
THE FOURTH CLASS SYSTEM
I'd like to chime in with
my two cents on the 4th Class System, as I experienced it. My plebe year was during
79-80 and, although it was probably not as draconian as that of the more senior
members of this forum, it appears to be considerably different from what exists
today.
As I went through it, I
did not understand how cutting a pie into nine equal pieces would help an officer
lead soldiers into battle. The myriad of disjointed memorizations, ludicrous tasks
and perpetual panic mode seemed to have very little to do with the profession
of arms. I maintained this attitude throughout my upper class years and I was
definitely not a flame, although fairly stern and consistent. I kept this perspective
as a junior officer ... right up to the moment I commanded a cavalry troop in
the gulf war.
One night, at around 0100,
we conducted a passage of lines to assault an airfield. We had gone almost 60
hours without sleep and it was raining with a vengeance (yes, rain in the desert
... lots of it). Our own artillery was falling short and landing amongst us, one
of my platoon leaders was heading off in a tangent to the direction he should
have been following, the squadron main body was drifting too far north, my driver
was heading straight for a ravine, a tank in my 4th platoon threw a track, we
found ourselves in the middle of one of our own DPICM minefields, the objective
was spotted on our right flank (instead of in front of us, where it should have
been), almost no maps existed for our area of operations, my boss was perpetually
screaming for me to change to his frequency (an impossibility with the wonderfully
designed, single-transmitter command tanks), a half dozen spot reports were coming
in from my troops (all critical), my intel NCO had a critical update, my XO had
a critical update, my ops NCO had a critical update, my 1SG had a critical update,
my gunner had spotted dismounts, the regimental commander was forward with us
adding his own personal guidance, visibility was almost zero, there was a suspected
use of chemical weapons, regimental S-2 reported 500 heavily armed Republican
Guards on our objective (later determined to be a squad of American engineers),
and I had a moderate to severe case of dysentery. (... A run-on sentence, I know,
but then again it was a run-on night.)
It was during this little
slice of heaven (of all places) that the 4thClass System was illuminated to me
in all its glory. Its goal was not harassment, ridicule, or punishment. Its goal
was to train the neural network to deal with an overwhelming amount of disjointed
information, quickly process that information, categorize it, and make rapid,
sound decisions. At that moment, I would have gladly given a month's pay to the
genius who devised the 4th Class System. It provided me with a priceless gift
to sort the significant from the insignificant and do my job in a much better
fashion. From my perspective, THAT is the rationale behind the system. It trains
your brain in a non-lethal environment to sort through the mess, bring some order
to it and continue functioning.
It is an extremely nasty
world out there, and part of the academy's mission is to train graduates to survive
and excel in that world. We are not doing the graduates any favors by sugarcoating
things and putting a happy face on everything. There is still plenty of unadulterated
evil, brute force, and chaos to go around. Pretending it isn't there will not
make it go away. I sincerely hope that there are enough qualified people to deal
with the future chaos and brute force quickly and effectively enough to protect
our interests and keep it off our shores. Don't dismiss the 4th Class System as
an archaic anachronism. I have found it to be one of the most valuable training
programs I have ever undergone.
Just my 2 cents ...
Bo Friesen
Major U. S. Army
USMA 83
Copied with the permission of Major Friesen
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