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Published: September 21, 2017

Top enlisted adviser: The military is working to grow NCOs who are ‘better advisers to officers’

By The Editor

Senior enlisted troops are attending the Joint and Combined Warfighting School, which is typically reserved for officers, as part of a larger effort to better educate and train service members, according to the top enlisted adviser to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

The Norfolk, Virginia-based school normally trains field-grade officers — in grades O-4 through O-6 — in “joint, interagency and multinational war fighting at the operational level,” according to the school’s website. The 10-week program consists of 13 to 14 seminars with 16 to 19 students in each.

Army Command Sgt. Maj. John Wayne Troxell believes that senior enlisted should go through the program, too.

“When I came in to this job, I asked the question to the National Defense University, ‘Why aren’t we sending senior enlisted to this course?’ ” Troxell said at the Air Force Association conference on Wednesday.

Senior enlisted troops have participated in four courses so far, he said, and the Air Force has had more graduates than the other services combined.

“We’re not trying to make officers,” Troxell said. “We’re trying to make better advisers to officers.”

Troxell said even with a high op tempo, leaders must remember “this is a human endeavor that we do.”

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