A senior defense official has called for censure against Senator Mark Kelly, who released a video reminding service members of their duty to refuse unlawful orders. The controversy is not about whether Kelly crossed the line or acted recklessly, but rather what happens when legality is left unresolved.
Junior service members are being asked to make decisions without meaningful authority, clarity, or institutional backing. Those who execute these orders carry all the risk, while those who make them remain insulated from consequence. This setup creates a moral trap, where obedience carries personal and professional risks, and refusal can mean severe punishment if that judgment proves wrong.
The issue is not about shielding service members from hard decisions, but rather that leaders have made such moments foreseeable and increasingly routine. Members of Congress raised legitimate concerns but chose performative expression over sustained institutional confrontation, avoiding the difficult work of congressional oversight.
The failure to provide clarity on contested operations has led to an abuse of power by senior officials. When unresolved legal questions are met with retaliation instead of clarification, authority is not being exercised to protect the force but rather shield those at the top from responsibility.
This setup creates predictable and corrosive consequences for junior service members. They navigate a system where avoidance of responsibility and the abuse of authority lead to a lack of institutional cover. Service members learn quickly whether legality will be clarified before action, shaping their behavior far more powerfully than any slogan or video ever could.
A professional military cannot function in this way for long. It depends on leaders who are willing to own their decisions before others are asked to carry them out. When responsibility is abdicated or abused, institutions are reshaped around avoidance and silence, which becomes entrenched over time.
The case highlights the importance of leadership failures converging. Congress failed to confront the issue sustainably, while senior military leaders remained silent in the face of ambiguity. The result is a system where authority is used to shield those at the top from responsibility, leaving junior service members to navigate complex and uncertain situations.
In the end, it's not about Kelly or Hegseth, but rather about a broader failure of leadership. When institutions are stripped away, and responsibility is avoided, the system breaks down. It's time for leaders to own their decisions, provide clarity on contested operations, and ensure that service members have the authority and institutional backing they need to execute orders safely and with confidence.
Junior service members are being asked to make decisions without meaningful authority, clarity, or institutional backing. Those who execute these orders carry all the risk, while those who make them remain insulated from consequence. This setup creates a moral trap, where obedience carries personal and professional risks, and refusal can mean severe punishment if that judgment proves wrong.
The issue is not about shielding service members from hard decisions, but rather that leaders have made such moments foreseeable and increasingly routine. Members of Congress raised legitimate concerns but chose performative expression over sustained institutional confrontation, avoiding the difficult work of congressional oversight.
The failure to provide clarity on contested operations has led to an abuse of power by senior officials. When unresolved legal questions are met with retaliation instead of clarification, authority is not being exercised to protect the force but rather shield those at the top from responsibility.
This setup creates predictable and corrosive consequences for junior service members. They navigate a system where avoidance of responsibility and the abuse of authority lead to a lack of institutional cover. Service members learn quickly whether legality will be clarified before action, shaping their behavior far more powerfully than any slogan or video ever could.
A professional military cannot function in this way for long. It depends on leaders who are willing to own their decisions before others are asked to carry them out. When responsibility is abdicated or abused, institutions are reshaped around avoidance and silence, which becomes entrenched over time.
The case highlights the importance of leadership failures converging. Congress failed to confront the issue sustainably, while senior military leaders remained silent in the face of ambiguity. The result is a system where authority is used to shield those at the top from responsibility, leaving junior service members to navigate complex and uncertain situations.
In the end, it's not about Kelly or Hegseth, but rather about a broader failure of leadership. When institutions are stripped away, and responsibility is avoided, the system breaks down. It's time for leaders to own their decisions, provide clarity on contested operations, and ensure that service members have the authority and institutional backing they need to execute orders safely and with confidence.