JN1 wrote:"Sergeant Tram? Go to the Sergeant's Mess, talk to the President, find out what is really going on here. Corporal Vung? Do the same for the Corporal's Mess, find out what troop morale and standards are. Rest of you come with me."
Now that is always the way to find out what is going on in any army with a professional NCO corps. The surnames could be changed and it could easily be the British, American, or any Commonwealth Army.
I imagine it would work in almost any other army; it's just that in a lot of armies, the officers wouldn't be willing to
admit that this is how to find out what's going on.
"Find out who those guards are and break the entire guard detail to privates. Then assign them to mine clearance. We're at war, nobody should be getting into this base without being challenged. Make that clear to their replacements."
Now that reminds me of a certain air force general. I wonder if it is really true that he chewed out a guard who took a shot at him and missed?
One way to tell the difference between a professional military and an unprofessional one: can some jackass with a fancy uniform bluff his way past a checkpoint?
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Morilore wrote:erik_t wrote:This is a painful stinker. No more rah-rah characterizations of people you've met, please, lest my eyes roll completely out of my head.
How is it a "rah-rah characterization"? It's light-hearted
schadenfreude humor.
P.S. Remember a previous chapter, when the good General was being subtly chastised by Petraeus and missing points?
When was that?
Anyway, I do think this chapter is a good illustration of the difference between good and bad generalship. With bad generalship you get the situation before Asanee arrived: people argue, no one knows what to do, and important things (like making sure there's fuel available) get forgotten. And everyone overestimates the strength of the enemy because
clearly they wouldn't be rolling up your troops if they didn't outnumber you; you're not likely to admit that they're rolling up your troops because you can't lead your way out of a wet paper bag.
With good generalship (or good leadership in any sphere), those problems tend to evaporate; the trick is making the transition. Which is why something like what Asanee did starts to make sense. Blasting everyone who
doesn't do their job tends to get people moving in a hurry, and in this case the really vital thing is to break Third Army HQ's inertia.
There are bound to be plenty of people in there who are quite capable of doing their jobs (probably including some of the people Asanee fired). But with everyone used to getting away with half-assing things, they
don't do their jobs, either because their superiors are interfering by wasting their time or because their superiors aren't keeping up the intellectual pressure. Since the superiors themselves don't know what to do, it should come as no surprise that the subordinates' talents are underused. Look at Kasit the radio corporal for an example: he's presumably a competent radioman, but he's dozing on the job because he has no messages to send.
When that goes on long enough, you get a logjam of incompetence. The general doesn't know what to do, so he doesn't ask his staff the right questions, so the staff wind up running around in circles... which means that the general gets faulty information and any decisions he
does make will be wrong, making his existing problems worse and heightening his confusion. The logistics staffer isn't thinking about logistics, so he doesn't correct the inflated enemy strength estimates, which leaves the operations planners scared and makes them pull in the troops, which means there's no intelligence on enemy movements, which makes the inflated estimate more plausible because the enemy can achieve more with fewer soldiers. Everyone screws up largely because everyone
else screws up.
By coming in and kicking out everyone she encounters who hasn't done their job and doesn't realize that they need to, Asanee breaks that wall as quickly as possible.