Military Review English Edition July-August 2016 | Page 30

• Field grade officers do the heavy lifting. • Managing change in the Army is at a critical point. • Army officers are professionals. • The future of the Army depends on it. • Force management is part of the job. • Force management links to every aspect of the Army at every level. • Army officers are leaders. • Force management will be included in follow-on assignments. Field grade officers do the heavy lifting. Senior leaders rely on field grade officers to be subject-matter experts to help them run the Army and assist them during decision-making processes. Majors that appreciate the complexity and nuances of how the Army operates will set themselves apart from their peers and will be better prepared to understand, visualize, describe, and direct their organizations. In the Officer Professional Management System (OPMS) XXI Final Report of 1997, Gen. Dennis Reimer, then Army chief of staff, emphasized that “while warfighting must remain the paramount skill of the officer corps, the Army should begin to foster officers who thoroughly understand how the Army works as an institution.”9 Managing change in the Army is at a critical point. Gen. David Perkins, commander of U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC), in a briefing to TRADOC civilians, explained that the problem for the Army is “how to win in a complex world where the future is unknown, unknowable, and constantly changing.”10 Force management is the process that the Army uses to address that problem. He observed that the Army is structured around the conventional capabilities for heavy combat in the “Big Five” weapon systems—the Abrams tank, the Bradley fighting vehicle, the Patriot surface-to-air missile system, and the Apache and Blackhawk helicopters. However, he noted, the operational environment has changed and with it requirements for different capabilities. Perkins said this operational focus has been replaced by the need for harder-to-measure capabilities of “optimized soldier and team performance: capabilities overmatch, joint/interorganization interoperable, scalable and tailorable joint combined arms forces, and adaptive professionals and institutions to operate in complex environments.”11 28 Today’s field grade officers must prepare themselves to help build then lead the next Army by ensuring the r equired capabilities are developed. To assist them, in October 2014, TRADOC published TRADOC Pamphlet 525-3-1, The U.S. Army Operating Concept: Win in a Complex World, 2020-2024.12 This doctrine guides future force development through the identification of first-order capabilities the Army must possess to accomplish its missions. It identifies twenty enduring Army warfighting challenges that must be overcome.13 Officers at organizations above brigade level should have a good understanding of this document because the Department of the Army is changing the organization of the Army to meet these new challenges with new capabilities. Army officers are professionals. ADRP-1, The Army Profession, published in June 2015, states in chapter 1: The Army Profession is a unique vocation of experts certified in the ethical design, generation, support, and application of landpower, serving under civilian authority and entrusted to defend the Constitution and the rights and interests of the American people. An Army professional is a Soldier or Army Civilian who meets the Army Profession’s certification criteria in character, competence, and commitment.14 [bold is author emphasis] As professionals, field grade officers are obligated to understand the basics of force-management concepts so they can better support Army “business” processes and increase their professional character, competence, and commitment. Leaders must understand the force-management systems in order to operate within them effectively no matter what position, branch, or specialty they hold. The future of the Army depends on it. Fleetwood Mac sang, “Don’t stop thinking about tomorrow, it will soon be here.”15 In ten years, when the current senior leaders have long-since retired, the majors of 2016 will be the strategic thinkers and planners of the Army, so they need to start understanding the anticipated future Army now. When the Army reaches the goal of “Force 2025 and Beyond,” they will be colonels; they will be the brigade commanders and key staff officers leading the Army being built and designed today. July-August 2016  MILITARY REVIEW