Military Review English Edition July-August 2015 | Page 12

of uncertainty and chaos, and who are capable of visualizing, describing, directing, leading, and assessing operations in complex environments and against adaptive enemies. This will not happen by accident. It requires deliberate, purposeful, and sustained leader development programs, soundly based on our core values and professional ethic. It also requires institutional processes that optimize the performance of Army professionals through rigorous education programs and a superior talent management process. We must then forge these leaders together into cohesive teams through the crucible of tough, realistic training that fully replicates the complexity of the future operating environment. The Army Leadership Foundation Many commentators have noted the stark differences between the art and science of leadership. Practitioners will tell you that leadership is an evolutionary process with desired skills evolving over time. But amidst changing demands, our core values remain constant. Our core values and qualities are central to our professional ethic. Over the last four years, I have consistently emphasized the importance of competent leaders of character who are committed to the defense of the Nation. Competence, commitment, and character are the bedrock principles that reinforce trust: trust between soldiers; trust between leaders and the led; trust among soldiers, leaders, and the institution; and, trust between the Army as an institution and the American public.2 At its core, the Army’s professional ethic is rooted in the Constitution and the words duty, honor, and country. Our duty is to defend our country and to lead our most precious resource, our soldiers. We must do so with honor and integrity, many times under the most difficult and chaotic of conditions. As soldiers join the military, they raise their right hands and swear an oath to “support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic.”3 Throughout our Nation’s history, Americans have made tremendous sacrifices to fulfill this commitment. The oath has served as the foundation of leader development practices for generations and will guide us through the myriad complexities that we will encounter in the future. The Army Operating Concept is the intellectual foundation for an evolutionary undertaking that will drive change and enable solutions across the force. 10 While some solutions may not yet exist, we begin today by changing our mindset. If there is one overarching requirement for the future force, it is that we must remain laser-focused on developing leaders who are skilled at optimizing the performance of individuals, teams, and organizations. These Army leaders must think critically and creatively, embrace innovation and change, and foster focused collaboration to drive future force development. Leader development is the most important contributor to shaping the Army of the future. To put this into perspective, many of tomorrow’s Army leaders—the sergeants, lieutenants, and captains that will be making their mark in the coming decade—are still in middle school and high school, and today’s captains will lead battalions and brigades in the next decade. We are continuing to adapt our professional military education and to develop the tactics, tools, and techniques they will need. So, the most important task today is to form the processes and management strategies to enable our leaders of tomorrow to thrive in the uncertain, ambiguous, and complex world they will undoubtedly face. The Army Leader Development Strategy The Army Leader Development Strategy (ALDS) 2013, provides a roadmap to develop Army leaders for the challenges our Nation faces.4 Leader development is a deliberate, continuous, and progressive process that grows soldiers and Army civilians into competent, committed professional leaders of character. The ALDS identifies the competencies and attributes expected of every leader—active and reserve officers, warrant officers, and noncommissioned officers (NCOs), as well as civilians—through the Army Leadership Requirements Model.5 Leader development is achieved through the career-long synthesis of training, education, and experience. It is fostered in the institutional (schools and courses), operational (duty assignments), and self-development (selected activities) domains, supported by peer and developmental relationships. This strategy must begin by attracting those with leadership potential; by identifying and assessing unique talents, skills, attributes, and behaviors early on; and then by providing a career-long synthesis of training, education, and experience acquired in our institutions and operational units. We must foster talent to ensure that the Army July-August 2015  MILITARY REVIEW