Excellent article in the Spring issue of the NWCR pertinent to this issue. Though I may not speak as eloquently, I think my opinion is shared by a few...
from the article...
Kohn cites Major General John J. Pershing’s instructions
to First Lieutenant George Patton in 1916: “You must remember that when we
enter the army we do so with the full knowledge that our first duty is toward the
government, entirely regardless of our own views under any given circumstances.
We are at liberty to express our personal views only when called upon to do so or
else confidentially to our friends, but always confidentially and with the complete
understanding that they are in no sense to govern our actions.” Or in the words
of Omar Bradley, the first chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, “Thirty-two years
in the peacetime army had taught me to do my job, hold my tongue, and keep my
name out of the papers.”
from the article...
Kohn cites Major General John J. Pershing’s instructions
to First Lieutenant George Patton in 1916: “You must remember that when we
enter the army we do so with the full knowledge that our first duty is toward the
government, entirely regardless of our own views under any given circumstances.
We are at liberty to express our personal views only when called upon to do so or
else confidentially to our friends, but always confidentially and with the complete
understanding that they are in no sense to govern our actions.” Or in the words
of Omar Bradley, the first chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, “Thirty-two years
in the peacetime army had taught me to do my job, hold my tongue, and keep my
name out of the papers.”