Hopwin wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
Hopwin wrote:
That would be the problem Kaffis. If someone felt that their opinions had at least been given an honest review then there wouldn't be this ticky-tack whining going on.
Maybe, maybe not. It's possible, even likely, that his views have been given an honest review and simply not been agreed with. Just because he hasn't gotten what he wanted doesn't mean he hasn't been listened to.
An effective manager will listen to his people's concerns, ideas and suggestions and even if they are not implemented both parties will leave in agreement on the outcome (aka getting their buy-in). People ***** and moaning is a result of poor management and on the rare occasion can be the result of one individual but for the General's entire staff to express these feelings would indicate it is a systemic problem.
People ***** and moaning is not necessarily the result of poor management. An effective manager will try to achieve those outcomes, but the fact that they weren't successful doesn't necessarily mean they aren't an effective manager. Some people still just ***** and moan, and that is especially true with matters that are of national importance; there are far more factors at play here than the manager-managee relationship, especially since McChrystal doesn't report directly to the President. As for the General's staff, they are staff. They are not commanders. It is the job of a staff to have the same opinion as their commander.
In any case, this is not a "management" situation in the way that the buisness world is. It is a basic principle of the military that, after having raised your concerns, you carry out your superiors orders as if they were your own. This is actually
more important at the highest levels that General McChrystal is at because it goes to the basic issue of civilian control of the military. MacArthur, by failing to adhere to this principle, dragged the U.S. into an unnecessary extension of the Korean War by provoking the Chinese to enter; Mao's own combination of paranoia and overconfidence notwithstanding.
Soldiers, even generals, are supposed to salute and carry out orders once they have expressed their concerns. The President is responsible for national success or failure in foriegn matters including warfare and cannot delegate that responsibility.
Khross has a good point that McChrystal's basic mistake is trying to win a war Obama would prefer to lose in order to pursue his policy of nonretaliation if the U.S. is attacked, and so that he can use it as a political tool to claim he was forced into an unwinnable war by the previous administration in the next election, but that doesn't change the basic obligation McChrystal has as a soldier to tow the party line. It's not his job to cricticize the President's mistakes; that is the job of Obama's political opposition.