Midrats

Episode 655: Command Posts - Hunter or Hunted, with Lt Col. Matt. Arrol, U.S.A.


Listen Later

For generations, the US military’s senior leadership in the field had no reason to worry about being on the receiving end of enemy fires at their command posts. Even at the company level but especially at higher echelons, we expected that we would be safe and secure in our command posts. Command posts were where one watched, planned, and executed operations – not become player in one.

One of the defining characteristics early in the Russo-Ukrainian War was the high loss rate of Russian General Officers from enemy action. Part of this was due to the top-down traditions in the Russian Army that required direct, forward, and in person direction and guidance – but a significant part of that was the Ukrainian military’s reaching out to eliminate senior leadership where they led the fight - their command posts.

As precision long range conventional fires and the ISR that supports them become more common on even the most primitive battlefield, is it time for the USA and her allies to reconsider their own reliance on large, static, and “noisy” command posts?

Using an article he co-authored in the March issue of the US Army’s “Military Review” titled “The Graveyard of Command Posts” as a starting point for our conversation, our guest this Sunday for the full hour from 5-6pm Eastern will be Lt. Col. Matthew R. Arrol, U.S. Army, commandant of the U.S. Army Joint Support Team at Hurlburt Field, Florida.

He is a contributing member of NATO’s Integrated Capabilities Group on Indirect Fire. He is a graduate of the Command and General Staff College, and his civil schooling includes a bachelor’s degree in history and political science from Michigan State University and an MBA from Eastern Michigan University. His most recent operational assignment was as the deputy commanding officer of the 19th Battlefield Coordination Detachment in Ramstein, Germany, where he served from 2016 to 2020. Previous tactical assignments include battalion operations officer and executive officer, 3rd Battalion, 16th Field Artillery Regiment; and G-5 fires planner, 1st Cavalry Division.
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

MidratsBy Midrats

  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8

4.8

86 ratings


More shows like Midrats

View all
City Journal Audio by Manhattan Institute

City Journal Audio

597 Listeners

Power Line by Ricochet

Power Line

483 Listeners

Angry Planet by Matthew Gault and Jason Fields

Angry Planet

798 Listeners

Modern War Institute by Modern War Institute at West Point

Modern War Institute

767 Listeners

The Editors by National Review

The Editors

4,757 Listeners

Defense One Radio by Defense One staff

Defense One Radio

135 Listeners

The Great Books by National Review

The Great Books

1,553 Listeners

The Proceedings Podcast by U.S. Naval Institute

The Proceedings Podcast

203 Listeners

Uncommon Knowledge by Hoover Institution

Uncommon Knowledge

1,993 Listeners

Net Assessment by War on the Rocks

Net Assessment

402 Listeners

The American Mind by The Claremont Institute

The American Mind

1,234 Listeners

GoodFellows: Conversations from the Hoover Institution by Hoover Institution

GoodFellows: Conversations from the Hoover Institution

680 Listeners

School of War by Nebulous Media

School of War

371 Listeners

The Secrets of Statecraft by Hoover Institution

The Secrets of Statecraft

110 Listeners

The Charles C. W. Cooke Podcast by National Review

The Charles C. W. Cooke Podcast

1,032 Listeners