schools to the best war colleges in the
world. Indeed, a former commandant of the Army War
College at Carlisle, Penn., retired Gen. Robert
Scales, who hold a doctorate, calls the Naval War
College at Newport, R.I., the finest heuristic
teaching institution in the world. Unfortunately,
relatively few naval flag officers attend that war
college because of the press of other, more important
assignments, often at sea, or legally mandated
promotion requirements that prevent tours at
educational institutions.
Third, if the United States is to prevail in the
struggle against jihadist extremists and others who
use terror as a tool and a tactic to advance their
political agendas, far greater knowledge and
understanding of different human behavioural patterns,
cultures, regions and societies are essential. These
cannot be acquired in two- or three-day
familiarization courses or part-time. And, as
technology, science and knowledge grow exponentially,
the military must keep up.
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