The Army stepped to the fore last   month, winning  one of the armed forces’ most coveted commands after   having seen Marine  Corps generals selected in recent years to head   operations in the  Middle East, Afghanistan and Europe.
The Pentagon announced that Gen. Lloyd  J. Austin  III, Army vice chief  of staff and the last commander in Iraq,  would  take over U.S. Central  Command — a pivotal post, given the unrest  in  Egypt and the possibility  of war in Iran. After Senate confirmation,   he will succeed Marine Gen.  James N. Mattis.
The Air Force had  been in the running  for the  four-star post because any  decision to  strike Iran’s nuclear sites would  involve a large bombing  campaign  lasting days.
Previously, a Marine  general was tapped to run NATO  and another Marine  selected to succeed  that officer to lead the war in  Afghanistan.
“Lloyd Austin has strategic vision and  significant   operational savvy, which will be extremely helpful in  dealing with   Iran and the rise of radical Islam in the Middle East,”  retired ArmyGen. Jack Keane said of Gen. Austin.
The inside politics of winning what is  called a geographic combatant   command is downplayed publicly by the  Pentagon.
But
 for the military branches, such an  assignment is   an important prize.
 There is the prestige of commanding  combat troops,   ships and planes,
 with a direct chain of command to the  defense   secretary.
It 
also gives each   general a seat at  the table when discussing budget 
priorities and more   face time with the  lawmakers who control Pentagon spending and   policies.
Leader of the pack
The Marine Corps may be the smallest  military   branch, but in recent years it has scored big in the  competition and   broken new ground.
This year, Marine   generals owned the  top command assignments for the Middle East and   Afghanistan and were  tapped to head forces in Europe and the Southern Hemisphere, leaving the  Army leadership a bit chagrined.
A Marine never had headed European  Command and   NATO forces until 2003. Now, a second, Gen. John R. Allen,  the current   Afghanistan
 commander, is in line. His posting is dependent  on an   inspector 
general inquiry into his email exchanges with a married    socialite in 
Tampa, Fla., home to U.S. Central Command, where Gen. Allen    had served.
“These leadership   decisions are  emblematic of the Marine Corps‘ effectiveness and   high-level  contributions to global military operations over the last   decade,” said  Rep. Duncan Hunter, California Republican, who served as a   Marine  officer in Afghanistan and Iraq. “Marines were a force in  Iraq,  and they  have been equally effective in Afghanistan. These  results are  possible  because of the strong leadership and tactical  know-how that  is a  reliable Marine Corps characteristic.”
Asked why Marines have been winning the  plum posts,   retired Air ForceLt. Gen. Thomas G. McInerney observed,  “They are   better at politics.”
Retired Gen.   James T. Conway, a former  Marine commandant, chalks up the good showing   to the Corps‘  “institutional excellence.”
 
 
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