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On December 9, 2011, Lt. Col.
Chris “Otis” Raible, Commanding
Officer of Marine Attack Squadron VMA 211 (the Avengers), issued his
commander’s guidance for squadron attack pilots.
Lt. Col. Raible was killed in action September 14, 2012, but his
leadership legacy
lives on to influence the world he left behind. Multiple fire leaders
shared this intent statement with us, now we share it with our audience.
May his influence provide
wildland fire leaders with an example of clear leader's intent.
From: Commanding Officer, Marine Attack Squadron 211
To: Squadron Attack Pilots
Subj: COMMANDER’S GUIDANCE FOR SQUADRON ATTACK PILOTS
1. Professional hunger.
My goal is to identify those Officers who want to be
professional attack pilots and dedicate the resources required to build them
into the flight leaders and instructors that are required for the long-term
health of our community. This is not a socialist organization. We will not all
be equal in terms of quals and flight hours. Some will advance faster than
others, and because this is not a union, your rate of advancement will have
nothing to do with seniority. Your rate of advancement will instead be determined
by your hunger, professionalism, work ethic, and performance.
If flying jets and supporting Marines is your passion and
your profession, you are in the right squadron.
If these things are viewed simply as your job, please
understand that I must invest for the future in others. Your time in a gun
squadron might be limited, so it is up to you to make the most of the
opportunities that are presented.
2. Professional focus.
Our approach to aviation is based upon the absolute
requirement to be “brilliant in the basics.”
Over the last few years Marine TACAIR has not punted the
tactical nearly so often as the admin. Sound understanding of NATOPS, aircraft
systems, and SOPs is therefore every bit as important as your understanding of
the ANTTP and TOPGUN. With this in mind, ensure the admin portions of your plan
are solid before you move onto objective area planning. Once you begin tactical
planning, remember that keeping things “simple and easy to execute” will
usually be your surest path to success. If the plan is not safe, it is not
tactically sound.
3. Attitude.
I firmly believe in the phrase “hire for attitude, train for
skill.”
Work ethic, willingness to accept constructive criticism,
and a professional approach to planning, briefing, and debriefing will get you
90% of the way towards any qualification or certification you are pursuing. The
other 10% is comprised of in-flight judgment and performance, and that will
often come as a result of the first 90%. Seek to learn from your own mistakes
and the mistakes of others. Just as a championship football team debriefs their
game film, we are going to analyze our tapes and conduct thorough flight
debriefs. It has often been said that the success of a sortie is directly
proportional to the caliber of the plan and brief. The other side of this coin
is that the amount of learning that takes place as a result of a sortie is
directly proportional to the caliber of the debrief.
4. Moral courage.
Speak up if something seems wrong or unsafe.
Speak up if something seems wrong or unsafe.
We all know what the standards are supposed to be in Naval
Aviation and in the Corps. Enforce them! When we fail to enforce the existing
standards, we are actually setting and enforcing a new standard that is lower.
5. Dedication.
If you average one hour per workday studying, 6 months from
now you will be brilliant. That is all it takes; one hour per day. As you start
to notice the difference between yourself and those who are unable to find 60
minutes, I want you to know that I will have already taken note.
Then, I want you to ask yourself this question: “How good
could I be if I really gave this my all?”
6. When all else fades away, attack pilots have one mission:
provide offensive air support for Marines.
The Harrier community needs professional attack pilots who
can meet this calling.
It does not require you to abandon your family. It does not
require you to work 16 hours per day, six days per week. It requires only a few
simple commitments to meet this calling: be efficient with your time at work so
that you can study one hour per day; be fully prepared for your sorties and get
the maximum learning possible out of every debrief; have thick skin and be
willing to take constructive criticism; find one weekend per month to go on
cross country. When you are given the opportunity to advance, for those few
days go to the mat and give it your all, 100%, at the expense of every other
thing in your life.
To quote Roger Staubach, “there are no traffic jams on the
extra mile.”
If you can be efficient during the workweek, give an
Olympian effort for check rides and certifications, and are a team player, the
sky will literally be the limit for you in this squadron.
C. K. RAIBLE
WILDLAND FIRE LEADERSHIP CHALLENGE
- Read "Command Based on Intent" on page 15 of Leading in the Wildland Fire Service.
- Reread Lt. Col. Raible's memorandum and adapt his message to fit within the wildland fire service.
- Consider providing your followers with a written statement expressing your intent.
************************************
Thank
you to wildand fire leaders Robert Morrow, U.S. Forest Service, and
Rowdy Muir, U.S. Forest Service Flaming Gorge District Ranger, for
sharing this information with us and Second
Line of Defense's and the U.S. Naval Institute's permission to reprint Lt. Col. Raible's guidance.
We first ran this post on 5/2/14
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