Top General: Rumsfeld Was Worst Leader Ever

And you thought the real war was between the U.S. military and the Taliban. Or the U.S. military and Saddam’s army inside Iraq? Actually, the most brutal conflict was between Army Gen. Hugh Shelton, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and his boss — Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld. That’s the bottom line in Shelton’s fat, 554-page autobiography out this week: Without Hesitation — The Odyssey of an American Warrior.

 

Gen. Hugh Shelton and his Secretary of "Deception and Deceit" / DoD

 

Shelton, you may recall, was the lanky special ops officer who served as the nation’s uniformed military chief from 1997 to 2001. He served three years in the Clinton Administration and for nearly a year under President George W. Bush and Rumsfeld, his tough-minded Pentagon boss. Shelton retired in October 2001, less than a month after 9/11. He doesn’t pull many punches. Some lowlights:

– Harry Truman revealed his guiding philosophy with his famous desktop plaque: The Buck Stops Here. I often thought Donald Rumsfeld’s should have said Don’t Tell Me, I Already Know.

– The problem arose when my analysis of the immediate threat posed by various countries did not concur with his own, and he became confrontational. “How can you not believe that China poses an immediate and direct threat at this time,” he asked.

– The fact is, we had Iraq contained and they were not a threat.

– Finally he asked me, “How do you view your job?”

That was easy because it’s specifically delineated by federal statute. “Mr. Secretary, I am the principal military adviser to you, the President, and the National Security Council, and also –”

“No, you are not the adviser to the National Security Council.”

“Well, I beg your pardon, but according to Title Ten of the U.S. Code, it states very clearly that –”

“But not the staff, not the staff.”

“No sir,” I answered, allowing him to save face when he realized that I had him by the balls since I knew exactly how the law defined my job…I thought to myself, We’re going to need some heavy-duty cleaning supplies if all we’re going to do is waste time having pissing contests like this.

– He was more concerned with marking his territory like a little bulldog than he was about getting down to the business of running the finest military force in the world.

– And there was the McNamara-Rumsfeld model, based on deception, deceit, working political agendas, and trying to get the Joint Chiefs to support an action that might not be the right thing to do for the country but would work well for the President from a political standpoint.

– It was the worst style of leadership I witnessed in thirty-eight years of service or have witnessed at the highest levels of the corporate world since then.

To some folks, this may seem like so much inside baseball. But it’s a startling peek at the dysfunction that permeated the U.S. military’s high command not so long ago. Can’t wait to see what Rumsfeld says in his autobiography, due out in January.

Related Topics: rumsfeld, shelton, National Security
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  • diecash1

    It was the worst style of leadership I witnessed in thirty-eight years of service or have witnessed at the highest levels of the corporate world since then.

    Sounds like he’s speaking to W’s skills as well as those of Rumsfeld. It’s refreshing to read but hardly a surprise.

  • michaelfury

    As Detective Columbo once said: “I hate to bother you sir, but something’s bothering me.”

    Can one of you Pentagon “insiders” please explain these clocks?

    http://michaelfury.wordpress.com/2008/12/18/clock-stoppers/

  • sacredh

    “– And there was the McNamara-Rumsfeld model, based on deception, deceit, working political agendas, and trying to get the Joint Chiefs to support an action that might not be the right thing to do for the country but would work well for the President from a political standpoint.”
    .
    Now there’s a news flash. Putting the interests of political power against the welfare of the country. Change it to “deception, deceit, working political agendas, and trying to get the American people to support an action that might not be the right thing to do for the country but would work well for the party trying to undermine the President from a political standpoint.” and you have the game plan of the Republican/Tea Party.

  • kbanginmotown

    “Don’t Tell Me, I Already Know”
    .
    I had a boss like that once. It says a lot about a person.
    .
    e.g. what a doucheb@g.

  • michaelfury

    Another “known unknown”:

    “Myers does include the curious claim that after his arrival in the NMCC, he ‘went to find Secretary Rumsfeld’ as ‘CNN showed the south tower of the World Trade Center collapsing in an avalanche of smoke and debris’, confirming that after 9:59 a.m. Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld–No. 2 in the military chain-of-command after the President–for some reason was ‘outside, helping with the wounded’ rather than doing his job in the NMCC, which he also had managed to avoid before the Pentagon attack.”

    http://michaelfury.wordpress.com/2009/03/17/lies-on-the-horizon/

  • textee

    What’s Shelton’s view on homosexuals in the military or so-called “Gay Pride” parades at Fort Bragg?

    If Shelton’s views are “Hell no” and “Hell no” don’t expect Time magazine to mention those views of Shelton, since it doesn’t conform with Time magazine’s position. Only views that conform with the ideology of Time magazine get the predictable, boilerplate adoring repetition.

  • sacredh

    “allowing him to save face when he realized that I had him by the balls”
    .
    That would make Shelton’s views on homsexuality and DADT ambiguous at best.

  • http://forgottenlord.livejournal.com forgottenlord

    So all we’re really told is that the distrust of Rumsfeld from within the military went back all the way to 2001. Everything else we knew more or less already

  • truevcu

    And once again, lacking a relevant response, the conservatives default to “HO NOES! THE GAYS!”

  • Paul-no not that one

    “Can’t wait to see what Rumsfeld says in his autobiography”
    .
    Ummm “Thanks for buying the bird flu vaccine”?

  • nflfoghorn

    COOTIE ALERT! COOTIE ALERT!!!

  • http://www.124monkeys.com Sean DeCoursey forgot his password

    Several of my buddies who were also in on the 2003 invasion of Iraq and I still go out every year and celebrate “Rumsfeld Day”. i.e. the anniversary of when he finally got canned.

    Hatred of Rumsfeld and the cascading dumb@$$ery wasn’t just limited to the generals.

  • kbanginmotown

    Hear, hear!

  • kbanginmotown

    Sean: But, but,…he stood at his desk – all day long! — and worked at, whatever. How could this be torture? How could he – and Scooter – not be patriots?
    .
    /snark

  • ohiolibb

    We knew Rumsfeld was a moron. What we didn’t know was how much of a moron he was.

  • sieben13

    Did he include bush & cheney ??????????

  • perrywhite1

    It is so refreshing to hear.
    .
    During the Bush years, you couldn’t say the Emperor — whether Bush or Rumsfeld — had no clothes. It was “unpatriotic” and they’d release the hounds.
    .
    So it’s refreshing to hear a man speak candidly of what we all knew but couldn’t say, that Rumsfeld was a strutting popinjay would got a lot of good people killed by being both arrogant and incompetent at his job.
    .
    As to Rumsfeld’s own autobiography, it will no doubt cast him in heroic, hagiographic, MacArthurian terms … in other words, fiction.

  • michaelfury

    “There are things known and there are things unknown, and in between are the doors of perception.”

    - Aldous Huxley

    http://michaelfury.wordpress.com/2009/03/10/culture-of-deception/

  • potvin99

    RUMMMSFELD!!!

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