Retired Ranger Colonel Shares Hard Lessons Forged in Combat – Col (Ret) Keith Nightingale

I was cleaning out my accumulated files preparatory to an ultimate demise, and I came across a series of notes regarding officers and leadership accumulated through the years.  Having commanded four rifle companies, three Airborne/Ranger battalions and two Airborne/Ranger brigades, several in combat between 1965 and 1993, I saw a lot, did a lot and tried to remember.  This article is for those who wish the knowledge, hopefully without the pain.

Officers in Combat

Do what you are trained to do.  Sounds simple but it’s hard when bullets fly.  Just do it.  Do not think.  Thinking at this stage is deadly for your troops. You will fight as you train.  You will not get magically better when you deploy.  Bad units are always bad-the enemy tells you that.

There is no luxury of self-indulgence.  Be with the troops.  Lead.  Do not order.

In a small moment in time, you are God.  Take the care associated with the responsibility.

Be calm.  Fear is contagious, and calm inoculates.

Use all the toys and tools you have or can demand.  Nothing is more expensive than a soldier.

Expect the unexpected. Reverse the process and surprise the bad guys.

Be flexible.  Combat demands it.  Everything changes all the time.  Open minds dominate the battlefield.