Gates Sends Mattis to CentCom

Gates Sends Mattis to CentCom

Marine Gen. James Mattis, currently commander of Joint Forces Command, will replace Gen. David Petraeus as the next commander of Central Command. Defense Secretary Robert Gates made the announcement at an afternoon Pentagon press conference. the move suyprised some observers, who believed Mattis had shown himself to be too outspoken as JFCom leader.

If confirmed by the Senate, the blunt-speaking Mattis will bring considerable regional experience to his new post. He served as a battalion commander during 1991’s Desert Storm, commanded Marine forces in Afghanistan in 2001 and commanded the Marines in Iraq during the invasion in 2003 and during the bloody fight for Fallujah during 2004.

Mattis’ intellect and knowledge are truly impressive, something Gates acknowledged in his announcement today when he said he had selected Mattis to lead the “red team” that war gamed scenarios that informed the recent QDR. He called Mattis one of the military’s most “innovative and iconoclastic thinkers.” He is also known as a military leader who speaks his mind with great vigor and directness. That was thought, in part, to be why he was not picked as the next Marine Commandant even though he was known to be one of Gates’ favorite generals.


“The post General Mattis is taking is a critical one at a critical time. The United States has vital, long-standing interests and commitments in Central Asia and the gulf region going back decades, interests and commitments that transcend multiple presidencies of both political parties,” Gates said. With the turbulent state of affairs in the region, from Iran and Iraq, Turkey to Afghanistan, senior military officials had worried at the prospect of the nation’s hottest combatant command going without a Senate-confirmed leader for any length of time. Gates, gave voice to those sentiments, telling reporters: “I consider it essential to have a confirmed full time commander in CentCom as quickly as possible.”

Join the Conversation

Congrats to Gen. Mattis.
While there is no doubt that Mattis is a true warrior, running CENTCOM also requires a serious amount of diplomacy, having to deal with regional friends and allies who may not be so friendly with their own neighbours for starters. Hopefully his outspoken manner won’t backfire on him.

McChrystal II, here we come.

Good Evening Folks,

General Patraeus was President Obama’s “Plan B” for Afghanistan, we now see what what “Plan C” looks like.

I’m sure this former subordinate to General Patraeus will keep him on a close leash.

ALLONS,
Byron Skinner

Mattis is a true warrior, having said that he may not pass Obama’s PC-test. The two qualities (if you can call being PC a quality) are mutually exclusive.

Mattis is the type of leader we need. A man who pulls no punches and isn’t going to dance to Washington’s politically correct tune, yet sadly that may be his undoing.

Mattis will tell Obama where to put it! One wonders if Obama is putting him there just so he can fire another General and complain that the deck is stacked against him, hoping to gain some sympathy since he has seemingly RUINED America since he took the helm 18 months ago! And here we thought that Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton made a mess of things!

Tough guy. Served under him two tours. Should be the commandant. PC has it’s uses… until you need a General.

As we all have participated in forms regarding social, political, military, cultural affairs we always come across the “know it all” with his pretentious script. We feed his ego with our counter points for which the precocious adolescent now an adult either dismisses or fails to acknowledge, pontificates with opinion as truths. For there is no accountability, no consequence for being obnoxious and anonymous. So if you want to continue bearing with his ego, continue to debate hoping to win the argument you have a better chance of winning the lottery.

ALLONS (translated: I’M FULL OF MYSELF)
vicgilroy

PS. You really don’t know what your are talking about. What you are writing is your opinion not truth. But thats what you do, is insite opinion, now I get it! You just bring up stupid statements just insite coments.

Changing to Mattis good choice for step one, step two.…change that diplomatic duo disaster team of Holbrook and Eikenberry.…..step three.…. put a handle on Bite Me .…step four.… clean out and (or) put a little discipline into the rest of those vague policy wonks in the White House.….…step five give a little bit more policial backing and attention to winning this thing Barry.…..Hooorah!

I stopped reading the article after “suyprised”. I know the DOD computers have spell check!

The GEN sounds perfect, to all you cynics out there.

So, Skinner thinks there was a plan. Very interesting.

There is no question that Mattis is qualified. And there is also no question that this is a better fit for him that JFCOM was. The only question in my mind is whether he should have gotten the Afghan position reporting to Petraeus rather than CENTCOM. I read Bing West’s “The Strongest Tribe” and there is no doubt Mattis understands COIN and can win. If the perception is that Petraeus is the good cop and Mattis the bad cop, this could be a problem.

Gen Mattis speaks the truth in a direct manner. He can, however, navigate the political minefield of coalition maintenance that awaits him at CENTCOM. He was quite skillful in this reguard when he was NATO’s Supreme Allied Commander, Transformation providing sage military advice to NATO on the development of a New Strategic Concept. Lots of landmines in that sandbox. Mattis walked right through it unscathed. He will do the same in CENTCOM.

*required

NOTE: Comments are limited to 2500 characters and spaces.

By commenting on this topic you agree to the terms and conditions of our User Agreement