Why are so many NCOs afraid to hold Soldiers to the standard?
1. They were not held to that standard or worse yet they do not hold themselves to that standard and often fail that standard (ie: ht/wt, regulation boots, etc.).
2. They do not read and therefore do not know the regulations.
3. They have no backing from higher to enforce the standard and are sometimes cut at the knees when higher allows the Soldiers to not perform to standard, higher does not support them when they try to enforce (ie: they do not take rank away or article 15, etc. for failure to obey order etc.).
4. Nobody else is doing it so why should I?
5. How can I enforce it if the 1SG or CSM or ..... does not meet the standards. How many leaders do you know that do not meet ht/wt or pass an APFT? We have all had a bad day or a bad tape/height where we were shorted an inch or something of the sort. However, there are leaders who never passed in years and yet are allowed to be in leadership roles. It is hard to enforce ht/wt when your 1SG or CSM is 100 lbs overweight. Try explaining that to Joe.
Also, I've seen a number of cases where a lower enlisted screws up and gets verbally corrected and then said lower enlisted goes and cries to the 1SG or CO and the correcting NCO gets his/her butt handed to them and the lower enlisted in the wrong walks free and clear.
I normally make corrections when I spot a soldier not meeting the standard, but sometimes I feel like its a losing battle.
Example: I correct a soldier for having his hands in his pockets. The soldier gives me attitude and I feel some PT is in order. Then his squad leader walks by wondering what is going on (as he should). The squad leader tells his soldier to move out and tells me that he will handle it. Later that day, I see the same soldier with his hands in his pockets.
At that point, there is nothing I can say to that soldier because his squad leader took that respect/authority away from me.
What happened to NCOs sticking together and, if they have a problem with what another NCO is doing, pulling them to the side at a later time?

NCOs
Duty
APFT
Professionalism
