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Has the Corps?

When I was a cadet at West Point and over the almost 60 years since I was graduated, I have heard older alumni and now some of my own classmates, since we are now older alumni say: “The Corps has.”  The meaning of this is that the Corps of Cadets has gone to hell because this or that changed since we were cadets.  The current hubbub of “the Corps having” is about the dropping of the West Point motto of “Duty, Honor, Country” from the United States Military Academy (USMA) mission statement.

When I first read of the newest concern that ‘wokism” was becoming more dominant at West Point I immediately wen to the bible of my father’s time and mine-The Bugle Notes.  Each plebe when he enters West Point is given a copy of The Bugle Notes and required to memorize certain contents such as:

  • The Corps
  • The Alma Mater
  • The mission of the United State Military Academy
  • Some football cheers and songs such as On Brave Old Army Team
  • Etc.

In neither my father’s Bugle Notes published in 1934 nor mine published in 1961 did the USMA motto of “Duty, Honor Country” appear in the mission statement.  The motto was not added to the mission statement until 1998.  And now it has been replaced with the term “Army values”.  This term is really what has excited those who want to say that the Corps has.  They fear that this term is a buzz word for some diversity, equity or inclusion initiative (DEI).  There are several points about this concern.  First many former and current graduates of the military academies and other serving members of the US military are rightly concerned that DEI activities in the military are divisive–not team building and threaten the teamwork that is required for a military unit to function with the highest effectiveness and efficiency.

In the last year or so there are at least several organizations primarily made up of service academy graduates that are seeking to be a voice against DEI in the military—STARRS and the MacArthur Society are two that stand out.  To say that the concern about DEI in the service academies is real would be an understatement.  Therefore, the concern about the term ‘Army Values.”

The Army basic training manual stresses that new recruits must learn what the words Loyalty, Duty, Respect, Selfless Service, Honor, Integrity, and Personal Courage mean. The manual goes on to stress that these seven these “Seven Core Army Values are what being a Soldier is all about.” In reading the meaning of each of these values one can find some greatness in every soldier who abides by these values.  The Army acronym for these values is L.D.E.R.S.H.I.P. However, the devotion to country is not as clear and sharp as it is in the West Point motto.  In the discussion of Loyalty, it says; “Bear true faith and allegiance to the U.S. Constitution.” But it does not link that statement to the country that was founded based upon the U.S. Constitution. This may be a weak link.

The weak link is trumped by the continued emphasis on the three hallowed words; “Duty, Honor, Country.”  For the younger reader you should know that the speech General Douglas MacArthur gave at West Point in May of 1962 was based on the reverence and criticality of those terms. Some may say so what? I was on the plain at West Point when the General trooped the line standing in a jeep with Major General William Westmoreland and the First Captain of the Corps of Cadets Jim Ellis.  I was also in the audience with spring athletes in their uniforms of the day—football, baseball, tennis, etc.– sitting on the floor in the aisles of the “mess hall” when General MacArthur made that speech without a note. (https://nationalcenter.org/ncppr/2001/11/04/general-douglas-macarthurs-farewell-speech-to-west-point-1962/) To this day I can vividly remember his demanding that:  “Duty, Honor, Country: Those three hallowed words reverently dictate what you ought to be, what you can be, what you will be. They are your rallying points: to build courage when courage seems to fail; to regain faith when there seems to be little cause for faith; to create hope when hope becomes forlorn.”

So, for today, if the Corps of Cadets and all past and future graduates abide by the West Point motto and MacArthur’s admonition about the three hallowed words, the term “Army Values” in the new West Point mission statement is less worrisome.  In fact, future leaders must learn and understand the values that their future troops are being taught.

I hope that coming out of this whole ‘hubbub” is a renewed interest in “Duty, Honor, Country” and ensuring that the Corps never has.


2 Comments

  1. steveputnam1943's avatar steveputnam1943 says:

    Thanks Bruce

    Sent from Mailhttps://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986 for Windows J. Stephen Putnam Winter address 1445 Manatee Cir Tarpon Springs, Fl 34689 Tel 727-580-0979 Summer address Unit 7B 207 East Grand Ave Old Orchard Beach Maine 04064 Tel 727-580-0979

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  2. Bob Frank '65's avatar Bob Frank '65 says:

    An important analysis. I hope that all concerned take the time to read beyond ‘Army values.’ I think those who do will learn that nothing has been lost. The Academy crest still retains ‘Duty, Honor, Country.’ If that changes, then I might be concerned.

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