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Command Post What is this?
Posted on May 11, 2015
GEN Stanley McChrystal
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SFC Detachment Ncoic
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Welcome to RallyPoint, Sir! I really enjoyed your book. I've recently returned from 18 months at Bagram. Did you have a lot of adjustments to make when you transitioned to civilian life after such a brilliant military career?
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GEN Stanley McChrystal
GEN Stanley McChrystal
9 y
Thanks for your kind words - and welcome home. I think, like everyone, I had a lot of adjustments to make. When I left the service in 2010 from Afghanistan, I'd been gone for 5 of the previous 6 years and in the same month my wife and I were reunited and moved to a retirement home, my son finished college - and moved in with his finance - and a cat. I went from being alone in a tiny room in a war zone to a house with 3 other people - and a cat. Simultaneously, I started a new career of teaching, began a company, etc, etc. All that's interesting, but the biggest change came in deciding who I was now that I wasn't a soldier (which I'd been for over 38 years). I had to decide how to think of myself, how to interact with others, and what I wanted to contribute to the world. Most important, I found were long conversations with my wife and friends. I couldn't have done any of that alone.
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SFC Detachment Ncoic
SFC (Join to see)
9 y
Thanks for responding, Sir!
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GEN Stanley McChrystal
GEN Stanley McChrystal
9 y
My pleasure.
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PO1 Donald Hammond
PO1 Donald Hammond
9 y
Long conversations with ... a cat?
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SPC Bernie Davies
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General McChrystal, I am a Vietnam veteran and understand the wearing of the uniform of our nation and the Constitution we are sworn to uphold as well as the price each man and woman pays in doing so. My question is how can this old war horse (redleg actually) and the people of our nation affirm and support the men and women now serving? What do they need to do the job they are called upon to do day in and day out? Besides money and equipment (keep the A-10, please) what do they lack and how can the military and political leaders support them and better lead them? During my service I learned that the most important thing is the people and I sense that now the military needs our support more than ever. I close with a quote from Julia Duin who in a story quoted a warrior as saying, "Remember that inside his heart, the warrior keeps to the ways of peace. Outside his heart, he keeps his weapons ready for use." God Bless our military men and women.
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GEN Stanley McChrystal
GEN Stanley McChrystal
9 y
It sounds to me like you're doing exactly the thing that matters most - care about soldiers and the job they do. I think our nation provides enough money (in most cases) to our military, but the critical resource is always moral support. As you know, it was dangerously weak during Vietnam, but it has been far stronger this time around. We can't let it slip.
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SGT Graduate Student
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GEN Stanley McChrystal: If you have not been asked this already, sir, would you consider running for president?

And (gotta squeeze this in, in case you already answered my first question), what was the most memorable book you've read?
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GEN Stanley McChrystal
GEN Stanley McChrystal
9 y
Although I have zero interest in running for any office, I would like to see more veterans enter elected politics. We need to leverage many of the skills, values, and experiences I've seen to obvious in the force.
Its hard to say the most memorable book, but I'm reading one now called "The Road to Character" by David Brooks and it really makes you think about what character really is- and what kind of person do we want to be.
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SGT Graduate Student
SGT (Join to see)
9 y
GEN Stanley McChrystal: I agree, sir. Thank you. I'm going on Amazon right now :)
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SGT Aaron Dumbrow
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Sir, thank you for taking the time to speak with us. It seems in my opinion, that we continue to fight the war in the press as well as on the battle field. We have lost many brothers and sisters to the rules of engagement.

While I agree it is important to follow the rules of war, when we are dealing with an enemy who does not, how can we win? This seems to be a repeating theme for the past several conflicts, something which puts us at a disadvantage. With your first hand experience I would be interested in your thoughts about how we can win with the restrictions we continue to see both domestically and at the front. Thank you.
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GEN Stanley McChrystal
GEN Stanley McChrystal
9 y
Its an important question. While all of us suffered frustrations with what we couldn't do, I came to the conclusion that the Rules of Engagement were not only correct (most of them), but essential to our effort. If we adopted the tactics of the enemy, we become no better than the enemy. In both Iraq and Afghanistan I felt that the only true road to victory lay in securing the support of the population. To do that, we needed to differentiate ourselves from our foe, and operate in a manner than the population could support and admire. At times that demands the hardest task - to display "courageous restraint" at a time when we want to strike, shoot, or bomb. But I believe it was (and is) essential.
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SMSgt Lawrence McCarter
SMSgt Lawrence McCarter
7 y
GEN Stanley McChrystal - I would agree with what the statement entails however it seems the MACV, Rules of Engagement We had to deal with in Viet Nam caused delays in making decisions that got US service people killed. On a battlefield there isn't a lot of time to think about things and decisions have to made right away and hope its the correct one. We certainly don't want to stoop to the level some of the enemy did and there do have to be some standards which of course the enemy there didn't have to observe. It appears I have the same concerns that Sgt Dumbrow had expressed although I think We still all agree on the need for ROE however the application often ended with results that cost American lives. I have noticed however throughout history We see Military Forces that had no such rules the results were never good.
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SFC Tyrone Almendarez
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Thank you for coming to RP GEN McChrystal. It's a honor to have you onboard.
What do you recommend to this administration and the future administration on how to continue the offensive on the GWOT?
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GEN Stanley McChrystal
GEN Stanley McChrystal
9 y
Although it sounds less dramatic an approach, I'd do a couple of key things:
1 - Create, train, and support a much wider group of regional talent. It would include language training, living in the region (often with their families), and the like so we have a group of people that are truly comfortable and have been able to develop relationships.
2 - I'd work to expand relations and coalitions with nations in the region. We have to work "through and with" threatened nations - we can't swoop in as outsiders and be even close to successful in the long run.
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SGT Signal Support Systems Specialist
SGT (Join to see)
9 y
GEN Stanley McChrystal
Was it a mistake to move out of Iraq as quickly as we did??
Do you think that is how ISIS/ISIL got to become such a great presence?
What do you think we should do to DESTROY ISIS/ISIL?
Thank you for your time Sir. Hope you have a wonderful day!
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MAJ FAO - Europe
MAJ (Join to see)
9 y
GEN Stanley McChrystal advocates in point 1 to "create, train, and support a much wider group of regional talent" with language skills, in region training, and etc so we have a "group of people that are truly comfortable and have been able to develop relationships." As Foreign Area Officers with EXACTLY this skill set, we hear all the time that senior leader demand for FAOs is extremely high. GEN (R) McChrystal's comments provide the proof. The Army FAO program--and the other similar Service programs--are of extremely high-value. But it takes 4+ years and $$$$$$$$ to make and train a FAO (language, in-region training, graduate school); if this is a demand, it will be interesting to see if DoD expands the programs. My guess: no. Why? It costs too much to make a FAO.
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LTC Student
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GEN Stanley McChrystal
Sir, In your book you talk how we adapted and moved forward out of the doldrums after Vietnam. What can the future senior leaders of the military do to avoid the decline in the readiness of the force again in the coming years?
Secondly, I believe that like the American Public School System the Military Education System, especially Officer education, can be modernized to move past the industrial line model that it is currently on. If you were given full authority to change the way that our Officers are taught what would you do?
Thank you for your time.
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Capt Richard I P.
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Edited 9 y ago
GEN Stanley McChrystal, Welcome aboard, Sir. You've talked about the military establishment turning itself in one generation into an adaptive, resilient force soon tested by the GWOT: what is the biggest threat to those gains? How do we guard against the degradation of what we have achieved? If we fail, what can we learn from this example about cycling back into capability rapidly at an institutional level?
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SPC Safety Technician
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"I don't miss the bureaucracy of being in the Army. But I still love the relationships you can build. And it doesn't have to be in military service - it can be anything you're doing with someone that matters. You develop a bond."

Sir, you were in charge, and able to affect the army and change it in ways many of us can barely wrap our head around. What changes did you make, or encourage the army as a whole to make, to alleviate the burden that is the Army's bureaucracy?

Thank you for your time, and your service to our nation, sir.

GEN Stanley McChrystal
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GEN Stanley McChrystal
GEN Stanley McChrystal
9 y
Kyle, great point and question. Unfortunately, the answer is that I didn't do enough to take on the bureaucracy. Within my commands I made changes within my authority, but like many other senior leaders, I tended to view "Big Army" issues as separate and assumed someone else would take those on. Of course "we" (all of us) own the Army. And I wish I'd taken a bit more time and effort to push against the kind of bureaucracy that simply seems to creep into most organizations as they get big.
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SPC Safety Technician
SPC (Join to see)
9 y
Thank you, GEN Stanley McChrystal . I was hoping you had some success or some helpful tips for the rest of us. A lot of us see your former position AS Big-Army. But, as you alluded to, the lines may be mostly imaginary.

Since you answered my question, does this mean I have to buy another copy of your book, "Team of Teams"?
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MSgt Keith Hebert
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Welcome aboard Gen. McChrystal.
My question is a two part question.
1. How do you feel about the differences between the guard/reserve and active duty retirement systems
2.if you could change it what and how would you go about it
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GEN Stanley McChrystal
GEN Stanley McChrystal
9 y
On 1, I don't know all the details of the differences. I thought that Guard/Reserve members retired at a later date, but most other aspects were very similar. So I'm not sure what I'd change.
The real point that your question uncovers is that I SHOULD know each system enough to understand and compare them. If an active duty senior leader is separated enough from the Guard/Reserve components on things like this, it means we have a ways to go in making the entire force a single, cohesive entity.
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MSgt Keith Hebert
MSgt Keith Hebert
9 y
thanks for the answer sir
the biggest difference is that as guard and reserves retirees we have to wait until age 60-62 to start drawing retirement and the pay is alot less than active duty due to the points system
thank you again sir
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SFC Kenneth Hunnell
SFC Kenneth Hunnell
9 y
MSgt Keith Hebert, as far as the difference between the Active Duty Soldiers and Reserve or Guard Soldiers Retirement system. I believe the Reserve and Guard has the better deal, in that they can build a retirement through there civilian employment or what ever kind of savings plan they may develop.
At the same time you build your Military retirement, the Reserve or Guard Retirement pay is based on the number of points accumulated throughout your career. I believe you can accumulate as much as 7500 pts.. This all depends on the individual, are you willing to do the extra work to earn every point available.

If you do the minimum you get that!!!!!

Where as the Soldiers from active duty goes, they get what they get from their service and then has to start over with starting a civilian retirement. Look at GEN Stanley McChrystal, he is still working. That should tell you something. A Four star General. There is not that many Generals that retire and go out into the sunset and kick back.

Your Retirement has always been in your hands, make the most of it.

I plan on retiring by the age of 62 and being a greeter at Walmart and enjoying the remaining years with my wife
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MSgt Keith Hebert
MSgt Keith Hebert
9 y
Very true SFC
Now when you equate the points to pay then you will see a E9 maybe getting a $800-1000 check after 20 years( and this a guess on actuall pay). Please correct me if I am wrong
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SFC Platoon Sergeant
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Thank you for the opportunity sir. In today's military, education is increasingly encouraged for enlisted and the troops are taking advantage of a lot of the programs out there. With so many enlisted obtaining higher education, what sets apart the Officer Corps from the Enlisted today whereas 20-30 years ago, it was unheard of for enlisted to have achieved what they are doing today?
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GEN Stanley McChrystal
GEN Stanley McChrystal
9 y
You're right, the educational difference is shrinking rapidly, and that will likely continue. That's actually a really good thing. I think what will happen is that the differences between officers and NCO's won't be education - it will be career focus. Officers will have different career paths from NCO's (resulting in different skills over time and different experiences). Deciding to become an Officer or NCO will be less an education or opportunity issue - than a personal choice. I think that will continue to shrink the disparity in pay and other incentives. It will also change the relationships fundamentally (although they've already been evolving for years).
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