While I'm flattered, I can't help but wonder if it isn't just an interest in feeding a milblog, but also a concern about how milblogs are reacting to CJ's troubles.
That's the state of play in the milblog world these days. There's some... tension here and there.



Bureaucracies are nearly always dominated by "anit-boat rocker" mentalities.
Like it or not, any large organization of humans is going to be a bureaucracy. The US military aint exempt from that reality.
Throwing CJ under the bus was a dumb### thing to do, but it was what can be expected from a bureaucracy.
Very seriously, about the situation with CJ, I wish it weren't so, but it is the fact. I don't have the right answers, mainly because I believe I don't have the right questions. Family is something sacred. This is a surgical operation, for the right person having all of the facts. This person is not me, he is in my thoughts and prayers.
V/R Grumpy
First, the IG's office has one job, and one job only -- to keep the Commander from getting his butt in a sling. Period. It has no other function.
The problem arose when one dumbsh*t who can't be bothered to read a disclaimer took offense at a *personal* opinion CJ expounded upon and, lacking even the courage God gave a field mouse, lodged a complaint with the IG -- and the legality of someone unconnected with the Army lodging an IG complaint about a non-military subject is pretty damned shaky.
The problem was compounded when another dumbsh*t in the IG's office leaped to the conclusion that the entire Army was going to get a black eye because of the first dumbsh*t's complaint, which had absolutely nothing to do with the Army, and instigated an investigation. The problem has escalated to this point because the remaining dumbsh*ts in the IG's office now appear to believe that they actually work for NSA, and that the complaint against CJ is a report of a threat to our national security.
And if anyone reading this happens to work in that particular IG office and takes offense at anything I have said -- tough cookies.
None of ours are permitted to blog or talk about it . Most of this country don't know and don't care what they are doing. One hears in the news a few dead and that's it really.
I have decades of experience of being unimpressed with MI commanders. I've met many fine MI soldiers and officers, as technicians, but MI officers as commanders... not so much.
I'm sure there are plenty of exceptions to that rule - I'm just speaking from my personal interactions with Intel units outside the narrow specs of their fields of expertise.
It seems to me the higher command levels and the boots on the ground understand the importance, Are the middle layers mired in policy, hubris or fear for themselves?
He received NO support from his senior NCO. He received NO support from command.
My conclusion? He's in a donkeybutt command, more concerned with kissing other donkeybutts and covering their own, than they are concerned about their Soldiers. Sad. No... not sad- it's tragic.
And if you take the time to watch the videos, you'll see that at no time was CJ out of line with his actions or words. The whole thing is just surreal.
Well, Argent, I was trying to answer your question, with an eye to others who also read but stay silent. There is a very strong element of CYA and risk-aversion in MI culture, which has a good basis in intel terms, but which makes for weak commanders.
There are always exceptions, of course, but I suspect you'll find many combat arms types agree with me.
I suspect it's not only the MI culture at play. An example from "back in the day".
The G2 boss for 2MarDiv in the early 80's was a Major. A former arty man. He was no longer an arty man because of his decision to save on transport space by loading up his ammo (8" arty rounds) on the trucks with the fuses in the fuse-wells.
Intel is often a place to hide dangerously incompetent officers. It's workable, because officers have squat all to do in intel, other than give the briefings to senior command that are produced by the enlisted.
That's how it tended to work in The Corps. No clue on the Army though.
Grimmy: I don't know how important MI actually is but I certianly would not feel enthused about having the worst providing information which influences decisions on how best to win and not get my guys killed.
I've run across exactly two Army intel commanders who fit that exception, but as an anecdotal observation, the ones in the Air Force seem to take better care of their troops.
Plus they're quicker to *share* what they know with those of us who need to know what they've found out...
I don't know how other branches do it, or even how it's done these days after all the changes since things went hostile, but...
Back in the day, in The Corps the boss hog of an intel shop at regiment or above was, actually, simply a figure head and briefing boy. All the work was done by enlisted personnel.
At battalion level, the IntelO had to be useful and actually intelligent since the battalion level was the primary sorter gatherer of current battlefield tactical info.
Above battalion was usually just a job of collating reports, posting stickies to a map and pretending to be important while giving briefs to other officer types.