Category: Philip McTigue NY

Philip McTigue and Winning in a Complex World

Philip McTigue NY

Figuring out how to win in a complex world starts with a couple complex questions. First, what is the definition of a complex world? For some people the complexities of life end at walking and talking on a cell phone at the same time. For others, a complex world can be juggling a multimillion-dollar business across global borders while dealing with strategic threats from business competitors. Finding the answer to the definition as it applies to United States Homeland Security (HLS) is step one. The second question that needs to be answered is what exactly does winning look like? Can we just put a ‘W’ in the win column for homeland security and move on to the next global issue for the United States? Defining a complex world and winning will help bring clarity to the solution as it applies to homeland security. But there are certainly some major topics that we can justly assume will be part of the answer to this question. NY native Philip McTigue believes the first major topic that will play a role in this solution is the application of soft power. As the old saying goes, you can catch more flies with honey than vinegar. In other words, you can make more friends being nice than by being mean. Another way to say this might be, you can make allies in an international environment instead of global enemies by helping emerging countries rather than attacking them. A second major topic that Philip McTigue believes will play a role in winning in a complex world would be the obvious proverbial phrase made famous by U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt when he said, “Speak softly but carry a big stick”. Very simply put, the U.S. needs a powerful and dangerous military that installs fear in our enemies in the event we need to call upon their services. Last, the U.S. can find part of the answer to winning in a complex world by exploring the economics of peace and strong relationships. We all know that financial issues are a top stressor to personal relationships and global economic relationships are in many ways no different. These major issues will all play a role in winning, and winning can loosely be defined as increased safety within the borders of the United States. The United States can increase homeland security through the international use of soft power tactics and a powerful military coupled with strong economic policies. 

The first topic for discussion is the concept of soft power. If hard power is the use of the military and the war machine, then simply stated, soft power is the opposite. Soft power can be defined as having influence over others actions by the application of our values, ideas and practices which encourage our adversaries to not resist, but cooperate with our objectives.  One crucial advantage to this concept is that it tends to be significantly less expensive than hard power. This is not hard to imagine as the cost of war has historically been extreme in both property and lives. In 2013 a report called the Costs of War Project by the Watson Institute for International Studies at Brown University stated the combined cost of both wars in Iraq and Afghanistan were estimated to be nearly $4 trillion with another estimated $4 trillion in interest and benefits being paid to veterans over the next 40 years. This same report has suggested that the cost of human life during these two wars, including civilians, reporters, soldiers and non-combatants could be as high as 250,000 dead. Given these statistics, the benefits of saving human life as well as the economic relief from implementing a policy of soft power over hard power is abundantly evident. This is not to suggest that soft power alone is the answer to a problem. As Colin Gray suggested in an article for the Army War College, soft power is a potentially dangerous idea, not because it cannot work, but instead because it can be too heavily relied upon. The application of soft power does not have to be a stand-alone option, nor does it have to come before the use of a military intervention. Soft power can be used in conjunction with hard power, before the application of military power or after a conflict has occurred. One shining example of the use of hard power followed by the exceptional implementation of soft power, and probably one of the best soft power case studies in history is the end of World War II. Both Japan and Germany lay in ruin and were the enemies of the United States. Worse for both countries, not only had they been defeated by the U.S. and the Allies, but they were now governed by occupational forces of the U.S. The United States generosity towards these countries in helping them rebuild their infrastructure, educate themselves and eventually run their own economy and countries put them both among the world’s strongest economies only twenty years later. This soft power success story does not come without monetary cost, but the long-term effects of the goodwill shown to these countries by the U.S. led to significant less economic burden than continued war would have. 

As Gray notes in his comparison of soft power and hard power, soft power alone is fool’s gold when considered a stand-alone policy. Military force “is and will long remain an essential instrument of policy”.  There are simply some international situations that cannot be resolved with politics, diplomacy or sanctions. There are no compromises that remain to sufficiently satisfy either side of an issue and the result is that warfare will become a necessary option against unacceptable actions by enemies of the U.S. But the threat of military force, or hard power must be backed up with proven results or the enemies of the U.S. will not fear the outbreak of war, thus rendering military force a useless option or tool of policy. Fortunately for the U.S., history favors our military records and as one of the largest superpowers remaining, we have the comfort of our past laurels to rest on. Philip McTigue currently works for a technology driven company in upstate NY and sees one way to ensure our military remains a dominant force is to continue our employment of cutting-edge technology. Another way to ensure our dominance militarily is to use violence of action when imposing our military will on our enemies. Former U.S. Navy SEAL Cody Courtley talks about the art of violence of action by explaining that when the time is appropriate for the use of force, be committed to violence and hit first, hit hard and hit often. In the U.S. Army doctrine for winning in a complex world the use and employment of technology in the future of warfare is clearly acknowledged. The Army doctrine states there is a need for integrating advancing technologies to provide the military with a ‘comparative advantage’. These activities include the increased use of Special Forces, developing flexible and adaptive commands and stressing the importance of innovation and adaptability as important as lethality and mobility. Philip McTigue has seen the advantages of this doctrine directly while serving the U.S. government in both the Iraqi and Afghani theater of war. As technology grows so does the need for the military to remain constantly upgraded and updated. To win in a complex world the military must continually implement new technologies and find a way to ensure they remain useful to the warfighter and allow them to concentrate on the battle and not the complications of technical products. 

Having a strong economy is the last element Philip McTigue stresses to winning in a complex world. A strong economy will lead to increased homeland security by virtue of domestic tranquility. Threats to homeland security are not restricted to foreign state actors or terrorist organizations. The U.S. also faces threats from within to include domestic terrorism, insider threats and lone wolf attacks. In addition to a strong domestic economy, having strong global financial ties with other nations can also help increase the homeland security as these nations may invest in their own economies keeping their citizens employed, educated and focused rather than being driven to attack the U.S.

At the end of WWII, the world economy was struggling and the U.S. wanted to increase their exports. The U.S. employed a soft power policy with both Germany and Japan but they also invested money into their markets to revive their economy thus creating trade with these countries. Following 1947 the U.S. gave $13.3 billion dollars to Germany and 15 other European countries and another $2.44 billion to Japan to re-establish these regions economy. This investment of financial assets coupled with the soft power policies of building infrastructure assisted in the revival of these countries and their economies. By rebuilding these countries, the U.S. put the people back to work and rather than leaving a void filled with hostile feelings, the U.S. left these countries arguably better than they found them.  Philip McTigue hopes that the U.S. will have similar success in Afghanistan and Iraq as these countries begin to emerge from under the U.S. and allegedly begin to stand on their own. This is representative of the power of a strong economy and good foreign relationships. In an article for Homeland Security Affairs Bijan Karimi described the U.S. economy as “an engine for global economic growth and a source of stability for the international system. In addition to being a key measure of power and influence in its own right, it underwrites our military strength and diplomatic influence”. Domestic economic tranquility is equally important. The economy acts as an element for the well-being of U.S. citizens as well as a tool for sanctions that lie directly between diplomacy and outright war. Philip McTigue from NY subscribes to the theory that if U.S. citizens are in a strong and affluent economy they will likely be less apt to become angry with their government and attack it. For those who are irreconcilable, there is always the application of hard power.

Philip McTigue projects an increase in U.S homeland security can be accomplished with a combination of these three policies, soft power, a powerful military and strong economic policies. In order to do this, the U.S. should evaluate the threats they face today from each known risk and determine what course of action is best suited for overcoming the risks. For example if the U.S. borders an economically weak neighbor like Mexico, then perhaps the U.S. should avoid a military confrontation, and rely more on financial assistance and soft power tactics. This may not only help create a more economically stable neighbor, it may decrease the amount of individuals trying to cross the border into the U.S. A country like Syria that is supportive of terrorist groups and does not have the potential to be a successful soft power interdiction may require more of a military solution than any other option. Philip McTigue understands there are endless examples of how either of these elements, or several coupled together over time may be a winning combination for decreasing the external and internal threat to the U.S. and therefore increases homeland security. By using all three of these concepts in concert with each other the U.S. can increase homeland security through the use of soft power tactics, a powerful military and strong economic policies. 

The preceding is an excerpt from a scholastic essay authored by Philip McTigue for Northeastern University. For a full copy or references for this article please contact Philip McTigue at mctigue.p@husky.neu.edu

Philip McTigue Provides Tips for Those Considering Joining the Marines

Philip McTigue NY
Philip McTigue deployed in Iraq using the skills learned from the U.S. Marine Corps

As a combat veteran of the United States Marine Corps Philip McTigue of NY can attest to the fact that being a Marine is tough, but it is also extremely rewarding. There’s a reason the Marine slogan is “The Few, The Proud,” and the reason is not everyone has what it takes to be a Marine. One valuable lesson Philip McTigue of NY learned during his enlistment with the Marine Corps was how to improvise, adapt and overcome. Unfortunately, not everyone who wants to enlist in the Marine Corps are prepared with all the relevant characteristics and traits to be a Marine. Today, Philip McTigue of NY will provide some helpful hints for those considering becoming a U.S. Marine.

There are of course several basic requirements to becoming a member of the U.S. Marine Corps. First a person must be a U.S. citizen, a legal permanent immigrant, or living within the United States with a green card. When it comes to education, the Marine Corps requires a minimum of a high school diploma or those with a GED or home degree, although the latter are limited. Even with a high school degree a military entrance exam must be taken, and the Marines do not accept entrants who score less than a 50 on this test. The Marines mostly recruit within the age range of 18-28. Those who enlist will need to be able to do pull-ups, push-ups and long distance runs daily. There are physical fitness tests throughout basic training which will help determine whether a person can truly be called a Marine. Philip McTigue of NY suggests that those with tattoos talk to their recruiting station representative to see if they are still eligible to join the Marine Corps. Those with large tattoos on their hands, face, or neck can be disqualified from enlistment eligibility.

Those who are considering joining the Marine Corps and have not done their research may be surprised to learn the Marine Corps is a service branch within the Navy. During his time with the U.S. Marine Corps Philip McTigue of NY reiterated the importance of close coordination of military operations between the Marines and the Navy. This close operational coordination between the Marines and the Navy is stressed in Marine ‘boot camp’ as an important part of the history between the Marines and the Navy particularly during World War II.   

Philip McTigue of NY points out during a recent conversation that nobody can be completely prepared for what they will experience during Marine basic training or ‘boot camp’. This is when being able to improvise becomes a necessity. Having the ability to perform under stress and without any preparation is going to be a key to success in boot camp. Of course, as Philip McTigue of NY points out, this inevitably leads to a person finding themselves in what seems to be a foreign or uncomfortable situation. That is precisely what the Marine training is trying to accomplish, and it is why having the adaptive characteristic is essential to success to boot camp. A Marine must be able to think, respond and follow orders in stressful and foreign environments which is what will ultimately lead to a Marine overcoming obstacles and hurdles. This ability to improvise, adapt and overcome will not only make a person a better Marine in combat, it will also make a better person who has the skills to be successful in life.

If a person wishes to become a Marine, Philip McTigue of NY suggests that honing these skills and having a clear understanding of the requirements will certainly provide an increased probability of success at ultimately becoming one of ‘The Few, The Proud’.

Four Wheelers For Wheelers Like Philip McTigue

As explained in the last Blog post, Philip McTigue shared a story from his time in Sheberghan, Afghanistan centered around his friend Irish. Accompanying Irish and Philip McTigue was a new friend, a retired Marine Corps Master Sgt. As previously mentioned, Philip McTigue was a Marine and a veteran of Desert Storm and was not going to let down his new friend and distinguished Marine the Master Sgt. As the reader will soon discover, Philip McTigue was both having fun in a war zone as well as pushing the boundaries of what any wife back home may be willing to put up with. Fortunately for Philip McTigue, as many times before, he survived this adventure and his reputation for adventure grew among his peers. His recollection and email of the incident follows:

Today was another million-degree day.  We start our training here at 5 a.m. everyday which is before most people are awake, but the Afghanis seem to have no problem with it.  So now we are training to the tune of Afghani roosters in the semi darkness of the mornings.  The good news is we are done by 1 p.m. which gives us plenty of time to find trouble.  Today was no exception.
 
One of my teammates here is a retired Marine Master Sgt and much to my surprise, trouble finds him even before it finds me.  He suggested to Irish and I we take the four wheelers out for a ride.  The ride was into the desert to the river here and then to the sand dunes.  The river is down in a valley and it is beautiful.  The ride started slow and safe, but as with all things here, it turned wild and reckless in no time.
 
The drama started as we were recklessly speeding through a tight, narrow valley that was about 6 feet wide with high dirt walls. The path was very bumpy, and the four wheelers were hard to control. As bad judgment crept its way into our ride, Irish decided it was best to drive faster, this was particularly bad since he had no idea how to drive a quad through rough, uneven sand.  In no time at all he bounced right out of control and wedged his quad sideways in between two high walls of hardened clay. I was behind him enough to stop and wait to see what was going to happen once the dust cloud evaporated from around him.  The picture I found was right out of Austin Powers.  He was going back and forth frantically trying to get the four-wheeler straight, but the path was too narrow so he was just continually smashing into the dirt walls around him and getting nowhere.  I was laughing at him so hard my eyes were getting muddy from tears and dust.  He never did get off the quad, he just kept hitting walls until the dirt broke away enough to drive away.  As I passed the location still crying with laughter I noticed green paint from the Kawasaki quads smeared all over the hard dirt walls.  
 
It was shortly after Irish’s crash we decided we wanted to be on the other side of the river.  We were in the middle of nowhere and not a road was to be seen.  Instead of going back the way we came, which had a bridge, the Master Sgt and I decided it seemed too much like surrendering or quitting by going back. One way or another we would find a way to cross, or sink the quads trying.  Never tell two Marines something cannot be done or it is too dangerous!   We found a location that looked like it might be safe to cross, but of course there was a cliff up the valley wall on the other side about 80 feet high. With four-wheel drive, and a lot of horsepower and luck, we managed to get ourselves very wet, but the quads made the river crossing and emerged on the other side cleaner than when we started.  Now we faced a sheer cliff wall with a small, narrow path up the face of it.  It was obviously for sheep and had no room for a four-wheeler.  It was so steep a human would need to be on their hands and knees to ascend it. Additionally, there was a cliff drop straight down on one side and a dirt wall on the other side.  Realizing we were in a predicament we did what any two Marines would do, we decided to try and ride up it!  
 
By his own admission the Master Sgt had led a good life and had little else to live for, so he volunteered to make the first run at it. Straight up the cliff he went until all four tires on his quad were screaming in hatred at the sand.  Right at about that time he started to slide back down the cliff path.  He safely landed where he started, looked at Irish and I, and yelled over the whine of the engine, “I think I need more speed!”.  I was assuming he would say something along those lines, so I nodded in agreement, and prayed I would be able to explain this to his kids. On his second attempt he made it all the way to the point where the path stopped and the steepest portion of the cliff started.  He jumped on one side of the quad and did a balancing act trying to keep the quad and himself from plummeting over the edge. Irish and I sprinted up the cliff and joined him hanging off the side of the quad. Once he regained control of the quad the Master Sgt got back on the quad on what little goat path there was, looked back at us with a grin and said, “I think I can make it from here”.  It was hard to imagine since the path was so steep his front tires were almost directly over the top of his rear tires.  With a Santa type twitch in his nose, he gunned the quad and took off uphill.  The four wheeler was screaming and sand was flying and as he summitted the peak safely at last, I made the only smart choice I knew…..it was now my turn to try!!
 
As I did a mix of falling down and climbing down the hill I realized I could never tell my wife what I was about to do.  She could live with wars, bombs, IED’s, and gunfights, but to willfully tempt God for no good reason was more than she could take, I was sure of it.  As I straddled my quad with the engine roaring the cliff seemed to double in size. I finally realized I could not do this; I was too much of a novice on the quad and I was going to get hurt trying.  Just at that point the Marine Master Sgt gave me a motivated Marine war cry that rattled the dirt valley around me and before I knew what was happening my quad was accelerating two times too fast as I shot up the cliff. It all seemed to be in slow motion, but I could see the goat path vanishing around me and my four-wheeler was tipping over the cliff.  I let off the gas and started to tuck for the roll down the hill and I knew it was going to hurt!  At the last minute Irish and the Master Sgt caught me and my quad as they had stayed on the cliff in case I had the same problem the Master Sgt did.  As the three of us struggled to situate the quad and me back on the hill, we all started to laugh at how stupid three grown men could be.  I managed to ride the rest of the way up the cliff and that just left Irish and his quad.  Irish was gun shy after his previous wall crash and was not willing to risk serious physical injury on the cliff climb. Of course, the Master Sgt claimed he could do it without stopping, and just like that another dumb decision was made by three grown men. In fact he did make it up without stopping much to the delight of the sheep herders and camel riders who had formed to watch the spectacle of American idiots.   
 
The rest of the day was uneventful as we all did jumps and tricks on the quads much beyond our skill level, but we laughed the entire time we did it. As luck would have it we all lived to tell our tale and now I must face the wrath of my wife for sending this story home.
 

Philip McTigue claims his wife ignored this story and never dignified it with a response. As Philip McTigue went on to explain, it was certainly not the last email she ever received that left her shaking her head in amazement over the adolescent activities of grown men in combat zones.

The Impact of War for Philip McTigue

Posted by Friends of Veterans

Philip McTigue of NY

Philip McTigue never misses a chance to relay a funny story about his time in Afghanistan or any of the other numerous theaters and experiences he has served in. For obvious reasons Philip McTigue of NY leaves out many details, like who he was working for, what exactly they were doing in the remote locations he found himself in and the names of those who were with him. By August 2008 Philip McTigue of NY had left Spin Boldak Afghanistan and moved to a different location in Sheberghan, Afghanistan. One of his good friends from Spin had accompanied him only identified as ‘Irish’.  

But as Philip McTigue broaches two subjects he ceases to be jovial and carefree and becomes a reflective man who is obviously more haunted by his past than initially revealed. His first revelation is that his hero growing up was his grandfather who served 36 years in the Navy and was a veteran of the attack on Pearl Harbor. His grandfather served the entire war in the Pacific campaign taking part in the Battle of Midway, Guadalcanal and Okinawa. Philip McTigue was raised on ‘funny stories’ his grandfather told at the dinner table during family visits of his years in World War II. It wasn’t until Philip McTigue joined the Marines and became a combat veteran of Desert Storm that his grandfather shared with him war stories he never told at the family dinner table. It becomes painfully obvious that Philip McTigue enjoys telling the same fun stories as his grandfather did before him. But the real stories come at a much higher price and are hard to extract from a battle-hardened Marine. Philip McTigue lights up when recalling stories about his grandfather, but he goes dark and slips into a shell once again when he starts to recall his own stories of war that are better left for those worthy of hearing them.  

The second topic that clearly weighs heavily on Philip McTigue is the topic of the brotherhood, bonds, and friendships he forged while serving ten years in combat zones. Many of his friends did not make it home and it is clear Philip McTigue is uncomfortable with this topic. During Desert Storm, Philip McTigue lost a close friend and Marine in his platoon and he often speaks about how it influenced his decisions later in life to serve his Country once again after the attacks of 9/11. “I never forgot about Tommy and I had demons to exercise, the decision to go back to the war on behalf of Tommy was the easiest decision I ever made” explained Philip McTigue. Philip McTigue has tattoos in honor of friends who never made it home, including Tommy, but he rarely speaks of them saving those memories for his ‘brothers’ who served with them as he did. Philip McTigue, like many veterans who have returned from war finds sharing stories of war, conflict, fear and death among the topics better left for reunions with his brothers who he served with overseas.  

Philip McTigue has led an incredible life and is one of the few fortunate people to maintain a close circle of four civilian friends from his days in high school. Philip McTigue explains, “The four of us have been the best man in all of our weddings, three of us married our high school sweethearts and two of us married sisters.” Thirty years later we are now each other’s children’s godfathers and our four families still vacation together twice a year. After his time in the Marine Corps Philip McTigue became a police officer in the Rochester, N.Y. and almost 20 years later still maintains very close friendships with many of his academy classmates, several who now are departmental Chiefs and Captains leading the department into new decades of police work. However, Philip McTigue shifts to a different gear when speaking of his brothers from his decade of warfare. Now many of them are ghosts from his past forever serving as a reminder of not only the good times, but the bad times as well.  

It is at this moment in the conversation that Philip McTigue slips back to the topic of his friend Irish who accompanied him from Spin Boldak to Sheberghan. Coincidentally it is also when the fun jovial Philip McTigue returns. Ironically, it is also when Philip McTigue shared one of his classic funny stories about his friendship with Irish and their adventures in Sheberghan, Afghanistan.  

Please stay tuned, the story will soon be posted in the next blog! 

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