David D. McKiernan
David D. McKiernan is a retired United States Army four-star general who served in Afghanistan as Commander, International Security Assistance Force. He served concurrently as Commander, United States Forces – Afghanistan from 6 October 2008 to 15 June 2009.
Prior to Afghanistan, McKiernan was Commanding General, United States Army, Europe and Seventh United States Army from 14 December 2005 to 2 May 2008. Before promotion to four-star rank, he served as Commanding General, Third United States Army and Coalition Forces Land Component Command from 2002 to 2004, where he commanded all allied ground forces during the 2003 invasion of Iraq, and as Deputy Commanding General, United States Army Forces Command, the army's largest major command, from 2004 to 2005.
Secretary of Defense Robert Gates said new leadership was needed as the administration of President Barack Obama launched a new strategy in the seven-year-old War in Afghanistan. McKiernan was replaced by two generals, General Stanley A. McChrystal and Lieutenant General David M. Rodriguez, ISAF and USFOR-A.
Army career
McKiernan graduated from the College of William & Mary with a Bachelor of Arts degree in history in 1972. He was commissioned from the Reserve Officers' Training Corps and entered active duty as an Armor officer. He holds a Master of Public Administration degree from Shippensburg University and an honorary doctorate in public service from William & Mary.McKiernan's commands have included:
- 1st Battalion, 35th Armored Regiment, 1st Armored Division, 1988–1990;
- 1st Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division, 1993–1995;
- 1st Cavalry Division, 1999–2001;
- Third United States Army/Combined Forces Land Component Command, 2002–2004.
- Seventh United States Army/United States Army Europe, 2005–2008
- International Security Assistance Force and United States Forces – Afghanistan, 2008–2009
Prior to these appointments McKiernan served in the VII Corps Headquarters during the Gulf War and then as the G3 in the 1st Cavalry Division in the rank of lieutenant colonel. The first appointment was probably his first experience of working with other officers or formed units of other nationalities, in the second he had British Exchange Officers on his staff.
In 2001, McKiernan was assigned as G3, Headquarters, Department of the Army. Following that posting, in September 2002, General McKiernan assumed command of the Third United States Army and United States Army Forces Central Command, and became the Coalition Forces Land Component Commander for United States Central Command in preparation for Operation Iraqi Freedom. In March 2003, McKiernan led all coalition and United States conventional ground forces that attacked Iraq to remove Saddam Hussein from power.
Following his assignment as ground forces commander, McKiernan was assigned as Deputy Commanding General/Chief of Staff for United States Army Forces Command, the largest major command in the Army which is responsible for the readiness and deployment of army forces based in the United States. Then he assumed command of Seventh Army/United States Army Europe. He was then assigned to Afghanistan as Commander, International Security Assistance Force and United States Forces-Afghanistan from 3 June 2008 to 15 June 2009.
Iraq War troop levels debate
In their book, Cobra II, military historians Michael Gordon and Bernard E. Trainor suggest that McKiernan was unhappy to hear of the cancellation of the deployment of the 1st Cavalry Division, a 17,000-soldier force that was scheduled to arrive in Iraq as a follow-on reinforcement. Its deployment was cancelled on 21 April 2003, after U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld raised the issue of whether it was needed. Previously, shortly before the war, McKiernan won Pentagon approval for a new war plan that increased the number of ground troops, calling the new war plan COBRA II.During Operation Iraqi Freedom, McKiernan had a different view of the battlefield than his superior, General Tommy Franks. McKiernan saw the Fedayeen Saddam fighters as a major threat and one of the "centers of gravity" in Iraq, while Franks dismissed the importance of the irregulars. The military was also surprised when McKiernan and his staff were not given command for post-war operations in Iraq, which instead went to V Corps and the newly promoted Lieutenant General Ricardo Sanchez.