How the Military Got its Mojo Back

How the Military Got its Mojo Back


Thirty eight years ago this week (October 25th) the U.S. invaded the Caribbean island of Grenada, rescued some medical students, and rounded-up a gang of thugs and criminals, along with their Cuban communist backers. Remember that? More than a few people back then had a hard time pronouncing the name of the place or even locating it in the right hemisphere. The conflict was wrapped up in a matter of weeks and America moved on, the Spice Isle all but forgotten. But in U.S. military history the invasion of Grenada turned out to be a very big deal indeed because the post-mortem on the inter-service bickering and lack of communication led directly to reforms and a new kind of cooperative warfare bearing more than tropical fruit today. The road to Abbottabad and the takedown of Osama bin Laden arguably begins three-decades before in Grenada.

When President Reagan gave the order to take the island, the Defense Department was new to the game of small wars and did what it always did: sent everyone to the party but without an experienced organizer. The Marines, freshly bloodied in the Beirut barracks bombing only days before, got a ride from the Navy which would be in charge. At the last minute, the 82nd Airborne was called in to insure enough of the right people were present. Those new small teams of Special Ops forces--the Deltas and SEALS--would be part of the mix too. In fact, they were originally the party and then the invitations expanded.?Seven-thousand troops, in all. Looking back now, it was a dysfunctional family, gathered in duress, with each service trying to outdo the other. What we had here, too often, was a failure to communicate. Army helicopters bringing casualties were waved off Navy decks for a lack of Army helo pilot to Navy ship radio. And, the famous incident, the SEAL officer and his men pinned down rescuing Sir Paul Scoon forced to use his ATT calling card to ring up the command in North Carolina to direct an air strike of the AC-130 gunships overhead due a positioning anomaly.

The U.S. invasion force restored order on the island in a matter of days and when the units later returned home to massive rallies and demonstrations of appreciation, for the first time really since the end of World War II, they knew they were appreciated. Grenada allowed us collectively to put Vietnam in the attic of our minds.

But those dysfunctional service family members still needed adult supervision going forward and that's where Congress, primarily Senator Sam Nunn, took the lead. Post Grenada, the new policy would be called Joint Warfare and within that, the youngest children in the family--the heretofore suspect special operation forces--would get the respect and nourishment they needed under the Nunn-Cohen amendment.

In Grenada, my unit, the 2-505 of the 82d Airborne Division, was the last combat unit to leave. We were spread across the island, focused on re-building infrastructure and training local security forces. Thanksgiving, by then, was fast approaching. The islanders asked what that was??Unbeknownst to the U.S. soldiers, boats and light planes were being dispatched to pick up bits and pieces of strange food stuffs. Cranberries, yams, canned or whole turkeys. Supplies stored in secret. Then on the American Thanksgiving Day, the squads and platoons of U.S. soldiers were invited in to the Grenadian villages scattered up and down the island and served a memorable feast. The speech was invariably the same: "We don't know much about this thing you call Thanksgiving and we don't understand the food. But we do know that it is important to you and want you to know that our Thanksgiving is the day you came. Thank you."?And that's how Grenadians came to celebrate October 25th as their own official National Thanksgiving Day.

Who knew that a small conflict on a rocky island, little noted nor long remembered, would be the time and place when the U.S. military got its mojo back??Bin Laden's last day on earth was made possible because some soldiers, sailors and Marines got sun tans thirty eight years before.

Gordon Dennis Sagwitz

hybrid photographer / digital motion at SagwitzStudios LLC

3 年

I was with the 1/508 a month before we deployed to Pt. Salines. We had CIBs and Combat patches as E1s. That was something to be proud of

Gordon Sumner Ph.D.

Over 40 years experience growing nonprofits both nationally and internationally.

3 年

Hard to believe it was so many years ago... seems a lot less. LOLOLOL!! Congrats on the article and thanks for sharing it. It was a honor to support your unit along with the other units in the 505 during OUF with my Air Cav Troop. Thx again. Airborne, Air Cav, RLTW.

Mike Horn

Independent Military Professional

3 年

Great assessment! I've made similar claims for almost 4 decades, that Grenada reversed declining morale in the US War Machine. I believe the victory there, and the vital lessons learned, would positively influence future campaigns like Panama and Desert Shield/Storm.

Bjorn Anderson

Senior Executive Leader

3 年

Keith, I am always smiling after reading your work, often wistfully, but that’s the point, right? Even the stories that demonstrate the bleak and/or dreary situations have a style that connects on so many levels. I wish we’d had more time together in Normandy back in 2012 but I am happy the Soldiers got your full exposition. All the best, Bjorn

Ed Klein

Business Development Consultant

3 年

Keith Nightingale I’m remembering Captain John “Pat” Giguere, Cobra AH-1T pilot, HMM-261, posthumously awarded the Silver Star.?Seems like yesterday. “They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old; age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.?At the going down of the sun and in the morning, we will remember them.”?Lawrence Binyon, 1914? https://valor.militarytimes.com/hero/23499

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