Forgive me if this rambles or makes no sense, but I’m on a series of meds right now that have made me feel like a zombie the last three days. I think Chantix was the final nail in this semi-comatose coffin I currently find myself in, which is ironic because I’m taking it to remove my addiction to “coffin nails.” But it IS my day off and therefore I feel obliged to post an article. This story kind of outraged me . . . well, as much as I can feel outrage right now.
The U.S. Army has given command of the 40th Infantry division to a woman. Before Sgt. Rena slits my throat, that’s not the outrageous part to me. I’m not a chauvinist. Hell, right now my wife is tearing apart and rebuilding the entire house. The circular saw is whining, she’s rewiring things. I have no idea how to do any of that stuff. Thank God for her. But it’s as poor of an idea as it would be to put me in charge of upgrading our house, it’s an equally poor decision on the Army’s part to make this woman the commander of an infantry division. My reasoning? She has no experience in the infantry!
Brig. Gen. Laura Yeager will make history later this month when she becomes the first woman to command a U.S. Army Infantry Division.
Yeager, a former Black Hawk helicopter pilot who deployed to Iraq, will assume command of the California National Guard’s 40th Infantry Division during a ceremony in Los Alamitos, California, on June 29, according to a news release from the California Guard.
She received her commission from the U.S. Army in 1986 as a second lieutenant from the Reserve Officer Training Corps at California State University Long Beach. Three years later, Yeager completed military helicopter training and began serving as a UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter aeromedical evacuation pilot.
Though Yeager left active duty service eight years later when her son was born, she continued her career in the California Army National Guard. In 2011, she deployed to Iraq as the deputy commander of the California Guard’s 40th Combat Aviation Brigade.
Yeager would later serve as battalion commander of the 3rd Battalion, 140th Aviation Regiment and brigade commander of the 40th Combat Aviation Brigade, before assuming her current role as commander of Joint Task Force North in Fort Bliss, Texas.
That’s impressive. But how does that qualify her to command an infantry division? Certainly there are male infantry officers with extensive combat experience who are more qualified for this command than she is. To me it stinks of the Army’s virtue signaling. “Look what we’re doing for women!”
Outside of her own career trajectory, Yeager is familiar with military leadership. Her father, Ret. Maj. Gen. Robert Brandt, was also a helicopter pilot who served two tours during the Vietnam War and became a top commander in the California National Guard. Brandt retired in 1999 after four decades of service.
“My father has been a tremendous role model to me, both as a parent and as an officer and I have benefited immensely from his mentorship,” Yeager told the Defense Department’s news service when she was promoted to brigadier general in 2016. “He always had high expectations for me but I was given a lot of independence to pursue my own path.”
When Yeager became a general officer that year, she was only the fourth female general in California National Guard history.
“As a female, I have found the military to provide opportunities and benefits unmatched by any profession,” she said then. “Clearly, females are in the minority within the military, yet in every assignment I have held, my mostly male peers, subordinates and superiors, have supported me, treated me with respect, coached, mentored and advised me. At the same time, I have been inspired by the incredibly strong and amazing women I have served with and for.”
The 40th Infantry Division was formed in 1917 with its soldiers fighting in World War I, World War II, the Korean War, Kosovo, Afghanistan, Iraq, and other locations around the world. The division must recently returned from Afghanistan in March.
She sounds intelligent enough, but again, her entire career has been spent in aviation. Let’s hope the 40th has a solid staff that she will listen to, because I just don’t get this. So while I fry myself trying to install a simple light switch, let’s hope she doesn’t do the same to those soldiers under her command. Are my doubts all in my drug-addled mind? What say you?
Nap time.