Posted on Jan 15, 2015
MAJ J5 Strategic Plans And Training Officer
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Foresttled
I loved the discussions about risk when I was a Captain Career Course Small Group Instructor.
The Army Leadership and Mission Command Doctrine advocates Prudent Risk but one needs to understand the nature of risk. Basic Concepts Critical for discussion about risk include:
-No reward without risk.
-But only fools rush in.
-When should we take risk and what are the potential concequense of risk adversion?
-What is risk adversion and how do identify risk adverse behaviors?
-What is prudent risk and how is risk midigation a factor?
-What are the differences between risk adversion and prudent risk?
-Do you have examples?
Posted in these groups: Doctrine DoctrineRisk logo Risk
Edited 9 y ago
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1SG Civil Affairs Specialist
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Aversion to risk is the enemy of initiative. If you don't have initiative, you are on the defensive, and probably losing. Risk aversion breeds timidity, indecisiveness, and complacency.

Most people think of assuming risk as a factor of safety. Safety in the military is a relative thing. But risk also boils down to where a leader commits manpower, scarce resources, training dollars, and perhaps most importantly, the leader's time. He can take steps to stretch a dollar or delegate tasks, but ultimately it comes down to risk taking in order to focus his effort on critical functions that his staff and subordinates can't do.

My own example:
When I was a new 1SG, I had very specific ideas for how my company should be trained. So the first Annual Training I led, I controlled nearly all aspects of training, planning each task, resourcing, and reviewing training plans in detail. Not to mention all of the stuff in my traditional role as First Sergeant. It went pretty well, but I was smoked. There was no way I could have sustained that level of involvement more than a few days.
The next year, I implemented a collective model where I would give one team at a time a collective task such as ECP operations, and the Sr NCO would develop a plan to train and evaluate all the individual and sub-collective tasks for that event. I would supervise the rehearsal and receive their back brief, offering suggestions for enhancements and offering resources as needed. It was a spectacular success. The NCOs on the team got quality experience planning and executing complex and realistic training, and I got to supervise with repeated excellent opportunities to develop my Soldiers.
I just had to learn to let go. When I learned that, my unit grew in confidence and competence in leaps and bounds.
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MAJ J5 Strategic Plans And Training Officer
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1SG (Join to see) Good example, that is risk; delegating to the point of discomfort.
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CW2 Joseph Evans
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The cycle for Risk Management is part of the problem. We are risk adverse to the point where we are not will to accept moderate risks in training and end up accepting catastrophic risk in combat if we are to accomplish the mission.

IMHO, the greatest risk reducer is proper training. Because of the volatile nature of combat, being able to cope with surprises is one of the most effective combat multipliers that exists. Thinking through a process from start to finish also provides us the tools to adapt when things change, best laid plans of mice and men... We train resiliency, initiative, and cognition. After that, everything falls into place and we trust our small group leaders to get the job done.

Ike put it best: "Plans are worthless, but planning is everything. There is a very great distinction because when you are planning for an emergency you must start with this one thing: the very definition of "emergency" is that it is unexpected, therefore it is not going to happen the way you are planning."
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MAJ J5 Strategic Plans And Training Officer
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Very Correct
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Lt Col Recce/Surv/Elect Warfare Pilot
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We, as military professionals, need to weigh risk vs. benefit. But it's our job to ensure we do the appropriate level of planning to give the decisionmakers, whether O-6, flag, or political, the levels of risk a certain plan may have.

The problem, IMHO, is that there has become a politicization of what we do to such an extent, that particularly after a decade + of ops downrange, we are creating leaders who are risk averse. Averse to having the rose pinned on us as "having made a bad decision," averse to potentially being fired by our superiors, and worse yet, averse to having to stand up to the court of public opinion and the press, whether or not it is warranted, or even has an ounce of truth.

It's a commander's (or any supervisor's) job to make those hard decisions. The right decision, while difficult, is never wrong. While it may meet with resistance or "institutional inertia," you can never go wrong for making the right decision for the right reasons. THAT, my friends, is how you can go to sleep every night and not have a worry on your mind.
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MAJ J5 Strategic Plans And Training Officer
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That is an excellent well thought out answer, Sir.
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