Tim Walz: The Command Sergeant Major Who Chose Politics Over Soldiers

Spread the love

Loading

Xitter by Cynical Publius

The last couple of days have been a whirlwind of controversy regarding the military service record of Democrat Vice Presidential candidate Tim Walz. My X account has seen the most traffic it has ever known as I have discussed this issue at length, and I thought it would be a good idea now to take a deep breath and kind of recap where we are at in this controversy. I know for sure that the veteran community is fired up over this issue, but I sense that many from the non-veteran community do not know what to think, given the competing arguments from both sides of the political aisle. I would like to share my own personal experiences and thoughts as a retired Army Colonel and veteran of both Iraq and Afghanistan.

What I hope for civilians to understand is this: the issue is not the number of years Walz served, or when he submitted his retirement paperwork, or what his final rank was, or even—just as a stand-alone proposition—whether he ever went to combat. No, the issue is the unique and special position of trust he held when he decided to walk away from his soldiers, his unit, and his nation. I’ll explain.

But first, some facts. There are all sorts of facts and disinformation flying around on this matter, so I want to highlight the most basic and most important facts, ones that not even the most rabid Democrat can dispute:

  1. Walz served for 24 years in the Minnesota Army National Guard, retiring at the rank of Master Sergeant (an “E-8” in the Army).
  2. In the spring of 2005, Walz was serving as the Command Sergeant Major (an “E-9”) of the 1st Battalion, 125th Field Artillery, a Minnesota Army National Guard battalion that is part of the 34th Infantry Division.
  3. Also in the spring of 2005, Walz and his battalion received a warning order that the battalion would be deploying to Iraq. (We know this because Walz’s own Congressional campaign told us at the time; see the link below from the Wayback Machine.) [Link]
  4. Knowing that his unit was deploying, Walz nevertheless chose to retire from the National Guard in May of 2005 to pursue his Congressional campaign.
  5. Serving members of the National Guard and the Reserves routinely also serve in Congress, and always have. Tulsi Gabbard is an excellent recent example. Walz did not necessarily need to retire to run for Congress. However, an Iraq deployment he might have instead chosen to participate in would, in fact, have prevented him from campaigning.
  6. Walz’s retirement meant he did not fulfill a contractual service commitment he willingly entered into when the Army selected him to attend the United States Army Sergeants Major Academy. As a result, the Army reduced his official retirement rank from E-9 to E-8.

These are facts. Now let’s explain what was so egregious in what Walz did.

So Walz retired when he was allowed to and ran for Congress instead—what’s the big deal, right? Well, had Walz been some slug E-8 holding down some clerical job in the 34th Infantry Division Headquarters, counting his days until retirement, and he had opted to take a lawful retirement rather than go to Iraq, no one would care. But that’s not what happened. Walz was a COMMAND SERGEANT MAJOR (“CSM”), and that makes all the difference in the world.

A CSM is the senior NCO in an Army battalion. He is the battalion commander’s most trusted advisor. He is the standard-setter for every other NCO and junior enlisted soldier in that battalion. All eyes are on him. He is as close to a god on Earth as a soldier could ever be. The rank and position of a CSM is exceptionally hard to attain—very few NCOs ever make it. More importantly, taking on the duties of a CSM is a sacred trust. The 500+ soldiers in your battalion are trusting you to train them and hold them to a standard where they can fight, win, and survive in combat. Those soldiers put their faith, trust, and lives in your hands. I’ll say it again: this is a sacred trust.

I’ll now be blunt. In the spring of 2005, Walz walked away from that sacred trust by abandoning his post when he learned of an upcoming Iraq deployment. He was a coward. He was a quitter. He placed his own self-interest over that of his soldiers. He was an NCO Courtney Massengale (IYKYK).

It is at this point that I would like to share a relevant personal anecdote to explain what it means when a CSM walks away on the eve of combat. When I was a battalion commander, just a few weeks before we were about to deploy to Afghanistan, and after we had done our intensive Joint Readiness Training Center rotation with the team we were taking to the fight—my CSM was relieved by the Division Commanding General because the CSM did something particularly stupid involving a junior enlisted soldier and got caught. I cannot describe how disruptive that was. It was like having the beating heart ripped out of my battalion. We overcame it, but it was tough—and it upset the entire NCO chain as we had to elevate multiple NCOs in the chain of responsibility to new positions they had not trained in, all because of our CSM being relieved. That disruption could have resulted in deaths in combat (thankfully it did not).

If you are an Army battalion commander, NO ONE is more important than your CSM. So yeah—I understand the impact of Walz’s cowardice better than almost all of the other people on this planet.

Someone asked me in good faith whether or not Walz simply left one kind of service for a higher level of service in Congress. I thought long and hard about an appropriate analogy as an answer to that question and finally came up with one: what Walz did is the moral equivalent of a mother dropping off her five pre-teen children at an orphanage in the dead of night so she could run for Congress. Yes, it’s that bad.

Walz’s ignominy was more than just abandoning his troops; it also reflects some sort of personal deficit in his character and make-up. For almost every professional soldier I have ever known, the idea of not going to war with his or her unit is a hateful thing. Please let me tell you another story to illustrate. One of the things that the Army makes a battalion do when it deploys to war is to leave back in the USA a “Rear Detachment.” It’s a very small group of soldiers who cover important administrative and logistical matters back home. The Rear Detachment is also the hub of the civilian spouse-led “Family Readiness Group,” keeping spouses and kids informed and—Heaven forbid—helping families if one of your soldiers is killed or wounded.

There are different schools of thought as to who a battalion commander should leave in charge of that Rear Detachment. Some battalion commanders leave their worst Lieutenant or Captain behind. When my battalion went to Afghanistan, I chose to leave my very best First Lieutenant behind. The job is just that important. When I called this Lieutenant into my office to tell him that he was being left behind to command the Rear Detachment, this stoic, hard-core, physical training stud, Jumpmaster, Ranger-qualified, combat medic Lieutenant broke down and boo-hoo cried, tears and all. He begged me not to leave him behind. Being left behind while the rest of the battalion and his company deployed was sheer heartbreak to him. He ended up doing the Rear Detachment Commander job extremely well, but I’m not sure he ever forgave me.

Most military leaders are like that. They will extend retirement dates. They will hide injuries. They will cancel a permanent change of station move or a desirable military school. Hell, many will even get divorced rather than not deploy to war. They will do any and all of those things to avoid not deploying with their unit. True military leaders are like that: the most dishonorable thing imaginable is to not go to war with your comrades. But not Tim Walz. He was a battalion Command Sergeant Major—the most senior and important NCO in a battalion—and he bailed, ran, and hid rather than deploy with his soldiers to Iraq and do his duty.

So right about now I can hear my midwit Democrat pals shouting “WHAT ABOUT CADET BONESPURS, HMMMMM!?!?” To which I easily say: Trump did not serve. Neither did Clinton. Nor Obama. Nor Biden. Nor Harris. But cutting and running in the face of the enemy and abandoning the troops you were sworn to lead AS THEIR SENIOR NONCOMMISSIONED OFFICER is 1,000 times worse than never serving at all.

Incredibly, it gets worse. Not only did Walz abandon his sacred duty to his soldiers to pursue a self-serving political goal, he then went and bragged politically about the honorable leadership as a CSM that he never provided. He took credit for a rank he never fulfilled, he lied about his service in war, and he cynically did all of this for no other reason than personal gain. This is despicable stolen valor, and reflects this man’s lack of honor, integrity and good character.

If Master Sergeant (Ret.) Walz could not be trusted to fulfill the duties he had to his soldiers, his unit and his nation in 2005, how can he be trusted to be Vice President in 2025? Tim Walz is not qualified to be a municipal dogcatcher, let alone Vice President of the United States of America.

Walz’s egregious behavior boils the blood of veterans who left a part of their soul in Mosul, or Fallujah, or Kandahar, or Ramadi, or Khowst–or any of the other cities or open spaces where their friends died. Veterans and non-veterans alike, please vote accordingly. Keep the heat on please. If all it does is cause 10,000 veterans to turn out in Pennsylvania or Wisconsin who might not have done so otherwise, we win. This is a vital issue—make Walz and the Democrats pay for their perfidy.

5 1 vote
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of

50 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Disgraceful.
I note that the dem camp has dropped calling him a “command sergeant major,” and are now calling him a “coach.”
New problem with that, tho.
He was NEVER a head coach.
He was, for a time, an “ASSISTANT COACH.”

He’s an embellisher who has got to go.
The convention will be a perfect time and place.
It can make it look like dems had a bit of democracy involved. Like the delegates got to pick a VP candidate.

In what way is an assistant coach not a coach? The word is right there in the job title.

You’re desperate, sad, and weird for grasping at that straw.

Nan never said Walz was not a coach, she said Walz was not a HEAD coach.
Is English your second language?

… speaking of weirdly grasping at straws, huh? Poor Michael, so lonely without Greggie.

I noticed that he hasn’t posted on any of this which is surprising not that I read his posts anymore.

Read it again. Her problem is simply with his being called “coach.”

So you’re making the same dumb point that other MAGAs are making: that an assistant coach is not to be referred to as a coach.

He loses that right when he lied about being a head coach. Unless he meant something else (another link to Kamala, perhaps).

When I look back at what assistant coaches do I recall them carrying the equipment out to the field and making sure the players stay hydrated.
Sometimes they stay to clean up the towels left all over after the game and they clean the equipment before they put it away.
They don’t plot strategy or create plays for during the game.
But, hey, someone’s got to do it and, after lying about a drunk driving arrest, it was probably the best job Walz could get.

You’re thinking about the team manager.

Assistant coaches will be responsible for coaching a specific subgroup, like receivers or the defense.

Let’ see, groomer; Watz was an assistant coach but allows himself to be thought of as a head coach that lead his team to victory.

He honorably served in the Army NG for 24 years but when he learned he would really have to put his ass on the line in combat, he threw his papers down 2 years before his enlistment ended so he wouldn’t have to serve in combat.

It’s no surprise that you support Democrats who pad their CVs.

It’s no surprise that you have your head up your ass, Oozy Cooz. That’s why your friends call you Ass Breath.

You crying?

When he cant defend one of his assumptions he calls names jeeze 14 year old maturity or what?

I’m the only one here who’s supposed to be held to a “no namecalling” standard, it seems. It’s so standard for MAGAs that you people don’t even notice it any more.

So you are still an ignorant POS that has no intelligent response. No surprise. Anyone who would support a Marxist candidate and her Marxist partner is not real intelligent to begin with.
It is obvious that you never served in the U.S. military or you would be incensed that Tampon Tim cut out on his men. But you’re not.

Oh, that’s right; you’re a California liberal.

A school teacher and assistant coach who came out supporting sexually grooming kids and going easy on pedophiles. It doesn’t take an Einstein to figure this one out. There was a time when one or more of the dads would have paid someone like that a visit had they known about his fetish..

Or trolling the showers. Much like Walz, you leftists will swallow anything.

He “misspoke” when he got caught lying.

So… since Kamala couldn’t possibly find anyone DUMBER than her to be VP and not steal any attention from her, she simply chose someone that was a bigger scumbag piece of shit.

Cue photoshops of the Wizard of Oz’s Scarecrow and Cowardly Lion as Kamala and Walz.

An assistant coach is a coach.

Not to mention the constant danger from false allies who would worm their way into American camps then blow themselves and other up, shot soldiers, or do other nefarious deeds.

Somewhere in Rural Minnesota
comment image

Well this is some shit show!
comment image

comment image

Kitt, rumors aside, this is Kamala’s one chance to inject the illusion of DEMOCRACY into the process of dems picking a President and VP candidate.

Not replacing him and having the elites UN-democratically place yet another hand-picked dem in his place, but by going to the convention and letting the DELEGATES VOTE on a VP option.

I really think dems have to do this if they don’t intend to bleed even more disillusioned voters who feel left out of having input for this ticket.

But cutting and running in the face of the enemy and abandoning the troops you were sworn to lead AS THEIR SENIOR NONCOMMISSIONED OFFICER is 1,000 times worse than never serving at all.

Walz submitted his resignation two months before his unit received the notice that it would eventually be deployed, and a year before it was actually deployed. There’s no way that can legitimately be called “cutting and running.”

Unless I’m somehow mistaken, the Army has developed a system for replacing soldiers who leave the service. Certainly Walz was not the only sergeant in the army; his unit presumably had a new sergeant for nearly a year before it was deployed.

Please watch the video below for one more smoking gun in a panoply of smoking guns. This is INCREDIBLY DAMNING and is further undeniable evidence of the foulness of Walz and #CowardGate.

Let me explain what is going on here.

In the Army, there is a chain of command (which is mostly with officers who have actual command authority), but there is also a “chain of responsibility,” which is between the NCOs at each level of command. This gentleman speaking was Walz’s Brigade Command Sergeant Major. A brigade is made up of multiple battalions, so this gentleman was the Brigade CSM in charge of Walz as a Battalion CSM. In many ways, he was Walz’s immediate boss. Walz promised the Brigade CSM he would deploy to war. Then he went AROUND the Brigade CSM and cowardly pulled strings two levels above at the highly political headquarters of the Minnesota National Guard. This is contemptible Blue Falcon behavior. Walz knew his Brigade CSM would NEVER have approved his retirement. Walz lied to his boss, went around his boss to fulfill his cowardly wishes, and didn’t even have the courtesy to tell his boss about it. This is ASTONISHINGLY feckless, dishonorable and disruptive behavior.

(I believe there is a saying about the “courtesy of a reach-around,” but I won’t go there.)

Not only did Walz break his sacred trust with his subordinates, we now know he broke it with his superiors too, in an incredibly disruptive, cowardly, despicable and nefarious way.

I said it before, I’ll say it again:

If Walz could not be trusted to fulfill the duties he had to his bosses, his soldiers, his unit and his nation in 2005, how can he be trusted to be Vice President in 2025?

Tim Walz is not qualified to be a municipal dogcatcher, let alone Vice President of the United States of America.

LINK

Still: the Army has a plan for what to do if a sergeant leaves the service a year before his unit is deployed.

He didn’t violate the law by retiring. He didn’t actually leave his unit in the lurch, since it had a year to work with another sergeant. This kind of thing—this whole “sacred trust” bit—is not going to play with anyone unless he or she is a) already dead set against Walz for other reasons, or b) a military cultist.

He went on to do other things that helped people. Bonus: he didn’t participate in what most people now see was a bullshit war in Iraq.

The problem for him is not that retired, it’s that he bypassed his chain of command.

Stolen Valor isn’t about his cowardice to go to Iraq. The problem for him was he continued to say he went to war. He didn’t, that’s where the ‘stolen valor’ is. He lied about his combat service. I’m not sure why any veteran would lie about it. You served, those who went into combat do not look down on those who didn’t! Every veteran looks down on stolen valor.

LINK

You served, those who went into combat do not look down on those who didn’t! 

That’s certainly not what I’ve seen online over the years.

Examples, please.

You keep saying the Army, yo dummy its the reserves, Walz did the commie retreat shuffle on his reserve unit, no there are not those already trained up to take a spot in a pinch. Its much more difficult to advance in the reserves than in the full-time Army.

No, nobody lets the draft dodger off the hook once the war is over.

When I was in high school, my older brother was drafted into the Army. He sent me a field jacket which he had sewn on a bunch of cool badges. I loved the jacket (they were the cool thing then) but real soldiers were fighting and dying in Vietnam and, even as a kid, I didn’t want to give the wrong impression about what I had done. So, I took the badges off the jacket.

My brother volunteered to go to Vietnam. He was on a rifle team at Ft. Lewis and could have served out his time stateside. He never mentioned his service there until just a few years ago. Of course, he never ran for office as a Democrat, either.

Exactly. I spent 8 years in a Reserve Special Forces unit as an Intelligence Analyst and always made it a point to tell people that I was NOT Special Forces qualified. We were Airborne qualified but we weren’t SF qualified. When Tampon Timmy wasn’t insinuating he was something he was not, he was down right lying about it. I’d like to see a photo of him in his Class A’s to see what type of medals and badges he wore on his uniform and see if they match what was on his DD214. He seems like the PX ranger type.