<----- Declined promotion and retired after 20 because of the tempo - pre-9/11.
"It would be the supreme irony, and a national tragedy, if after winning two wars in two years, the U.S. Army were broken and defeated while trying to keep the peace. Unfortunately, the risk that this will happen is all too real."
A national tragedy indeed. How unfortunate if something like this actually occured again.
What was once a proud, mighty army before the Vietnam conflict was reduced to little more than a hollow shell of itself thereafter. The decline resulted primarly from the Vietnam experience as well as the large commitment to Europe. Experienced NCOs and officers left the service in droves during the early-to-mid 70s. Discipline eroded so much that drug abuse, AWOL, desertion and internal crime became disturbingly commonplace. Morale, or lack thereof I should say, was little more than an abstract definition of basically going through motions.
Finally, sometime during the mid-1980s, was the US Army finally able to discard the bureaucratic and even dangerously ineffectual ghosts of McNamara, Laird, LBJ, Richardson, Schlesinger and the squarely removed Brown. Morale, pay, quality of life and retention rates increased. Once again, we felt good about what we were doing and who we did it for.
DoD and the policy makers in Washington really must do something about the tempo. They should have done something 7 years ago. Because of demographics, recruiting and retaining an All Voluntary Force or AVF becomes more difficult each year.