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Calvin Agustine Hoffman Waller (December 17, 1937 – May 9, 1996) was a United States Army officer. Calvin Waller was born Calvin Agustine Hoffman Waller, to an African American family in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on December 17, 1937. He attended Prairie View A&M University in Texas, and graduated in 1959. Waller spent 32 years in the United States Army and served in the Vietnam War. Waller held a variety of staff and command positions which included: Chief of Staff, 24th Infantry Division (Mechanized), Fort Stewart, Georgia; Commanding General, 8th Infantry Division (Mechanized), V Corps, U.S. Army Europe and Seventh Army. Waller was the deputy commander - in - chief for military operations with United States Central Command (Forward), during the Persian Gulf War. Waller's last duty assignment was as Commanding General, I Corps at Fort Lewis, Washington, before he retired from the military at the rank of Lieutenant General, on November 30, 1991. Waller was vehemently opposed to allowing homosexuals to serve openly in the United States Armed Forces. During the 1993 U.S. Senate hearings on allowing homosexuals to serve openly in the United States military, Waller vigorously opposed it. He declared that "to compare [his] service in American's armed forces with the integration of avowed homosexuals is personally offensive." After retiring from the military, Waller moved to Denver, Colorado, and served as the president and chief executive officer of an environmental technology company, RKK Limited. He then became the senior vice president for the Department of Energy Programs for the ICF Kaiser Environmental and Energy Group. In July 1995, Waller became the Kaiser - Hill vice president for site operations and integration at Rocky Flats Environmental Technology Site. Waller died in Washington, D.C. on May 9, 1996, at the age of 58, due to complications from a heart attack. Upon learning of his death, U.S. President Bill Clinton said, "His rise from humble beginnings to one of the highest ranking African American officers in the U.S. military through stalwart determination and a record of excellence served as an inspiration to minority and non - minority officers." President Clinton also cited Waller's reputation as a "skillful and disciplined professional and a caring, enthusiastic commander." Among his awards and decorations are the Defense Distinguished Service Medal, the Army Distinguished Service Medal (two awards), the Defense Superior Service Medal, Bronze Star Medal (with Oak Leaf Cluster), the Meritorious Service Medal (with three Oak Leaf Clusters), the Air Medal, the Army Commendation Medal, Combat Infantryman Badge, and the Master Parachutist Badge. Waller's civic awards include the Martin Luther King Jr. "Buffalo Soldier" Award from the Congress of Racial Equality, the Roy Wilkins Renown Service Award from the NAACP, the French Legion of Honor award from the Government of France and the "Star of Texas" award from the state of Texas. John Ashley Warden III (born December 21, 1943) is a retired colonel in the United States Air Force. Warden is a graduate of the United States Air Force Academy. His Air Force career spanned 30 years, from 1965 to 1995, and included tours in Vietnam, Germany, Spain, Italy and Korea, as well as many assignments within the continental United States. Warden completed a number of assignments in the Pentagon, was a Special Assistant for Policy Studies and National Security Affairs to the Vice President of the United States, and was Commandant of the Air Command and Staff College. John Warden has been called “the leading air power theorist in the U.S. Air Force in the second half of the twentieth century". He has also been called “one of the most creative airmen of our times. John Warden is not just a creative airman; he is one of America’s premier strategic thinkers”. “Warden’s career was marked with brilliance and controversy, and to this day his name inspires both warm affection and cold contempt in the defense establishment. He was, and still is a controversial and influential figure in the defense establishment in general, and the U.S. Air Force in particular”. His impact on the future of air power in the United States Air Force is still being assessed, but “several distinguished military historians, officers, and other experts have concluded that Warden defined the very terms of reference for the 1991 Desert Storm military strategy and thereby introduced a new approach to the conduct of war”. John A. Warden III was born in McKinney, Texas, in 1943 and was the fourth in his family to pursue a military career. He earned his Bachelor of Science degree with a major in National Security Affairs in 1965 from the Air Force Academy and his Master’s degree from Texas Tech University in 1975, with his thesis focused exclusively on decision making at the Grand Strategic level. In 1965 (on his twenty second birthday), he married his high school sweetheart, Marjorie “Margie” Ann Clarke, and on December 5, 1966 became the father of twins, Elizabeth Kathleen, and John Warden IV. While still at the Air Force Academy, Warden started to become disillusioned with the future of the Air Force. He was concerned that air power would play a secondary role to the Army and briefly considered transferring to that service and enrolling in West Point. It was at that moment in his career that he was “introduced” to the military theorist, Major General J.F.C. Fuller, through his book, The Generalship of Alexander The Great. General Fuller quickly became Warden’s “intellectual mentor” and was instrumental in forming his lifelong interest in history and strategy, and what has come to be called the “science” of war. In April 1967, Warden was a member of the 334th Tactical Fighter Squadron, flying the F4 Phantom II, when he was first deployed overseas to South Korea in response to the Pueblo incident. In 1969, then Captain Warden, volunteered for duty in the of Republic of Vietnam. His assignment was to fly the OV-10 Bronco as a Forward Air Controller. Captain Warden participated in 266 combat missions by the time his tour ended. On several occasions, his aircraft was damaged by enemy fire, once very seriously. The North American Aviation newsletter in 1969 reported that it was the most seriously damaged OV-10 that had managed to land safely. Like many other young officers who came of age during that conflict, Warden was very much affected by the sometimes conflicting rules of engagement and the lack of an overarching strategy to guide the conduct of that war. That experience was to serve as the foundation for his emerging theories on the use of air power and the importance of strategy. Just as it did for another young officer, Colin Powell, as enunciated in the “Powell Doctrine”, Vietnam taught Warden some important lessons about warfare: you need a consistent strategic approach; overwhelming force; clear objectives; an exit strategy, and integration of the political and military dimensions. For Captain Warden, good tactics simply could not overcome a flawed strategy. As a major, Warden arrived at the Pentagon in August 1975 and accepted a position in the Directorate of Plans. Warden was assigned duties in the Middle East Section, and began his familiarity with that region of the world. This was to culminate in his contributions to the conduct of the First Gulf War. It was also at this point in his career that he began to attract attention from senior officers and members of the Intelligence Community, both for his ability to think strategically and conceptually, and for his ideas about force structure, concepts and doctrine, that normally did not interest fighter pilots. Warden had also begun to become something of a lightning rod, in that he was not afraid to forcefully express his views, even to senior officers, and was somewhat impatient with those who disagreed with him, as well as with the structure and the chain of command. Warden was at this point, and would remain throughout his career, the “quintessential air power advocate”, and a very controversial figure. Warden has been compared to famed aviator Billy Mitchell: “a thinker on a grand scale; a rebel who constantly sought ways to improve himself and his organization without having the patience to explain his reasoning or seek consensus; a revolutionary who refused to take political and personal sensitivities into account in his eagerness to change things fast, and a gentleman of unfailing integrity”. As a Lieutenant Colonel, Warden began a series of operational assignments which were a necessary requirement for the command track, and an opportunity to reach General Officer status. Warden’s operational assignments:
Warden was promoted to Colonel at the age of thirty nine and selected for the National War College. Colonel Warden’s first book, The Air Campaign: Planning for Combat was published from his National War College research in 1988. In it, he defined his theories of airpower. Many of the concepts in the book became the framework for the air campaign in the First Gulf War, and formed the bases for what is now known as the Prometheus Strategic Planning System. The Air Campaign further cemented Warden’s reputation as a brilliant, but controversial strategist. In this complex book, he focused on the concept of air power as a determinant factor in modern warfare. He directly challenged the prevailing doctrine entitled AirLand Battle, which held that air power must always play a subordinate role to ground operations, and was not strategic in and of itself. Air Force historian Richard P. Hallion noted that:
In 1989, after a tour of duty as Wing Commander of the Thirty - Sixth Tactical Fighter Group in Bitburg, Germany, Colonel Warden was again assigned to the Pentagon. He was placed in charge of the Directorate of Warfighting Concepts, where he continued to conceive, develop, and promote his ideas surrounding air power, particularly that land - based air power now constituted the dominant form of national presence and power projection; as captured in the phrase he coined; “Global Reach – Global Power”. Colonel Warden was acknowledged as a “catalyst and provocateur” by Air Force Secretary Donald Rice and Lieutenant General Michael Dugan during the significant intellectual and conceptual changes undertaken by the U.S. Air Force in the period 1988 - 90. Warden was widely acknowledged at the time to be the Pentagon’s premier authority on air power strategy. Warden instructed Checkmate, which had merged with the Mission Area Analysis Division to become the Force Assessment Division (XOXWF) under his command, to look beyond traditional AirLand Battle doctrine and to focus on potential trouble spots, paying special attention to the Persian Gulf. Sarah Baxter of The Times (U.K.) said of Checkmate:
When Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990, Saddam Hussein’s move took nearly everyone by surprise. General Norman Schwarzkopf, who was in charge of the CENTCOM (Central Command) area telephoned the Pentagon on August 8 and asked that the Air Force "put planners to work on a strategic bombing campaign aimed at Iraq's military, which would provide the retaliatory options we needed." Schwarzkopf needed two things: a way to defend Saudi Arabia, and the ability to strike Iraq if Saddam made a crazy move. The model that came to mind was Operation El Dorado Canyon, the 1986 American air raid on Libya, in which USAF and Navy aircraft struck Libyan sites in retaliation for Muammar Qaddafi's terrorism. The Commander - in - Chief (CINC) needed something like the Libya raid, on a larger scale”. The planning to liberate Kuwait originated with Warden’s group of air power advocates in the Air Staff. Warden and his team at Checkmate had reacted quickly to the task laid out by Generals Powell and Schwarzkopf, and had laid out a strategic and offense oriented plan, that, while it underwent vigorous review and revision, put the initiative in coalition hands and resulted in the overwhelming victory of Desert Storm. Colin Powell stated, “His original concept remained at the heart of the Desert Storm Air Campaign”. Norman Schwarzkopf declared that “together we mapped out the strategic concept that ultimately led to our country’s great victory in Desert Storm”. Warden's "Five Rings Model" was a central element in the presentation to General Schwarzkopf of the general outline for the Air Campaign in late August, 1990. David Halberstam asserted in War in a Time of Peace: Bush, Clinton, and the Generals (2002):
Warden’s view of the enemy as a ‘system’ and of the primary importance of the command, control and communications apparatus within that system, combined with his belief in bombing for functional disruption, strategic paralysis and systemic effect, was at the heart of the Instant Thunder air campaign in the first Gulf War, and has played an important role in changing the United States view of Warfighting at both the strategic and operational levels. His theories on effects - based planning, and his radical ideas about air power’s purposes and applications, have made him probably the most influential air power theorist since the Second World War. In 1991, at the recommendation of the Secretary of the Air Force, Donald B. Rice, Colonel Warden became the Special Assistant for Policy Studies and National Security Affairs to the Vice President of the United States, Dan Quayle. Warden represented the Office of the Vice President on numerous interagency policy coordinating committees and focused on American productivity and competitiveness. Quayle credited Warden with having finalized the Manufacturing Technology Initiative, a plan announced in 1992 that provided for American company representatives to study Japanese manufacturing processes in Japan. a bilateral agreement that enabled American enterprises to become increasingly familiar with Japanese production technology. Quayle also credited Warden with introducing senior government officials to the Six Sigma concept of business management and quality control, and with strengthening National Security through the enhancement of industrial competitiveness. As Commandant of the Air Command and Staff College ACSC for three years, Colonel Warden completely changed the entire structure and curriculum from a focus on the tactics and techniques of war, to a focus on the real objectives of war. During his time in command of the college, he intended to make it a world class educational institution for mid - career officers. Warden and his team transformed what had been an isolated academic institution into one that attracted the notice of the Pentagon, the Department of Defense and various research communities. During his tenure, the school received several official honors, such as the General Muir S. Fairchild Educational Achievement Award in 1994 and 1995. Colonel Warden’s impact will be felt for years to come as the more than eighteen hundred Majors who graduated during his time as Commandant, some of whom have already reached General Officer rank, continue their careers in the Air Force. John Warden retired from the Air Force in June 1995, and shortly thereafter started his own consulting company to pursue the application of strategy in the business world. He co-authored, with Leland A. Russell, Winning in FastTime, in which he encapsulates his ideas and theory about strategy and effects - based planning into a process they call “Prometheus”. The Gulf War Air Power Survey documents how Warden managed to “define the debate on the military strategy for 1991 through his presentations to Generals Powell and Schwarzkopf”. The U.S. Air Force History Office, after extensive research, concludes that Warden introduced a new approach to the conduct of war; an air- and leadership - centric paradigm diametrically opposed to the AirLand Battle doctrine that relegated air power to a supporting role. Scholars such as Robert A. Pape, Edward N. Luttwak, Alan Stephens, Richard P. Hallion and Phillip S. Meilinger all agree that Warden is one of the most influential strategists since the Second World War. The historian David R. Mets wonders in The Air Campaign: John Warden and the Classical Airpower Theorists whether John Warden belongs in the pantheon of such great airpower thinkers as Giulio Douhet; Hugh Trenchard; and Billy Mitchell. Federation Starship John A. Warden was named after the Colonel in Starship Troopers: Invasion. |