Between asceticism and license: The commander’s role
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83
Overseas operations subject the soldier’s body to tough challenges. Danger, new temptations, sometimes idleness will place the need to keep soldiers in top physical condition at the top of the commander’s mind. The latter must of course set out clear, realistic, and shared rules despite the relative nature of the ambient moral climate. Physical and operational training primarily comprises adapting practical aspects to assignment characteristics. On the other hand, when there is temptation and a risk of excess (women, alcohol, drugs. . .) comes into play, the commander will need to pull on the strings of constraint, intelligence, and of the heart. Soldiers’ behavior has a direct influence on the assignment’s success. They will accept this all the better if the rules of daily life correspond to objective, demanding moral choices and if living conditions combine respect for privacy and plenty of common sense that passes through a desire to improve the living conditions of the lowest levels of the unit.
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