An Open Letter to my Fellow Army General Officers-
We all commissioned into the Army with ideals and a determination to make a difference. We would lead with character, create effective teams to win on future battlefields, and advance our beloved institution, all the while, remaining loyal to our Constitution. During our service, we have faced threats, challenges, and impediments to these ideals ‒ some in the crucible of combat. Yet, we have never wavered. Today, we face a different challenge ‒ unique to our time ‒ that threatens our army like never before. We must not waver now.
Today’s challenge is Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI). These innocent sounding words represent a “wolf in sheep’s clothing”, attacking the foundations of our beloved Army. This growing cancer creates distrust, discord, and doubts throughout the institution wherever it metastasizes. Let me briefly explain what you already know in your hearts to be true.
At its core, DEI operationalizes the tenants of Critical Race Theory (CRT) in the organizational setting. Using agreeable sounding concepts like diversity, equity, and inclusion, the underlying goal is to impose race and gender-based outcomes through discrimination. It is a radical ideology that seeks to undermine the “colorblind”, performance-based organization that we helped to create. Unfortunately, we have grown to accept its catchy slogans, like “celebrate diversity” and “diversity is our strength”, while ignoring the damage they cause. But the fact remains, because DEI programs see the world through a lens of skin color, gender, and sexual orientation, they segment our once-unified force into tribes that increasingly look on each other with suspicion. This destroys the unity and trust that we know are the vital ingredients to winning tomorrow’s wars.
Sadly, by supporting DEI principles, we have moved our great Army ‒ which has led the nation in racial and gender integration ‒ into reverse. The DEI bureaucrats that we have installed up and down the Army’s echelons, are actively sowing the seeds of discord and distrust in our ranks. By forcing our Soldiers to see the world through a lens of skin color and gender, they are creating suspicion and division ‒ instead of the unity, trust, and cohesion that we know are required for successful teams to win in battle. The result is wormwood in the Army’s timbers of readiness.
And it’s not just readiness that suffers. DEI is political ideology wrapped in bad social science. Why would we impose this politically controversial experiment on our Soldiers? Army Secretary Christine Wormuth recent said in Army Magazine, “We need to make sure we are keeping the Army out of politics.” Well, here’s your chance. DEI is very political. You can’t look the other way, when you know that the core tenets of DEI violate the Constitution, it’s 14th Amendment, and our civil rights laws. And what of our commanders? Aren’t they responsible for building teams, creating healthy command climates, and ensuring their Soldiers are treated with dignity and respect? Or have we lost faith in them too? Our proven Equal Opportunity channels are no longer good enough? Do we really need a separate bureaucracy to make sure our commanders are valuing diversity?
Don’t misunderstand me. Diversity is a wonderful thing. But DEI is not about diversity of thought. It is about one thing ‒ diversity of appearance. This should never drive organizational goals ‒ especially in a profession that requires rigorous excellence and high standards. Rather, diversity in today’s America, is better seen as a precondition for any organization that wants to recruit talent. This is a good thing. But it’s an issue for US Army Recruiting Command, who should be innovating to attract all underrepresented populations into our ranks. But once they wear Army green, it’s all about unity. They are on the Army team, never to be separated into tribes.
Unfortunately, as the DEI bureaucracy grows with every passing year, the unfortunate victims are our Soldiers. Each required training session on antiracism, white privilege, implicit biases, and the like, feels indoctrinating. And some topics are even offensive to their traditional religious values and upbringing. We now force them to “celebrate” things that they often fundamentally disagree with. And of course, every new diversity training requirement, takes valuable time away from training warfighters in their key tasks. Yet, most damaging of all, the training drives wedges into the trust, cohesion, and unity that good leaders strive to create. I hope you bristle at the empty phrase “diversity is our strength” when you know from hard-won experience that our army’s strength has always been the direct opposite: Our strength comes from building unified teams from diverse people. These two concepts are diametrically opposed.
Initially, you may have accepted these toxic ideas because they flowed from presidential executive orders. And at a basic level, diversity sounds good. But make no mistake: This is not diversity of thought; this is diversity of nothing more than physical appearance. This imposition of the superficial over substance damages the good order and discipline of the force. Besides, are they lawful orders in the first place, if they directly oppose the Constitution and our civil rights laws? You may have also fallen for the flawed notion that our army “needs to look like the nation it represents”. Who says? This has never been the case in our history. By comparison, does the NBA look like the nation? Of course not. It’s a meritocracy in very competitive environment. Do you not see our military as a more important meritocracy in the competitive environment of combat?
You can no longer look the other way. The time has come to confront it. Will you choose unity and trust, or grievances and tribes? Will you choose excellence and high standards, or quotas and prescribed racial and gender outcomes? Will you build social-justice warriors or real warriors? You can’t have it both ways.
I was recently assured by a 3-star friend, that work is being done behind the scenes to push back on these destructive ideologies. But he also admitted that if any senior leader speaks out, they will forfeit any future promotion. Duty often comes at a price. If you need support, look to our rich history with a simple question: What would General George Marshall have done? Do you think he would have sat by and watched any administration push politically controversial ideas into the force, when he knew they undermined trust, cohesion, and unity? You know he wouldn’t. He would have pushed back, even if he had to risk it all. We need some George Marshalls today.
If you don’t see the need to act, I fear you may be out of touch with your Soldiers. Unfortunately, they know they are being watched, many by the DEI commissars that you have installed at every echelon. Can they even be honest with you anymore? And it’s not just their rolling eyes in classrooms, they are actively warning people not to join the ranks. Do you see the connection between your embrace of these controversial political theories and the precipitous drop in the public’s trust of the military over the past few years? And if you think the current recruiting challenges are driven solely by a tight labor market and disqualifying conditions in our youth, think again. American youth are attracted to excellence. They want challenges and high standards. But the uncomfortable truth is this: These cohorts have traditionally leaned conservative. That’s the problem. By helping create a progressive political institution of social-justice warriors, you have created an Army that seems hostile to traditional conservative and religious values. This is significant. For the first time in history, you have broken the important link between the family legacy of military service and new qualified candidates. By some estimates, this link, which has normally averaged around 40% is now down to a paltry 13%.
Your oath was to the Constitution, and your duty has always been to build warfighting readiness. DEI programs are at odds with both. Don’t lose this battle. The soul of our army, and our nation’s security, depend on it.
Yours in service,
Chris J. Petty
Brigadier General, USA Retired
Brig. Gen. (R) Chris Petty is a graduate of West Point and a decorated combat commander. He is the author of 12 Battles Every American Should Know, as well as the creator of the Battle Digest military history series. He currently serves on the Board of Directors of STARRS, Inc.
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Well said. Just because we one day shed the uniform, we did not shed our oath. Where are the Davids of today? Who will stand with the airmen, soldiers, and sailors as they stand the wall. It won’t be the REMFs that pursue a “woke” path.
Keep preaching General.
God forbid, if the country is ever attacked, the pentagon will spend more time trying to determine the pronouns and genders of the enemy, while citizens man the ramparts.
Great article, thanks for writing it.
Absolutely. As a conservative mother of several sons whose father served, I always thought I’d encourage my sons to join the military — that is not the case. This mama is actively discouraging them. I have no desire for my sons to be indoctrinated with progressive ideals and medically experiment upon with no choice about what is injected into their bodies.
Sadly Madam, had I sons, I would discourage them from joining the Active Army. However and depending on the state, I might encourage them to join the National Guard which, along with elected Sheriffs, can form a final bulwark against Federal tyranny.
Regards,
Mike
PS…Miss your commentary!
Thank you for your service!
Good on you for writing this-its a sad day and a travesty when we feel compelled to remind our brethren of their obligations and their oath.
Soldiers-leaders-need leadership-we have a vacuum at the top right now-Austin and Milley are a “satire upon leadership and honor.” Austin should never have been given another bite at the apple after overseeing the re-emergence of the ISIS Caliphate while CENTCOM Commander: he is just missing the “right stuff” no matter how many DIE attributes he checks.
Milley is the definition of a political officer-poison-I wouldn’t follow him out of idle curiosity.
Their failures, misguided policies and lack of credibility are polluting downstream like an oil spill.
Thank them for their service-gently-but firmly-“kick” them to the curb.
Nothing is worse for small unit leadership, cohesion and the teamwork necessary to excel than leaders a soldier can’t respect. Far worse is when we force leaders to adopt public platitudes to policy they decry in private and social settings: soldiers know and it undercuts a fragile balance of respect that will be telling at crunch time. This is going to end in tears for our brethren in arms.
I would rather suffer the slings and arrows calling these charlatans out than to work quietly behind the scenes as an “influencer”-easy to say from the comfort of retirement.
I did that my last several years in civil service-in fact for nearly 8 years in the face of silly and asinine policy-taking issues directly to leadership in our organization. Not to do so would have been a disservice to those I led, the leaders I followed and the oath of office I swore to this country.
Did it make a difference? Ask the man in the glass-he will tell you what’s what…..
We are experiencing how many leaders are in the military, and the numbers are dismal. Unfortunately, it is not that they are not present, but that they are following the same trend in the civilian population.
Duty is not only for the military. Civilians have duties to live up to. The problem I see with the military is part of the destruction of the civilian leadership of military service. We have allowed those who don’t share our beliefs and duties to undermine you, and we, in the civilian sector who have great respect and admiration for your service.
You need our continuing support for the great leadership you give. We are letting you down, sir. I’m saddened that it is going this way.
But your words convey a spark for others to grasp and build upon, not just the military. We rely on you, and we have let you down. You need to speak to the whole of the country, not just your fellow soldier.
Thanks for your service, and keep speaking out. The bold and righteous leader is one to be cherished. Keep up the good fight.