Thursday, March 15, 2012 - 6:42 AM

By "John Paul Lejeune"
Best Defense Guest columnist
Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus announced on March 5 a new personnel initiative applicable to the Navy and Marine Corps called "21st Century Sailor and Marine" (21CSM), which is designed to "maximize Sailor and Marine personal readiness" -- a laudable goal.
As a serving active duty officer in either the Navy or the Marine Corps, north of O-3 and south of the FO/GO ranks, I wonder if the enhancement in personal readiness occasioned by breathalyzers will be worth the trade-off in flagging morale, professional insult, and perceptions of detached, out of touch senior leadership. I will tell you this: Getting a breathalyzer after morning PT as a precondition for working like hell for the rest of the day has great potential to piss me right off.
While the "in the weeds" specifics of how the breathalyzer program will work are not yet revealed, the general contours of the program are that Navy leaders will administer breathalyzers to operational unit work sections duty sections -- apparently everyone on duty, including, presumably, ship and squadron commanders -- plus "random" samples of other sailors in shore and support commands. No probable cause. No reason to suspect alcohol use, much less abuse. One size fits all screening of everyone, regardless of rank, career status, history of alcohol use or abuse, duty performance, or billet. Marine units will phase in the breathalyzers later, after the Navy beta tests the program.
This is among the most paternalistic, professionally insulting concepts I've seen in all my years of service, and I'm not sure I will submit. Yes, I know my options, and I just may exercise them and go right over the side the first time the duty blowmeister shoves a plastic tube in my face and treats me like a drunk driver for daring to report for duty. To the CNO, CMC, CMC of the Navy, and SgtMaj of the Marine Corps, here's my question: At what point will one of you four exercise your duty to tell the Secretary of the Navy, "Hey, Boss, WTF, over?" and that he really ought to fire whichever clown came up with this idea to screen everyone to identify serial alcohol abusers who are readily identifiable through other means. One or more of you needs to find the moral courage to recommend relegating this part of the initiative to the dustbin of really bad naval ideas.
Secretary Mabus' speech announcing the initiative notes
"[t]he test will be used only as a training and prevention tool...This is a
deterrence tool used to identify and direct appropriate counseling or treatment
before any of those career or life-altering incidents happen." Well, which is it, a training and prevention tool
or a deterrence tool? Deterrence usually
equals avoiding some bad outcome, which is inconsistent with viewing this as a
"training and prevention" tool. We can't have it both ways.
Moreover, the Secretary notes the program will be "used to identify
and direct appropriate counseling before any of those...incidents happen."
This is because the time-honored tradition of assessing sailors and
Marines by looking them in the eye at quarters or morning formation and holding
them accountable for showing up for duty under the influence of alcohol -- what
some old salts used to call "personal leadership" -- is an insufficiently precise way of knowing
who is drinking too much. This
"program" is encouraging "leaders" to default to a plastic
straw and digital display in place of demonstrating the moral courage required
to pull a promising petty officer or sergeant out of formation and haul him to
the infirmary for a fitness for duty physical.
Secretary Mabus observed: "In 13 of
20 recent Navy Commanding Officers relieved, alcohol was a component in
the incident for which they were relieved." So, according to
Secretary Mabus and the cowardly sycophants who thought up this scheme, the
problem is not that we have poor character development and command screening
processes. Rather, the problem is that we can't possibly tell when people
are drinking too much and displaying conduct which suggests they might not be
fit for command. And breathalyzing every O-5 and O-6 on duty ensures that
we will have the soberest bunch of moral coward commanders in the history of
the naval force. The solution to commanding officers abusing their
positions in alcohol related incidents isn't character development and rigorous
screening. The solution is a breathalyzer. Oh. My. God. What have we become?
I am keenly aware that alcoholism threatens readiness and the lives, well-being, families, and professional performance of sailors and Marines. I've had alcoholic service members work for me, I have seen it control their lives, and I think I have done my duty to get them help when I could and to hold them accountable when I must. I am also intensely aware that the fix is in holding leaders accountable for exercising due diligence with regard to educating and influencing their sailors and Marines on the dangers and consequences of alcohol abuse. That does not mean every ship CO or battalion commander is going to see the old man for every DUI in his unit. It does mean that if a ship CO or battalion commander has cultured a leadership environment in which clear signs of alcohol abuse are tolerated or even encouraged, and if there is a spike in alcohol-related incidents in the command, service senior leaders are going to take a hard look at what is going on inside the unit. Leaders exercising their solemn duty to junior sailors and Marines, who have even a modicum of intuition about their charges, can figure out who is sucking the worm out of the bottle every night without resorting to the extraordinary insulting and distrustful measure of breathalyzing every shipmate who steps across the brow and every Marine who marches into a gun park. Of course this might require the unthinkable: For the squadron XO to come in on a weekend and walk through the barracks, for the Master Chief to get off his ass in the Chief's Mess and head down to troop berthing, and for the company commander to fire a 1stSgt hiding a platoon sergeant's alcohol problem. Egad, it might even require a flag or general officer to look at his O-6 brigade or group commanders for regular signs of red faces and bloodshot eyes. It might require -- wait for it -- leadership -- for officers to be officers and not simply Powerpoint producers or flag mess food blisters.
Think of the signal this program sends to our officers, specifically our junior officers: welcome to the fold; you are the next generation of captains and colonels, admirals and generals; we love you like our younger brothers and sisters; we expect enormous productivity, professionalism, and sacrifice out of you; we entrust you with monumental responsibility; we want you to think strategically year to year while acting tactically day to day; we want you to blow in a tube like you are Lindsay Lohan in return for the privilege of showing up, embracing your mortality daily, and working really hard in dangerous and austere conditions for modest pay and recognition. Who wouldn't want to keep taking that deal? If corporate leadership tried this stunt in a Fortune 500 company, they would get a considerable reaction from the union or the labor force, and their retention programs would suffer massively. Labor simply would not stand for an invasive program like this. The military is different, and we just roll over for it. Maybe it is time for military leaders to start thinking about our service members more like a labor force (any active duty member who says the military is categorically different and does not respond to human resources programs in the same way as a civilian labor force: Please return your reenlistment bonuses, flight pay, and subsidized health care stipends to the U.S. Treasury at once, and call personnel to zero out your generous annual leave balance). Leaders should recognize that it is possible to cross redlines with the force.
Personally, this is a redline for me.
So here is one version of how this plays out: Lieutenant Umptefrats and Captain Beltbuckle, classmates at the Naval Academy, meet up in Honolulu. Close friends at the Academy who boxed the same weight class and remain within 5 pounds of each other, Umptefrats is a division officer on the USS Chosin and Beltbuckle commands a company in Third Marines. Smart, sharp, dedicated, and diligent, they work hard -- real hard -- enduring separation from their young families for months at a time conducting and supporting combat and presence operations at sea and ashore. Their wives give them their liberty card to go out together. It's a weeknight, so both officers are keenly aware that they have to keep it in check. Still, the beer starts flowing and the stories about misdeeds in Bancroft Hall abound. Each of them has 5 beers before they call it a night just after midnight. They take taxis home. When each of them reports for duty at 0630 the next morning, their breathalyzers register .013. Neither is impaired, and both are fully prepared to execute a full workday. Absent a breathalyzer, no one on the ship or in the battalion would likely know or care that either officer had even been out the night before. Now, with both officers showing up and blowing very low alcohol levels, their COs are notified. Each officer is called in to see the XO so he can evaluate them for himself and counsel them on responsible use of alcohol. Whispers about "drunk on duty" start circulating, both officers get a little scared for their careers. Then they get pissed at being treated like a problem child trooper with 3 NJPs in his book, snatched by the Shore Patrol out of a drunken bar brawl in Phuket. How long before both these guys start counting the days until their five years are up so they can go back to grad school on the GI Bill?
We have tools for determining whether Umptefrats and Beltbuckle, their sergeants and chiefs, their seamen and Marines are abusing alcohol: daily observation; evaluation of duty performance; perceptions of peers; knowledge of life stressers; receipt of information about financial troubles; brushes with law enforcement. We don't need another one size fits all tool that screens everyone to identify a few, and the leadership doesn't need to insult everyone and treat us all like wayward teenagers in order to identify a relative few folks who would dare show up for duty under the influence of alcohol.
This tool is categorically different than the inspections we conduct to detect the presence of illicit drugs: Unlike the urinalysis program, this "leadership" instrument threatens to sweep up members of the force for engaging in perfectly lawful activity, even tacitly encouraged by the government through the sale of booze in exchanges and clubs. Unlike the urinalysis program, which is virtually the only way to determine whether a service member smokes marijuana during weekend liberty periods, we have options with regard to diagnosing alcohol abuse. Moreover, it is cumulative: we already sacrifice some measure of privacy for the greater good by submitting to random drug testing, even though the vast majority of the force does not and would not use illicit drugs. This program in its current form is needlessly invasive, professionally insulting and misguided. It warrants a hard look by the uniformed senior leadership in reevaluating their advice to the secretary, who may be so far removed from his own uniformed service that he misunderstands the contemporary military. If retained, it should be administered selectively, in the same way that the services test for steroids (supported by facts which add up to probable cause), not daily breathalyzers across the force.
The remaining issue this officer has to sort out is how I will react personally when the breath Stasi try to make me blow into an breathalyzer as a precondition for reporting for duty. I might just say no, and take a day of leave on short notice. When my commander later hears about it and has "the discussion," that conversation might offramp into discussion of other topics, like my transition off active duty. I understand the leadership's fervent desire to mitigate operational and personnel risk and help those with alcohol problems to get counseling and continue to serve honorably. Treating every service member -- including tee-teetotalers and moderate social drinkers who comprise the vast majority of the force -- like a DUI suspect without cause is a flawed methodology for getting from here to there. It is reactive leadership at its finest, and bespeaks a lack of understanding of the modern force.
"John Paul Lejeune" is an active duty naval officer with more than 10 and less than 25 years of service. He is leaving his service identity and rank undisclosed to emphasize that this is a leadership issue for both the Navy and Marine Corps.
As there are few rewards and little professional respect to be gained for taking principled and well-reasoned positions against ill-conceived CYA policies, you learn to say your piece and then you move on.
I'm quite sure that many CMCs have voiced "within the lifelines" opposition to this policy, but, as in most things inherently political, their concerns have been dismissed out of hand. This, despite the fact that on most of the contentious personnel issues of the last 15 yrs or so, the MCs have usually been spot-on in their assessments as to how things would play out over time.
the law of the instrument paraphrased
There are few quotes that articulate EAC reasoning as well as this... When the only tool you have in your toolbox is a hammer, every problem starts looking like a nail - attributed both to Maslow and to Kaplan
I no longer play in that sandbox
but I would be certain that this policy was not well-received by the Senior Enlisted Leadership of the USN/USMC. I would be surprized to learn if they were solicited for their opinions prior to this diktat being passed down from the SecNav's office. Having been told that the ship had already sailed on this policy, the CMCs and SgtMajs saluted smartly and got with the program.
Two two service chiefs and two senior enlisted advisors were standing there with him on the deck of the Kearsarge in a public display of solidarity. Might the CNO, CMC, MCPON and SgtMaj of the Marine Corps have had different opinions prior that they were professionally obligated to swallow when the SECNAV decided to head off in this direction? Perhaps. But the bottom line is that this was presented as a unified position. I don't think one or the other of the two service chiefs or two senior enlisted advisors should have shouted down the Secretary, but we haven't heard a peep from either about the program. Maybe one or the other of them might have said publicly "well, let's just see how it goes and determine whether this is useful" or some sort of statement signifying their recognition of the intrusion that this kind of hare-brained idea works to the morale of the force. Maybe this isn't a fall on your sword type issue for them. Maybe it should be. It would be interesting to learn how loudly they protested this stupidity when it crossed their desks.
My first thought, on reading this very worthy article, was that this was yet another Op in the long campaign to make sure that the Navy is “not your father’s Navy anymore”, which swung into high gear with the deceitfully overblown Tailhook brouhaha back in the days when the USSR was going away, the Shock and Awe of the first Gulf War had succeeded (with no small thanks to Sadaam’s witlessly sitting on his hands and giving everybody the months necessary to assemble the ‘lightning stroke’), and thus the US military would have no ‘peer’ ever again and could ignore operational efficacy in favor of becoming “not your father’s military anymore”.
That was then.
My second thought, however, is that after about 20 years of the consequences of highest-levels-supported ‘changes’ and ‘reforms’ (such as dropping standards of not only excellence but efficacy, abolishing such ‘masculine’ concerns as strength and competence and self-mastery as well as responsibility and clear-eyed assessment, double-standards all around which had to be accepted – at the very least – with a straight face and no questions asked or doubts voiced, and generally an organization-wide campaign against maturity and command competence) the NavMar team and the military generally are now honey-combed with generations of officers (and – alas – NCOs and senior NCOs) who are really not well-prepared to do the primary job and who have been trained to see themselves as ‘customers’ rather than members of a ‘hierarchical’ organization (soooo ‘masculine’ a concept) and as basically just job-holders who have to wear a special suit to work every day.
And yes, there is the CYA dynamic that is also now in play, as well as the weather-eye on how best to get a nice bullet on your FitRep (or whatever they call that now).
No, not every officer can be a James Stockdale. But that should be the ideal; although,(of course, as Baudrillard the pomo literay and culture critic insists, every ideal is ‘oppressive’ because it makes you limit your own ‘total autonomy’ and then ‘impose’ such limits on other folks as well) – so the NavMar team no longer goes in for ‘ideals’ because they are ‘oppressive’ and reinforce the ‘dominant, oppressive, patriarchal’ system (all of which terms were lifted whole-hog by ‘advocates’ over here from Antonio Gramsci’s theories as to how you can undermine Western Culture to insinuate some form of Marxist-Leninist ‘revolution’ in otherwise well-functioning Western cultures and organizations).
What a frakking mess.
The bottom-line is that anybody who is really trying to get the primary job done is now micturating into a typhoon and should probably think about putting in the proverbial papers and heading for the boats.
The Navy has yet to face actual operational combat under this new regime (the Army and Corps have, with alarmingly unimpressive results, alas). But the warning signs of operational problems have been there to be seen (even though the DOD has worked ‘heroically’ to prevent such incidents from garnering much public attention).
This cannot end well.
And to everyone who is still trying to do the job ‘the old way’ all that comes to mind is that rock ballad that begins “This is for all the lonely people, thinking that life has passed them by …”. They face a nightmare version of JFK’s old “long twilight struggle”.
For a good indicator of the Op Stress of sailors, look at the units forward deployed in Japan. They see more time underway than CONUS cousins, have less structured maintenance time, and still have to surge for emergencies. Also very common in you CNFJ sailors: alcohol related incidents, divorce, domestic violence. So the Navy has the metrics about it, they just haven't done much to change it.
Not just the human factor, it amazes me that we continue to bring ships over here and run them into the ground for 12 years. Good luck to the sailors of the Bonhomme when they take over the Essex, which couldn't even get underway for the annual Thailand exercise. And who would miss out on a trip to Thailand?
That's what happens when we accuse Congress of spending like drunken sailors.
Wars everywhere in places where there is no possibility of winning so eternal deployments ruining families, causing mass PTSD and unit breakdown - check.
Creating a racially divisive atmosphere by a Commander -in-Chief who specialty is causing racial strife - check.
Replacing real leaders with political butt-kissers whose only interest is smooching butt to become a big cheese in DC - check.
Trying to make the military into a police force where our soldiers know that them getting killed is noble but actually killing the bad guys without a trial is "criminal" - check.
Making the very ideals of the enemy sacrosanct and protecting potential jihadi's in the ranks - check.
Adding in a group whose whole goal is to flaunt personal perversions at the most devoted group in the military - Christians - so they will be forced out or dishonorably discharged for prejudice - check.
Now making "acting like an uptight boyscout" a job description for all service members (you can mouth your bunk mate but not a beer) so everyone is under the gun to act "properly" - check.
Result - driving most real soldiers out of the service and shrinking it to what the administration views as its proper role in our society.
What we have a here is a perfect prescription for gutting the military and leaving behind a force that is only strong enough to be used at home to "quell resistance to the government".
has nothing to do with gays in the military.
I find it ironic that you whine about uptight boyscouts while simultaneously bitching about the persecution of Christians and the outrage (gasp) of forcing people to spend time around gays. The reason I find this ironic is that virtually without exception, the Marines I've met whom I would describe as "uptight boyscouts" were bible-thumpers who forced their Marines to go talk to the chaplain once a quarter in the off chance that maybe they can get them converted over to Southern Baptism. The same people who gave me the stink-eye when I reached for my second beer at lame command social functions while my wife was getting cornered by their 300-lb land monster of a spouse and aggressively interrogated about when she planned to have kids. The same people, incidentally, who most enthusiastically supported these kinds of retarded policies.
Why the shock on this policy. This is the same Sec of the Navy that named a ship after that bastard John Murtha. This is the same Navy that tried to ban bibles from Walter Reed/Bethesda. This is the same Navy that arranged for lesbians to be the first off the boat for a photo of them kissing just after DADT was repealed. And its not just the Navy, not a single senior officer has the balls to stand up to the radical military haters running the show and tell them to go to hell.
This soldier is glad to be retired.
Really enjoyed this well written post about this policy. As someone who has been through some well needed alcohol treatment in the Navy and could have possibly benefited from this policy, I still feel it takes a step too far. Getting help for a drinking problem has a great deal to do with the honesty and willingness to change out of the individual. If someone with a problem does get sent to a SARP screening for blowing a .013, I highly doubt they are going approach their screening in a way that could get them help. I've seen many people lie and minimize their drinking to save their career and I don't see this being any different. At the height of my drinking I would have just lied, said it was a one time thing, and then started drinking as soon as I got off work from what I kept stashed in my car.
But enough about my history, This policy is going to hurt everyone. The morale of honest responsible sailors is going to take a major hit. You are going to lose good sailors who made an honest small mistake that now has a paper work trail that is going to affect their evals and PTS. You are going to tie the hands of leaders who can no longer use sound judgement. Alcohol treatment is going to be flooded with non-issues and diminish the effectivness of their program. Worst of all, you are going to lose many people who feel that civilian life can provide them a level of personal respect for their time that they deserve. I don't feel like this is going to be a positive for people. I feel like it's going to be a witch hunt followed by a blame game that is going to further widen the gulf between ideals and reality.
There would be no UN. Europe would be Germany, Asia would be Japan. Russia would be the middle. There would be no Isreal that is for sure. Germany would probably control the world oil supply. Alot more supper powers.
"Is rio orange war always forfait mobile inevitable ?"
MaximB
By imperialistic, are you referring to the fact that we donate more money to the poor of the world than all other countries put together? You obviously need to get out an see the world if you think we are so awful..
"Is rio orange war always comparateur forfait inevitable ?"
MaximB
People have been sneaking contraband onto ship's forever. Taking a breathalyzer at morning quarters isn't going to stop the CO or Chief, or even a seaman from taking a sip out of a flask in the middle of the day. One late night post 9/11 harbor security watch in Norfolk, my Chief medicaldebt at the time told me how to bring Captain Morgan on board in a Listerine bottle for a night cap during long underways.
(64)
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