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Command Post What is this?
Posted on Feb 16, 2015
SFC Michael Faircloth
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CPT Hhc Company Commander
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Ultimately, my Soldiers are my "kids". I treat them the same way as I treat my own child. I love them all, but there are times that you must do things that may make you uncomfortable for their benefit.

Train them to fill your boots. If you are combat-bound, prepare them so that if you are separated, incapacitated, or killed then they are able to carry on in your absence until someone can arrive or fills your role. If you are non-combat, then prepare them so that they are not left in the lurch when you eventually leave the Army or are promoted out of the position then they know how to fill your shoes and your Soldiers are capable of carrying the mission until the incoming personnel know their jobs well enough to implant themselves into the situation.

Fight like hell to protect them. Like I said, they're my kids. They need to know that you care, and if they are fighting for you by ensuring that your mission succeeds, then you have the obligation to fight for them to ensure that they have everything needed to complete their own mission. Protect them from the politics, the WARNOs and FRAGOs that go back and forth, "Yes we have funding...wai....no....yes we....nope.....ok no fund...just kidding, we DO have funding." Save them from the distractions that will pull them from completion of the mission. Let them focus on the execution, and you focus on pulling them through the suck to get on target.

Break the box. We all have supply issues, funding issues, etc. Too often, I see Soldiers say, "There's no way to do it." In the Army, there are very few absolutes......and nearly everything can be accomplished with the dedication, intestinal fortitude, and the creative outside the box thinking. Coming from someone who was "Special Board Promoted" to CPT after 2 time nonselect...having spent my entire career taking care of my Soldiers careers instead of my own, a CPT, 2 MAJ, and a LTC all engaged to help me get to where I am....and from there, I survived and began advancing my own career with a newfound understanding of another piece of the puzzle.

There are so many more things...but I disagree that most are targets. Sometimes, it's just finding the right methods to motivate the troops. Finding that motivation can enhance the numbers of productive members of a company/platoon/squad....any level of leadership.
v/r,
CPT Butler
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SFC Boots Attaway
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SGT Joe Sabedra
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While I agree with the concept telling your soldiers they are like your kids goes the wrong way.

I had a battalion commander tell us we were like his kids and then scolded the entire battalion.

He lost an entire battalion in that formation.

We all worked as companies but did not support him.
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SGT Joe Sabedra
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From the front.
You need to push them till you get one to drop out.
Then have them help him.

Creates teamwork. No man left behind and it ensures some of them get pushed farther then they think they could have gone.

Following a leader out of a flying aircraft is an unnatural act but they will follow.
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SFC Instructor/Writer  Alc Cc/Ssd 2
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By teaching and develop their skills, will, and teamwork. Once they are confident in their skills and mastered their crafts, and they build that trust to a fellow soldiers, working toguether as a team, eventually they will developed the will to fight. The will not to let down his peers and leaders. It takes time and a committed leader to take his team to this level.
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SSG Paralegal
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But shouting and knife handing does not work on everyone. A leader recognizes what his subordinates responds to and adjusts the approach accordingly. I'd rather my subordinate hear what I'm saying and getting them to do then shut down and not hear me because I'm shouting.
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SSG Paralegal
SSG (Join to see)
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I take the approach of mentoring. If they don't catch on then I counsel verbally.
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SGT James Elphick
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This is one of the reasons I left the Army, poor training and leadership. I did everything I could on my own but there is only so much book-smarts and manuals can do without the practical application in the field. After 2 deployments and still training to fight the Russians I did what I could to impart survival skills and toughness on my soldiers and when the time came I left because I felt I was a Lifer as you described but I was being led by too many targets.
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SFC Cryptologic Network Warfare Specialist
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As the picture depicted, the knife edge hand is the tool to use and they should give them out in RFI.
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