25 February 2014

Where is the tipping point for America's trust in the military? And are we near it?

FEBRUARY 14, 2014

By Jim Gourley 
Best Defense chief military culture correspondent 


Back in 2011, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Martin Dempsey wondered aloud at a National Guard leadership conference why the U.S. military had scored the highest among Americans polled on what institutions they trusted most. "Maybe if I knew what it would take to screw it up, I could avoid it," he said. 

The numbers haven't wavered outside of statistical error since then. Despite highly unfavorable public opinion of the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, polls by Gallup and Pew back in June showed public confidence in the military holding above 75 percent. The implication appears to be that no one blames the military for failing to achieve distinct victory. It leads one to wonder just what the American people will blame the military for. In the last year, the military has run some of the biggest governmental scandals this side of the fiscal cliff. To recap, by service: 

Air Force 

Two high-profile sexual assault fiascos, one of which by a sexual assault prevention officer 
A massive cheating conspiracy among nuclear missile officers 
Shady handling of pilot deaths in the F-22
The discovery they lied about the severity of a B-2 crash years ago 
The revelations of the Air Force Academy's secret informant program

Navy 

A bribery scandal involving top-ranking officers, high-level security clearances, millions of contract dollars, hookers, and Lady Gaga tickets 
Nuclear reactor officers cheating on their tests (what is it about cheating on nuke exams?) 

Marines 

The incompetence of two generals leading to an attack that destroyed eight aircraft and killed two Marines. 
Potential undue command influence of a trial by the commandant 
Potential tampering with evidence in a trial by the commandant 
Potential cover ups by the commandant 
Petty, vindictive reprisals against the press for covering the commandant's indiscretions ... probably enacted by the commandant 

Army 

A $34 million dollar contract for a building in Afghanistan the military will never use 
A recruiting fraud scandal running up a $100 million tab 
The discovery that a four-star general turned the National Security Agency into the biggest American diplomatic catastrophe since Dick Cheney. 
"Minor" sexual indiscretion among senior officers is so rampant that it's futile to try to parse out cases among each service. 

Then there's the massive waste occurring in the Defense Department's accounting systems. But with tens of billions involved, there's plenty for everyone to lay claim to. Dempsey's question almost deserves a comedic rephrasing. "What's a military gotta do around here to lose the public trust?" Or is it perhaps that we've run out of other places to put it, and it's going to rest with the military no matter what?

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