“A vast and efficient organism” – Admiral Chester W. Nimitz and the art of command

Trent Hone
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Abstract

Abstract In the years before World War II, the US Navy developed and refined a particular culture of command. Outwardly, this culture emphasized decentralized authority; it relied on clear mission-based orders that provided direction and fostered the initiative of subordinates. An informal network of connections – personal relationships between officers – supported these formal structures. Intimate familiarity, developed through years of shared experiences and collaboration, was the medium through which the US Navy’s officer corps exercised command. After the attack on Pearl Harbor, Admiral Chester W. Nimitz leveraged these personal connections and shared experiences to transform the Pacific Fleet and turn it into a “vast and efficient organism” capable of learning, evolving, and overcoming myriad obstacles in pursuit of a singular vision: victory in the war against Imperial Japan. Nimitz’s approach was unique, but it was not unusual; it was an outgrowth of a leadership culture the Navy had actively fostered in the early years of the twentieth century. He used his relationships and familiarity with fellow officers to exercise command decisively and transform his command into a complex adaptive system that accelerated Allied victory in the Pacific in World War II.
“庞大而高效的有机体”——海军上将切斯特·w·尼米兹与指挥艺术
在第二次世界大战之前的几年里,美国海军发展并完善了一种特殊的指挥文化。从表面上看,这种文化强调权力分散;它依赖于明确的以任务为基础的命令,这些命令提供了方向,并培养了下属的主动性。一个非正式的关系网——官员之间的私人关系——支持着这些正式的结构。通过多年的共同经验和合作而形成的亲密关系,是美国海军军官团行使指挥的媒介。珍珠港事件发生后,海军上将切斯特·w·尼米兹利用这些个人关系和共同经历,改造了太平洋舰队,把它变成了一个“庞大而高效的有机体”,能够学习、发展和克服无数障碍,追求一个单一的愿景:在对日本帝国的战争中取得胜利。尼米兹的方法是独特的,但并不罕见;这是海军在20世纪早期积极培养的领导文化的产物。他利用自己与其他军官的关系和熟悉程度,果断地执行指挥,并将自己的指挥转变为一个复杂的适应系统,加速了盟军在第二次世界大战中太平洋地区的胜利。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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