By allowing ads to appear on this site, you support the local businesses who, in turn, support great journalism.
AUSA leader wants sequestration ended
Letter to the editor
lettereditor

Editor, The following is an open letter on sequestration to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nevada, from retired U.S. Army Gen. Gordon R. Sullivan, head of the Association of the United States Army:
Dear Sen. Reid,
The first duty of a leader is to keep hope alive. In my experience, good leaders must act and, through their words and their work, create a feeling deep inside those being led that they can trust their leader during difficult times.
As a nation, we live in perilous times and face complex threats. It is a time when we need leadership — for the peace of mind of U.S. citizens, for our friends and allies, and even for our potential enemies — to show this nation is able to govern itself in a collaborative, purposeful and bipartisan fashion.
I have no utopian illusions about the state of play between the executive and legislative branches of our government and am fully aware this is an election year for the entire House of Representatives and one-third of the Senate, but I would like to think that somewhere, in the very souls of our leaders, there is a sense of unified selflessness that can be tapped at this time.
What I’m proposing isn’t as difficult as it sounds. There are simple steps to sending the right message: Kill sequestration, stop all downsizing in the Department of Defense and security-related agencies, and make some tangible progress in building the balanced joint force we’ve long talked about with trained and ready land, maritime, air, cyber and special-operations forces who can respond anywhere in the world when we need them.
Is this too hard? I cannot speak for 300 million Americans, but I will speak for myself. I have been in or around the U.S. Army for almost 60 years, and I am very concerned that our enemies, potential and current, don’t see us as a rock-steady nation. They think we cannot act in a collaborative, efficient manner. Some of our closest friends are left scratching their heads wondering what is going on in America that makes us seem so indecisive and weak.
Those who know us best can see that we have lost our edge. Our forces are less ready, and we are taking apart a magnificent, combat-honed force based on a great American myth that when we need defense, we can just create it. Let me be clear — it is a myth. A lesson we should have learned by now is that the cost of being unprepared is paid in lives and spilled blood.
Hope is the anchor of our souls, but success requires creating a vision and making it happen so our nation believes it and our allies and friends perceive us as serious. We want our enemies to know that we have placed ourselves where we belong — on center stage.
We don’t have a year to fix what ails our national defense. We must stop sequestration now. We must cease downsizing now. We must rely on the elected, appointed and uniformed leaders of this nation to structure forces so that they’re capable of ensuring our security. We have precious little time to show the world how good we are.

Sincerely,
Gordon R. Sullivan,
retired U.S. Army general

Sign up for our E-Newsletters