. 24/7 Space News .
Rumsfeld Shares Transformation Philosophy With Chinese Military

US Secretary of State Donald Rumsfeld (L) is greeted by Zheng Shenxia, president of the Academy of Military Science, as he arrives for a visit 20 October 2005 in Beijing. Rumsfeld is visiting the academy, which studies operational war fighting, theories, and application, a day after warning China that it is sending 'mixed signals' with a military buildup. AFP photo by Mandel Ngan/DoD Pool.

Beijing (DOD) (SPX) Oct 20, 2005
The roadblocks to military transformation "are enormous," and overcoming them requires leaders who believe in and advocate the changes being introduced, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld told members of China's Academy of Military Science here today.

Rumsfeld, who visited the prestigious academy during his three-day visit to China's capital city, responded to a Chinese army officer's question by discussing his efforts to transform the U.S. military.

The Academy of Military Science is China's equivalent to U.S. military war colleges and conducts research programs for the Chinese armed forces. Much of that effort is directed toward helping China expand and modernize its military.

"We are deeply impressed by your efforts in advocating and promoting the transformation of military forces in the United States," Senior Col. Huang Xing told Rumsfeld during a question-and-answer session following Rumsfeld's address to the group.

Huang asked the secretary what challenges he faced along the way and how he overcame them.

"The obstacles are enormous," Rumsfeld quickly acknowledged. "Things at rest tend to remain at rest," he said, alluding to people's inherent tendency to want to stick with what they know and are comfortable with rather than change.

Instituting change, particularly in a large organization like the U.S. military, requires far more than issuing a directive or barking an order, Rumsfeld told Huanag and the other Chinese officers.

"Big institutions ... can't simply be commanded. They need to be persuaded," Rumsfeld said. "They have to believe that what you are having them do that's new is the right thing to do and the best thing."

But the persuasion doesn't stop with the force, the secretary told the group. In the United States, it extends to the Congress, which funds the changes being made, and to defense industries, which must respond by changing their operations to produce new or different equipment need.

These industries also resist change because they "have an interest in continuing to build and make the things they are currently building and making," Rumsfeld said.

Five years at the helm of the U.S. military's transformation, Rumsfeld said he's concluded that the key to success boils down to people. It requires choosing leaders who believe in and advocate change and placing them at "multiple leadership centers" throughout the organization, he said.

"There is no way that a big organization can be led from the top," the secretary said. "It has to be led from throughout by people who have the same culture and the same orientation and the same desire to see those changes implemented."

Toward that end, Rumsfeld said, he and his senior staff throughout DoD seek out leaders who "are innovative and ... bold ... and interested in being joint, that is to say, having all the services work together intimately," Rumsfeld explained.

Once these leaders are identified, the next step, the secretary said, is "seeing that they are spread throughout the Department of Defense and carry that message."

The Chinese officer also asked Rumsfeld how he's coped with obstacles while transforming the department and the military.

"Energetically and imperfectly," Rumsfeld quipped, receiving chuckles from his audience. Then, turning serious, the secretary added, "but hopefully."

Related Links
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Analysis: China's Opacity Seen As A Threat
Washington (UPI) Oct 20, 2005
U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's visit to China has focused attention again on concerns that the vast Communist nation's unpredictability during times of crisis is a threat to international security.







  • Top Officials, Specialists Meet At First Space Safety Conference In Nice
  • Masten Space Applauds NASA's New Suborbital Challenges
  • Masten Space Applauds NASA's New Suborbital Challenges
  • 'Star Trek' Actor's Remains To Be Blasted Into Space With Fans' Tributes

  • Caltech: NASA Grant For New Work On Mars With Rovers
  • Spirit Wiggles Into A Sturdy Workspace
  • Spirit Knows Tests Its Limits, Gets What It Needs From Hillary, Husband Hill
  • Mars Looms Big And Bright As It Swings Close To Earth

  • European Rocket Sends French Military Satellite Aloft
  • Syracuse 3A And Galaxy 15 To Launch October 13
  • ESA Begins Cryosat Launch Failure Probe
  • Russia To Reduce Military At Cosmodrome

  • The Next Generation Blue Marble
  • Wetlands Satellite Mapping Scheme Yielding First Results
  • Interview With Volker Liebig On The Loss Of Cryosat
  • Ice Satellite Loss Was A Disaster, Say Scientists

  • New Horizons Pluto Payload Ready For Flight, Exciting Science Campaign
  • The PI's Perspective: Changes in Latitude
  • New Class of Satellites Discovered As Moon Discovered Orbiting 10th Planet
  • Tenth Planet Has A Moon

  • Integral: Three Years Of Insight Into The Violent Cosmos
  • Lady In Red: Andromeda Galaxy Shines In Spitzer's Eyes
  • HETE-2 Satellite Solves Mystery Of Cosmic Explosions
  • It Takes Three Smithsonian Observatories To Decipher One Mystery Object

  • NASA'S Hubble Looks For Possible Moon Resources
  • Ball State Students Developing Model Of Edible Lunar Vehicle
  • Britain Should Put Astronauts On Moon, Mars: Astronomical Society
  • The Da Vinci Glow

  • Boeing JDAM Wins Australian Competition
  • Symmetricom Announces First IEEE 1588 Network Grandmaster Clock
  • Satellite Navigation to Play More Integral Role Due to Air and Waterway Crowding
  • Navman Expands Its GPS Receiver Product Line With The New Jupiter 21

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement