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Mullen: U.S. Military Needs More Diversity

Mullen: U.S. Military Needs More Diversity

By Karen  Parrish
American Forces Press Service


                           Navy Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, addresses the      Air Force Diversity Senior Leader Working Group at the Doubletree Hotel in      Crystal City, Va. on Oct. 17, 2010. DOD photo by Navy Petty Officer 1st      Class Chad J. McNeeley

                             (Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available.

WASHINGTON, Oct. 18, 2010 – The armed services “can’t go  fast enough” to increase diversity, Navy Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,  told a group of senior military leaders here yesterday.

Mullen addressed the Air Force Diversity Senior Working Group,  comprised of Air Force  senior leaders including more than 50 general officers who were attending a  two-day working group aimed at increasing diversity across the armed forces.

           Bolstering diversity across the military requires fast,  direct action, Mullen told the group.

“There isn’t anybody sitting in this room … who won’t look  back 10 years from now and say, ‘I wish we could have gone faster,’” the  chairman said. “There are some things we should have done better, more risks we  should have taken to get this right. And the demographics are pretty daunting.”

           Mullen said his boyhood in small-town, middle-class  California didn’t show him much of the world. When he came home for a few weeks  of vacation in August 1965 after his first year at the U.S. Naval Academy, he saw the Watts  section of Los Angeles aflame with race riots.

“I’m 15 miles from Watts, and it is burning down,” he  said.

           The 1960s and 1970s put a glaring light on race and civil  rights issues in America and the American military. As a young military  officer, Mullen said, he learned early to focus on people’s individual  capabilities.

“Even back then, from my perspective, what I was trying to  do was put the best talent together to get the job done,” Mullen said.

           When he became chief of Naval Operations in 2005, Mullen  said, he made diversity a priority.

“When you’re taking on a very, very difficult challenge  like this and trying to change your institution, you can’t go fast enough,” he  said.

           Mullen said he focused his diversity goals for the Navy on two areas:  minorities and women.
 “That’s where the leadership was really critical, and we  were not doing very well,” he said.

           Now, Mullen said, the Navy has a number of female one-star officers who are  competitive for the future.
 “We know how to make [general officers],” he said. “We’ve  been doing it a long time, and it’s actually pretty simple. You put them in the  right jobs, and if they do well, they get promoted. And a really interesting  dynamic that was going on in the Navy in 2005, Mullen said, was: “Who is  putting people in jobs?”

           When he looked into it, Mullen said he found that the  people making officer assignments for the “hot” career paths were white males.

“There certainly wasn’t much of a path for those that  couldn’t break through. Almost overnight, once I knew that, and we started to  diversify our assignment officers … all of a sudden, records that were just as  good as any other records started surfacing,” he said.

           His senior leaders regularly reported to him on their  progress in increasing diversity, Mullen said.

“We measured ourselves on that … and if there were senior  officers that weren’t doing this, they were leaving,” he said. Mullen said he  now keeps a magazine on his desk with a cover photo of three Navy three-star  admirals, all black, so that everyone who visits his office can see it.

“Three or four years ago, you didn’t see that  [senior-level diversity] in the Navy,” Mullen said. Today’s minority role  models, he said, provide important examples of success to young military  officers.

           Without such role models “you’re not going to make it, no  matter what programs we have or how much we talk about it,” the admiral said.

           The drive  for diversity in the military is talent-driven, Mullen said. Shortly  after he became chief of Naval Operations, he recalled addressing a diversity conference  comprised primarily of young officers. Mullen thought he had a strong message  for them, but his message came back at him during the question-and-answer  period.

“This young Coast Guard ensign asked me, ‘What about that all white-male  staff you just walked in here with?’” Mullen said. Two years after hearing that  ensign’s question, the admiral said he gathered his personal staff.

“I stood back from that and looked … and I think I was the  only white guy in the room,” Mullen said. “It was all women and minorities. And  what really struck me that day was how disappointed I was in myself that it took  me so long. Because this was the best talent, the most talent, I’d ever seen in  a room … person by person.”

           Diversity is all about opportunity, Mullen said.

“This is not about bias or anything like that. This is:  ‘Here’s the job, here’s your opportunity — sink or swim,’” he said. “There was  way too much not getting the opportunities, for whatever reason: institutional,  systematic, how we were assigning people, you name it. It just wasn’t going on.  And again, we know how to do this, because we know what it takes to get  promoted in our system.”

           The military services and the officer ranks cannot remain  effective if they veer away from the nation’s demographic makeup, Mullen said.  By 2040 or 2050, he said, white males will become a minority segment of the U.S.  population. But the service academies, which last year graduated the  flag-officer class of 2040, do not reflect that reality in their current class  enrollments, which are less than 50 percent — and in some cases less than 25  percent — minorities and women.

“The leadership has got to think about it, from my  perspective, along those lines,” Mullen said. “And then be very hard on  ourselves: Are we making progress?”

           Increasing  diversity within the Defense Department‘s military and civilian workforces  isn’t magic, Mullen said.
 “It’s a lot of hard work,” he said, noting increasing diversity  requires commitment by the leadership.

“And, more importantly,” he continued, “the opportunity  for us as a military to just grow stronger and stronger and stronger, which we  must do over the course of the next 10, 20, 30 years.”

           The American military, like American industry, has to work  harder to increase diversity, the chairman said.

“There are a lot of things we can learn in terms of those who have done  this before,” Mullen said. “In the end, for us, I think it’s going to come down  to some very basic things.”

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