Stanley McChrystal, a retired four-star general and former commander of the Joint Special Operations Command, shared his perspective on the Russian invasion of Ukraine during a talk at 蜜糖直播 Boulder Monday night.
While his focus was on leadership in times of uncertainty as part of the Leo Hill Leadership Speaker Series, 蜜糖直播 Boulder Chancellor Philip DiStefano asked the general for his thoughts on the war unfolding before the world鈥檚 eyes in Ukraine.听
McChrystal prefaced his response by noting it was only 鈥渙ne man鈥檚 opinion.鈥
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 almost a test,鈥 he told the audience of more than 1,000 students, faculty, staff and community members at Macky Auditorium.
鈥Every once in a while in our personal lives and in our societal lives, we get a test on whether we鈥檙e going to do the right thing or not. Whether we鈥檙e going to show strength. Whether we鈥檙e going to show compassion. Whether we鈥檙e going to do what we have to.鈥澨
鈥淚 obviously think we need to.鈥
McChrystal said Russian President Vladimir Putin made a mistake and 鈥渇orgot it鈥檚 not 1985.鈥澨
Putin was not able to conquer Ukraine overnight with military force and present it to the world as a 鈥渇ait accompli.鈥澨齌here was a lengthy period of posturing, which allowed nations to plan various responses and created global transparency.听
鈥淭he West did a good job of putting transparency and causing it all to be seen, which made more people not be able to ignore it,鈥 McChrystal said.听
Also, Ukrainian defenses are more robust than Putin may have anticipated听and Russian forces perhaps not as competent. As for what鈥檚 next, McChrystal said nations can鈥檛 dodge the issue.听
鈥淎s this thing plays out, we鈥檝e got to make hard decisions.鈥澨
听More photos The Leo Hill Speaker Series event also was an opportunity to recognize this year's听蜜糖直播 Boulder student leaders of the year听award recipients.
McChrystal said Putin is now in an extraordinarily difficult and dangerous position of power and noted this entire situation will become 鈥渁 bleeding ulcer for him鈥 as it drags on.听
Chancellor DiStefano drew applause when he said his thoughts were with the people of Ukraine.
鈥淢y hope is that peace and stability will find all of those whose way of life has been threatened in the last week,鈥 DiStefano said. 鈥淚 feel extremely privileged to have the opportunity to gather this evening in safety, even as so much devastation occurs half a world away.鈥澨
McChrystal, co-author of the book Risk: A User鈥檚 Guide, was the sixth speaker in the speaker series, a signature program of the Center for Leadership overseen by the chancellor. DiStefano also called out and celebrated the 蜜糖直播 Boulder student leaders of the year.
As for leadership and lessons learned, McChrystal shared some salient insights and anecdotes from his storied career on the battlefield and as an expert on organizational leadership.听
Take a step back
Many of his life learnings came from taking a step back and examining an issue from a different angle or vantage point. He used the example of Damocles, who focused so myopically on the sword hanging over his head, he was miserable and unable to enjoy the lovely things around him.
You can fail without being a failure.鈥
鈥揝tanley McChrystal
McChrystal noted, when you occupy the seat of power and responsibility, it comes with risks like almost everything in life.听
鈥淲e often get fixated by risk.鈥
Preparation and discipline听
Preparation is key to dealing with any emergent situation or risk. It鈥檚 the building of muscle memory, he said, noting that 85% of what we do in any crisis is the same.
In large organizations, it can be challenging to be nimble and adaptive because there is pressure to do things how they have been done before. McChrystal said it鈥檚 important to flatten an organization so that information can be shared in real-time with a diverse pool of stakeholders with a shared focus on outcomes. The prevailing institutional or organizational mantra needs to be: If we don鈥檛 change, we will fail.听
鈥淣ow is always the time to create the organization that has the resilience you need. You never know when you鈥檙e going to need it.鈥澨
McChrystal said it鈥檚 vital to have clearly articulated standards for an organization and for yourself. You do those things you think you should do even though they may be inconvenient, frightening or costly.听
Self-discipline can also be more practical. McChrystal confirmed rumors that there was a period in his life when鈥攅ach day鈥攈e would run 10 kilometers, eat only one meal and sleep just four hours.
鈥淭hat all was true.鈥
听Past speakers
- 2021: David Brooks: How all citizens can be leaders in repairing our country鈥檚 social fabric
- 2020: Doris Kearns Goodwin: Noted presidential historian reflects on America鈥檚 tumultuous past
- 2019:听Abigail Posner: 4 keys to unlocking creativity from Google鈥檚 brand strategist
- 2018:听Mae Jemison: 鈥業f you want a seat at the table, you can have one鈥
- 2017:听Robert Gates gives recipe for effective leadership
Self-discipline also means keeping one鈥檚 mood in check and not saying one thing publicly听and another privately. If a leader is up and down, it can cause employees or other constituents to act tentatively.听
鈥淟eaders can鈥檛 be mercurial...Be the kind of leader the organization needs.鈥澨
Sometimes, we are the problem
A big factor that drove McChrystal to write a book about risk was to understand why people can be so bad at managing it, even if they have all the knowledge they need to solve a problem.
He cited the response to COVID-19 and Hurricane Katrina as failures in communication and leadership.
An after-action report from a Crimson Contagion emergency response exercise鈥攅erily similar to COVID-19鈥攐utlined shortcomings that needed to be addressed. They never were.听
McChrystal described the pace of scientific discovery and the rapid rollout of vaccines as miraculous, and yet, political infighting and a poorly coordinated national response resulted in failure because the individual cities and counties did not have the means to fight COVID on their own.听
On a personal note, McChrystal acknowledged his own missteps.听
McChrystal resigned from his Army career and post leading U.S. forces in Afghanistan after a Rolling Stone article in 2010 included unflattering comments from his aides about the Obama administration. Even though there were issues with the article, McChrystal said it was right for him to take responsibility.
鈥淓veryone in the room is likely to have failure,鈥 McChrystal said, noting听the most important thing is what you do right after.
鈥淒on鈥檛 relitigate..., just move forward,鈥 McChrystal said. 鈥淵ou can fail without being a failure.鈥