I hope you might read this short historical case study published at The National Interest of how President Eisenhower changed out his entire Joint Chiefs of Staff at the beginning of his administration to pursue a new National Military Strategy (The New Look) while cutting the Pentagon's budget and bureaucracy. The case study is derived from primary source documents reviewed at The National Archives, the Eisenhower Library, and the Wilson Papers at Anderson University, Anderson, IN. https://lnkd.in/ewPKdKC9
If only……..
A great from Dr. Hendrix as always!
Suffice it to say that President Eisenhower had a personal depth of insight into the military world that is perhaps unmatched among U.S. Presidents.
Thanks, Jerry!
Interesting. Of course, back then, the Joint Chiefs had operational control of their forces, which today they don't. Defense "needs" in terms of operational forces is really dictated by the Combatant Commanders (CCDRs), most so by the Geographic Combatant Commanders (GCCs). Another difference, something that the Korean War foreshadowed, is the limitation of nuclear weapons as a deterrent: our possession of nuclear weapons has not reduced the need for conventional forces as evidenced by Vietnam, DS/DS, OEF/OIF, the Houthis, etc.
Great article - very informative
Jerry, thanks for sharing this!
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5moExcellent analysis. Possible to repeat?