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[ Marine Corps ] [ Krulak's speech ]

Scuttlebutt & Small Chow USMC History List

Everyone, this is from a retired dogface who knows his apples. Read it and weep.

George Clark


----- Original Message -----
From: Dale Wilson <
drdale@hilo.net
To: Kelly DeShane <KDeShane@vfmac.edu
Sent: Wednesday, February 09, 2000 12:59 AM
Subject: Re: FW: LATEST GEN Krulak Speech at JCOPE

Absolutely awesome speech by GEN Krulak, Kelly! So absolutely true. Our own "Praetorian Guards" and the rats and wreckers running amok in Washington, state capitols, colleges and universities, and the NEA, AFT, etc., ad nauseum, are eating rapidly away at what little integrity is left in our society. However, it really starts with the fact that "One nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all," has become a nation that is fragmented, has turned its back on God, is filled with divisiveness, suffers greater loss of true liberty daily, and has made a mockery of justice!

God help us!

Dale


----- Original Message -----
From: Kelly DeShane <
KDeShane@vfmac.edu
To: Dale Wilson <drdale@hilo.net
Sent: Tuesday, February 08, 2000 1:25 PM
Subject: FW: LATEST GEN Krulak Speech at JCOPE

Fellow Americans,

I attended the annual Joint Services Conference on Professional Ethics (JSCOPE) on 27-28 January. GEN Krulak gave the keynote speech. It was a 'keeper.' He received a full-house standing ovation at the end. The text is transcribed below.

The Question & Answer session was also superb. You should have heard him defend his Marine Corps' 'no mixed-gender' basic training policy before a gaggle of young 'girls,' USMA cadets and USNA midshipmen, after the Q&A session. The guy is absolutely magnetic. He charmed them while defending his position with enthusiasm, reason, and integrity. Even those who disagreed with him were positively impressed by his openness, sincerity, and honesty.

During the Q&A, Krulak came out and said that every one of the Joint Chiefs, in private, agreed with a 'no mixed-gender' basic training policy but none were willing to stand up to their civilian bosses to defend their professional military judgment-sad. He said that it had become known within the Pentagon that 56 Marine General Officers would 'turn in their suits' if mixed-gender training were imposed on the Marine Corps, against their best military judgment.

The Marines drew a line in the sand, and the opposition folded. Too bad there are so few at the top with such integrity.

During the Q&A session, GEN Krulak also expressed dismay that not a single member of the Joint Chiefs publicly defended the Constitution over the issue of whether or not a prominent political figure would 'make his views on homosexuals serving openly in the military' a 'litmus test' for the next Chairman of the Joint Chiefs.

When this kind of stuff starts becoming public, either by a book, speeches, articles, or other means, GEN Krulak's view is going to start taking hold with the 'grass roots' and we'll be surprised at how fast he will start picking up steam for his position.

Take heart. We are starting to turn the tide. Shortly, I will give you a summary of my impression of what I learned from my first attendance at the JSCOPE conference on 'military ethics,'-both POSITIVE and NEGATIVE.

Best Regards,

Beak


Begin text of GEN Krulak's keynote speech:

REMARKS AT JSCOPE 2000, JANUARY 27, 2000

By General Charles C. Krulak, USMC (Retired)

We study and we discuss ethical principles because it serves to strengthen and validate our own inner value system. It gives direction to what I call our moral compass. It is the understanding of ethics that becomes the foundation upon which we can deliberately commit to inviolate principles. It becomes the basis of what we are . . . of what we include in our character. Based on it, we commit to doing what is right. We expect such commitment from our leaders. But most importantly, we must demand it of ourselves.

Sound morals and ethical behavior cannot be established of created in a day, a semester … or a year. They must be institutionalized our character over time. They must become a way of life. They go beyond our individual services and beyond our ranks or positions. They cut to the heart and soul of who we are and what we are and what we must be: men and women of character.

They arm us for the challenges to come and impart to us a sense of wholeness. They unite us in the calling we now know as the profession of arms. Of all the moral and ethical guideposts that we have been brought up to recognize, the one that, for me, stands above the rest. The one that I have kept in the forefront of my mind . . . is integrity. It is my ethical and personal touchstone. Integrity, as we know it today, stands for soundness of principle and character – uprightness-honesty. Yet there is more. Integrity is also an ideal. A goal to strive for. And for a man or woman to "walk in their integrity" is to require constant discipline and usage. The word integrity itself is a martial word that comes to us from an ancient Roman army. Tradition during the time of the twelve Caesars, the Roman army would conduct morning inspections. As the inspecting Centurion would come in front of each Legionnaire, the soldier would strike with his right fist the armor breastplate that covered his heart. The armor had to be strongest there in order to protect the heart from the sword thrusts and from arrow strikes. As the soldier struck his armor, he would shout "INTEGRITAS," which in Latin means material wholeness, completeness and entirety. The inspecting Centurion would listen closely for this affirmation and also for the ring that well kept armor would give off. Satisfied that the armor was sound and that the soldier beneath it was protected, he would move on to the next man.

At about the same time, the Praetorians or imperial bodyguard were ascending into power and influence. Drawn from the best "politically correct" soldiers of the legions, they received the finest equipment and armor. They no longer had to shout "integritas" to signify that their armor was sound. Instead, as they struck their breastplate, they would shout "Hail Caesar," to signify that their heart belonged to the imperial personage – not to their unit – not to an institution – not to a code of ideals. They armored themselves to serve the cause of a single man.

A century passed and the rift between the legion and the imperial bodyguard and its excesses grew larger. To signify the difference between the two organizations, the legionnaire, upon striking his armor would no longer shout "INTEGRITAS," but instead would shout "INTEGER." Integer means undiminished-complete-perfect. It not only indicated that the armor was sound, it also indicated that the soldier wearing the armor was sound of character. He was complete in his integrity. His heart was in the right place. His standards and morals were high. He was not associated with the immoral conduct that was rapidly becoming the signature of the Praetorian Guards.

The armor of integrity continued to serve the Legion well for over four centuries. They held the line against the marauding Goths and Vandals. But by 383 AD, the social decline that infected the Republic and the Praetorian Guard had its effects upon the Legion. As a 4th Century Roman general wrote, "When, because of negligence and laziness, parade ground drills were abandoned, the customary armor began to feel heavy since the soldiers rarely, if ever, wore it. Therefore, the first asked the Emperor to set aside the breastplates and mail. Then the helmets. So our soldiers fought the Goths without any protection for the heart and head and were often beaten by archers. Although there were many disasters, which lead to the loss of great cities, no one tried to restore the armor to the armor to the infantry. They took their armor off, and when the armor came off, so too came their integrity." It was only a matter of a few years until the legion rotted from within and was unable to hold the frontiers. The barbarians were at the gates.

Integrity. It is the combination of the words, "integritas" and "integer." It refers to the putting on of armor, of building a completeness-a wholeness-a wholeness in character. How appropriate that the word integrity is a derivative or two words describing the character of a member of the profession of arms. The military has a tradition of producing great leaders that possess the highest ethical standards and integrity. It produces men and women of character. Character that allows them to deal ethically with the challenges of today and to make conscious decisions about how they will approach tomorrow. However, as I mentioned earlier, this is not done instantly. It requires that integrity becomes a way of life. It must be woven into the fabric of our soul, just as was true in days of imperial Rome. You either walk in your integrity daily, or you take off the armor of the "integer" and leave your heart and soul exposed…open to attack.

My challenge to you is simple be often very difficult. Wear your armor of integrity. Take full measure of its weight. Find comfort in its protection. Do not become lax and always, always, remember that on one can take your integrity from you. You and only you can give it away.

The biblical book of practical ethics, better known as the book of proverbs, sums it up very nicely. "The integrity of the upright shall guide them, but the perverseness of transgressors shall destroy them." [Proverbs 11:3]

Thank you.


End of transcription of GEN Krulak's keynote speech.


Major Kevin M. McConnell
Artillery Requirements Officer
Marine Corps Combat Development Command (C443)
3300 Russell Road
Quantico, VA 22134-5001
(703) 784-3192 FAX: -2532
DSN: 278-3192
mcconnellkm@mccdc.usmc.mil

 

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