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The Chesty Puller Paragon: Leadership Dogma or Model Doctrine?

Major Mickey L. Quintrall, USAF
(0)
Pages
66
Year
2015
Language
English

About

This study examines whether or not the United States Marine Corps senior warrior-leaders should continue to use heroic-warriors from the 1942-52 era as contemporary paragons of tactical leadership. Additionally, the Marine tactical leadership models of 1942-52 are compared to the cultivated and refocused leadership doctrine of today's Marine Corps. Then, it is considered whether or not there is a gap created by using an earlier era's tactical leadership example to model contemporary tactical battlefield leadership. The Marine Corps tactical leadership criteria and what the Corps expected of its commanders during World War II and the Korean War is the starting point. There was not much written leadership guidance then, but there was accepted leadership doctrine, nonetheless. Today, several United States Marines are recognized as setting the contemporary paragon for the ideal tactical battlefield leader. Among them is World War II and Korean War Marine Lewis 'Chesty' Burwell Puller. Chesty Puller not only set a courageous combat example, but he also trained his men hard, respected his men's fearlessness, and worked hard to build unit comradeship. Service parochialism and cultural turmoil through the Vietnam War set the stage for a rocky period in the history of the Corps, leading up to the Commandant's re-focus on a new Marine followership-leadership ethos. The Marine Corps' recent effort to 'Transform' their Marines into a new breed is an attempt to transform leadership dogma to leadership-followership doctrine. His fresh approach is thought to better inculcate the Marine culture with loyalty and commitment to the Corps, similar to what was experienced within World War II Marine Corps. The thrust of the monograph pursues the question: Does Chesty Puller provide the right contemporary leadership example, or does he perpetuate dogma?

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