Leadership Under Fire is a procedural investigation into what military leadership education claims to teach-and what leadership looks like when conditions crush the clean language of doctrine. Instead of offering slogans, this book treats leadership as a discipline of reality: separating facts from assumptions, keeping decisions accountable, and building learning loops that survive fear, fatigue, hierarchy, and politics.
The method is deliberately two-layered. Professional curricula and doctrine provide the definition layer-how institutions define leadership, ethics, responsibility, mission command, and after-action learning. Audie Murphy's To Hell and Back provides the friction layer-episodes where standards are tested by missing information, deprivation, social pressure, and moral boundary moments. A memoir is not a court transcript, so this book uses it as case evidence, not as authority: definitions come from doctrine; the narrative supplies the human mechanisms that official language often smooths over.
Across six chapters-profession, ethics, teams and institutions, self-leadership, decision-making under pressure, and mission execution-each module ends with a practicum designed for serious discussion and training. The appendices include usable tools: decision memos, climate scans, AAR prompts, sample seminar syllabi, and assessment rubrics.
If your job demands action and truth-results and integrity-this book is written for you.