Commander of U.S. Forces in Iraq Wants Lower
Profile Than Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf
Sun Mar 09 2003 08:55:07 ET
Army Gen. Tommy Franks "thought that [Gen. Norman]
Schwarzkopf cut way too high a profile during the Gulf War," a military
subordinate who has worked on Franks� Centcom staff tells TIME. "He
thinks it�s tawdry."
"Like any good soldier, the general knows when to keep his head down,"
write TIME's Michael Duffy and Mark Thompson in TIME's cover story.
In an interview with TIME, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld heaped
praise on his field marshal for being open to new ideas. "He�s
intelligent and quick, and he knows his stuff," Rumsfeld said. "He has
total ownership over these matters. He cares only about what is the most
effective way to put military power on a military target�that�s not
the norm, necessarily."
"Rumsfeld loves the spotlight; Franks is only too happy to stay out of
it," write Duffy and Thompson. TIME calls Franks "quick, funny, very
private, ferociously hardworking and, everyone says, a rare leader of
soldiers, particularly enlisted troops. He is also, at least in public,
the consummate strong and silent type, the good soldier who shuns the
limelight in marked contrast to some of his predecessors at Central
Command."
Franks, 57, head of CENTCOM (US Central Command), leaves Tampa, FL for
Qatar this week. At a Friday lunch with hundreds of troops behind his
headquarters, Franks sang first at the mike, a version of an old Charley
Pride tune called (Is Anyone Going to) San Antone? As Franks warbled
through�"Rain dripping off the brim of my hat"�the crowd cheered. "We
have to take our jobs very seriously," the general said, before turning
the mike over to country singer Neal McCoy, "but we should never take
ourselves too seriously."
Franks went to high school in Midland, Texas with Laura Bush, but she does
not remember him. Their high school principal told Franks at a recent
reunion, "You weren't the brightest bulb in the socket." Franks reply:
"Ain't this a great country?" Franks' wife of 33 years, Cathy, kissed him
goodbye in Tampa every morning with the charge, "Go make the world safe
for democracy."
END
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