Leadership in The United States Army | General Anthony Tata | On The Homefront

Brief Summary
In this powerful episode of The Homefront, Jeff Dudan welcomes Brigadier General (Ret.) Tony Tata—a West Point graduate, decorated combat leader, national security expert, bestselling author, and public servant. Tony unpacks his life’s journey from a Virginia Beach kid in a family of educators to leading troops across the globe, advising the Pentagon, and writing acclaimed military thrillers. The conversation dives deep into leadership, patriotism, service, societal shifts, and the challenges facing America’s military and youth today.
Key Takeaways
- A soldier’s purpose evolves, but the heart of service remains. Tony initially joined the military to be a coach like his father, but found his identity and impact through leadership on and off the battlefield.
- Declining patriotism threatens national readiness. Tony warns of alarming cultural trends affecting military recruitment and national morale.
- Leadership is learned through humility and action. His early mentors taught him to listen, lead with empathy, and stay mission-focused—a lesson he passed to troops and readers alike.
- Diplomacy is underrated—and war is never glamorous. Tony shares real-world stories where diplomacy, not force, achieved strategic goals without loss of life.
- Veterans need clearer paths to entrepreneurship and fulfillment. With 200,000 transitioning service members each year, more effort must be made to support their civilian futures.
- Writing is legacy work. Tony’s 15-book thriller series carries forward his lifelong dream of being a novelist—and 100% of his proceeds go to support wounded warriors.
Featured Quote
“Listen. Learn. Lead. But if you’re not going to lead—listen and learn, and be a great team member. There’s nothing wrong with that.”
tRANSCRIPT
Meet Brigadier General Tony Tata: West Point, War Zones, and Public Service
Anthony Tata (00:01.331)
Adieu.
Jeff Dudan (00:06.38)
Greetings, I am Jeff Duden and we are on the home front. Home front brands simply building the world's most responsible franchise platform, encouraging entrepreneurs to take action to transform their lives, impact communities and enhance the lives of those they care the most about. All the while delivering enterprise level solutions to local business owners. This sounds like you check us out on.
Homefrontbrands.com today and start your next chapter of greatness building your dynasty on the home front I will be here looking for you and today We are thrilled and excited and honored to have Brigadier General Anthony Tata Retired on with us today Tony welcome
Anthony Tata (00:47.874)
Great to be with you, Jeff. Thank you.
Jeff Dudan (00:49.96)
Yes, absolutely, sir. And I'm gonna read some background here, and it's gonna take me a minute, but you know, when you've done a lot, there is a lot. So I'm gonna read through a little bit of background here. So Mr. Tata is a 1981 West Point graduate who completed graduate studies in international relations from the Catholic University of America and the School of Advanced Military Studies. He also served as a National Security Fellow at Harvard University's JFK School of Government.
Tony served for 28 years in the United States Army, commanding a paratrooper battalion in the 82nd Airborne Division and an air assault brigade in the 101st Airborne Division. He served as the Deputy Commanding General of the 10th Mountain Division and Joint Task Force 76 in Afghanistan from 2006 to 2007. Correct me if any of this is not exactly correct, sir. He also served as a Deputy Director of Joint Concept Development and Experimentation, as well as the
Joint IED Defeat Organization. His Mr. Tata's operational deployments and missions include Operation Uphold Democracy to support Haitian stability, Operation Joint Endeavor in Bosnia and Croatia, Operation Jungle Warrior in Panama, Operation Joint Guardian in Kosovo, and Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan. He is the recipient of the Army Distinguished Service Medal, Defense Superior Service Medal, Legion of Merit,
combat action badge, Afghanistan campaign medal, Kosovo campaign medal, and the Ranger tab. Upon transitioning from the military, Tony served as the chief operating officer of Washington DC public schools, superintendent of Wake County, which is Raleigh, North Carolina, public school system, and secretary of transportation of North Carolina. And his business background includes the presidency of a defense startup company, leadership of companies in the airborne.
collection infrastructure and oil and gas industries. And also last but not least, served as Under Secretary of Defense for Policy. Prior to assuming this, he was performing the duties of Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Policy to the United States. Tony, welcome.
Anthony Tata (03:06.306)
Great to be with you, Joe. I managed to stay awake during my own bio. So.
Jeff Dudan (03:07.508)
That was a mouthful. Well, you know, I there's a you have a very artful and impressive humility about you for somebody who's done so much and doesn't really need to say much about it, but I'm so thrilled and honored to be on with you here today. Uh, there are so many things that we can talk about, but maybe like to start, uh, just to kick it over to you and share a little bit about early life. People.
It's always interesting where people come from and what influenced them. So if you don't mind, where did you grow up? What did you do? Did you play sports? Family guy? What was going on?
Growing Up in a Family of Teachers and Athletes in Virginia Beach
Anthony Tata (03:36.334)
Sure.
Anthony Tata (03:45.115)
Yeah, yeah, yeah. So Jeff, born and raised in the Virginia Beach, Norfolk, Virginia area. Both parents were school teachers. My dad was a high school football coach. Mom was really a school counselor. I have an older brother. I'm the middle child and a younger sister. We were all three athletes, as you might imagine with a football coach dad. And my big sport was baseball. And I
Anthony Tata (04:12.686)
and played on two state championship baseball teams in Virginia Beach and placed fourth in the state of Virginia in wrestling. Should have won, but I choked in the semifinals against somebody I could easily beat on any given day. I got recruited to wrestle at West Point and I already had a, my older brother was playing football at the Naval Academy. He was the kicker for the Navy team.
And so, you know, I enjoyed growing up in Virginia around Williamsburg, Jamestown, Yorktown. My mother's from the Blue Ridge Mountains where not far from Front Royal and New Market and all the Shenandoah Valley battlefields. And so I was enamored with the history of particularly the Revolutionary Civil Wars and the courage it took to fight those wars. And...
and the lineage of West Point graduates during those conflicts. And so I was inclined to go to a service academy, and my mother, importantly being a guidance counselor at the time, understood that, you know, they paid you to go, you didn't pay to go. They pay like half of a sergeant's salary. So, and it all goes to books and uniforms and all that. So you don't actually make any money. It's all an accounting trick.
Jeff Dudan (05:33.078)
Yeah.
Three Kids, Three Academies: Why the Tata Family Didn’t All Join the Military
Anthony Tata (05:42.27)
At the end of the day, I had an older brother at Navy. And remember, two school teacher parents. I was at West Point and my sophomore year at West Point, my younger sister, who ran a 442 mile in high school, was a three time Virginia state champion, Myler. She calls me crying at West Point saying, dad's trying to make me join the Air Force. I'm like, what are you talking about? She goes,
He's trying to make me join the Air Force somewhere in Colorado. And I'm like, put dad on the phone. And she had, she had received an appointment to the Air Force Academy. And, and so my parents wanted the hat trick, each kid at a service Academy. And, and importantly, nothing out of their meager teachers' savings accounts. And I said, dad, look, uh, Kendall, my sister is going to be, uh, a state.
or a national champion, Mylar, and she plays second in the nation, ultimately. I said, there's no need for her to go to the Air Force Academy. She's gonna get a scholarship, you know this. And I said, plus I'm in the second class with mixed with women. There are two classes right now that are all male and two classes that are mixed because in 1977, they brought in the first, or 76, they brought in the first female integration into.
the service academies for graduation in 1980. I was class of 1981. And I said, it'll be okay one day, but this is not an environment right now for your daughter, my sister. And particularly someone as well as I know my sister, her being a daddy's girl and being out in Colorado, it just won't work, trust me. So she ended up getting a full ride to the University of Virginia, his alma mater where he had played football and baseball. So.
Um, then, you know, I went to West Point and, and, uh, stayed, uh, initially I thought, okay, I'll do five years, get out and become a baseball coach, you know, kind of emulate what my parents had. And, you know, I'd always had this dream of being a professional athlete. And even though, you know, I quit growing at five foot nine and, and, um, one day I'm out there shagging grounders at shortstop at West Point.
From Baseball Dreams to Airborne Reality: Choosing a Military Career
Anthony Tata (08:04.358)
And my tactical officer comes up to me, every company, there were 36 companies, and everyone had like an active duty captain. He comes out, pulls me over to the foul line and puts his arm around me and says, Tony, are you going to play pro ball? And I said, well, sir, you know, I appreciate the compliment, but you know, I don't think I'm that good. And, you know, it kind of went way over my head. He says, good, because you need to focus on academics. And I'm like, are you telling me I'm in trouble here? He goes, no, but.
You need to focus on academics. So I did, I tightened down and thankfully I had a roommate who was a genius and he helped me study. He studied by teaching me and all was good. I graduated just like everybody else graduated. And, you know, I had a good career in the military. And, you know, my brother went on to be an attorney. He got out after seven years. My sister's teaching and coaching.
just honoring our father's legacy in Virginia. She's a track coach and a teacher. So, got two amazing kids that, today, Brooke, my daughter, 34 years old, pregnant with her first child, and my son, Zach, 29, they just had their first child last summer. So I'm officially a grandfather.
Though I don't admit to being anywhere near that age to be grandfather capable. So yeah.
Jeff Dudan (09:38.973)
Well, I tell you what a what a what an incredibly productive family and serving not only in the teachers role serving a huge important role with children, but also serving the country. So we all appreciate the sacrifice that your family and contributions that your family have made. So, so you you now was the decision to go into the military.
when you went to West Point because you knew you had a service obligation at that point, right? So it's a great school. If you can do it, people that get out of there, they have a real leg up in a lot of ways. So that was your decision point there. Why'd you stay in so long?
Anthony Tata (10:06.318)
Sure.
Anthony Tata (10:11.033)
Mm-hmm.
Anthony Tata (10:16.31)
All right.
Early Mentors, Tough Decisions, and Choosing to Stay in Uniform
Anthony Tata (10:22.806)
Well, that was the professional athlete story that I didn't really finish. But when I got into the military and I started, I was an infantryman, a paratrooper, graduated Ranger school, and I started thinking to myself, I'm doing very physical things on the most important field of all, the battlefield.
And I'm being paid to do it. And I said, well, that's kind of like being a pro athlete. I'm jumping out of airplanes. I'm, I'm doing rock marches, you know, 10, 15, 20 miles. Uh, I'm doing physical training every morning. I have to be an optimum shape, uh, to be able to do this paratrooper business. And it was my version of becoming a professional athlete. And I started getting pretty good feedback on my leadership. And.
So I firmly believe that we all have mentors in our lives that either intentionally or unintentionally give us feedback, both good and bad. I remember going to take the LSAT, the Law School Admission Test, back in 1982 or whatever. I'd been out of West Point a year and my brother was talking about taking it and my dad was like, it'd be great to have a lawyer in the family. And...
And so, you know, I did well on it. And I went over, I was down at Fort Benning, Georgia, and I went over to Auburn University and took it and, you know, had lots of offers. So the army was expanding its fully funded legal education program. And so I needed a letter from my battalion commander, Lieutenant Colonel Jack Dayboy, and I'll never forget this big giant special forces guy from Vietnam. And he took me to, he said, Tony, let's go to lunch. And, and he, he took me to lunch and he said,
You're, you're, you don't realize how good a leader you are. And I'm saying this with all the humility in the world. I'm just telling you what he said. And, and he said, you can go be a lawyer, but just understand that you'll be working with the worst 10% of the army. The, you'll either be prosecuting a dirt bag or you'll be defending a dirt bag. And because operational law at the time, advising commanders on.
Jeff Dudan (12:39.769)
Mm. Mm.
Anthony Tata (12:46.658)
drone strikes and all that, that had not come into full stride yet. It was, it was still sort of in its infancy at the time. And so lawyers into military at the time, though important, were really focused on discipline and courts, marshals and, and all of that. So I thought about that. And he said, you, your leadership is better applied to the, to the, you know, the, the, the
wide range of men and women that we have serving in the military. And yeah, I was like a 24 year old lieutenant and that filled my head big, right? And I thought, and I did, I thought about it and prayed about it and I said, you know, let me go a few more years. And it was like, for the first 10 years, it was okay, let me go in a couple more years. And the feedback just kept being very, very positive. And I thought about what I was doing as a leader and I was listening to my
my troops and sort of paraphrasing back to them what I was hearing. And I was trying to make good decisions based on what I was hearing. And I was learning at the same time because any 20 something lieutenant captain has a lot to learn. And it's a tough ski slope to navigate when you have all these super experienced non-commissioned officers that are used to.
young green lieutenants and captains coming in. And I just tended to continue to rise to the top. And that was positive reinforcement that kept me hanging around. Then I was promoted early to major, promoted early lieutenant colonel, assigned premium battalion and brigade commands in two of our premier divisions. So it was just one of those self-fulfilling prophecies that as I...
began to believe that I was a good leader, I actually became one and got to command some of our very best men and women that serve our country.
Jeff Dudan (14:44.853)
Mm.
Jeff Dudan (14:55.238)
As you look back, do you have a favorite command? And I don't know if you, is it might be like, you know, picking a favorite kid, which, so you might not want to answer it. Yeah, I don't want to.
Anthony Tata (15:02.338)
Yeah, well, it very much is, but you're going to get me in trouble, man. No, no, no, no, that's all right. Importantly, I'm a distinguished member of the 502nd, 504th, and 505th Parachute Infantry Regiments. And the 502nd is a fam- they're all famous World War II Parachute Infantry Regiments. And-
The 50 seconds affiliated with the 101st Airborne, the 504th and 505th are affiliated with the 82nd Airborne. The proudest moments of my life are serving in probably those two divisions. And if I had to choose one, maybe by a hair's breadth, it would be the 82nd because they're still an active jump unit.
And so the 101st has helicopters and they do a lot of tactical mobility around the battlefield. The 82nd is a strategic rapid deployment force and the ALAN in that unit and the discipline probably seemed just a little bit tighter because you had non-commissioned officers responsible for leading and managing the back of the airplane.
as you're pushing soldiers out for, they jump out, but for airborne operations. So that little difference there with the airborne operations piece, I think makes a difference.
Jeff Dudan (16:27.68)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (16:36.536)
Got it. Well, you handled that very diplomatically, as I would expect. Hey, what is that when people hang behind a helicopter on a rope and they fly through the air? What's that called? You know what I'm saying?
Anthony Tata (16:42.064)
Yeah.
Anthony Tata (16:51.626)
Spies, S-P-I-E-S, I'm gonna get the acronym more, but it's an extraction technique. So they drop the rope out, you've got what's called a Swiss seat around you with a snap hook in it. The rope has certain loopholes tied in it and you hook into that and you're extracted out. It's a...
Jeff Dudan (17:00.553)
Okay.
Jeff Dudan (17:07.573)
Yeah.
Anthony Tata (17:19.946)
It's an extraction technique.
Jeff Dudan (17:21.588)
Nice. Got it. Well, I appreciate all that. Maybe, you know, I'm interested, you know, back in the 80s, building your career. And then we've got the military today. And, and you know, how it's evolved only from culturally, how we think about things in this country, how we think about freedom, how we think about honor, how we think about service. There's been a lot of change in that. And then just technology.
I mean, I can't imagine with the technology that I have access to today, what the military must have access to is just mind numbing. And I guess we probably need less people or we need different skill sets today, obviously, with all the technology and the drones and all of that stuff. So what's the military today versus maybe what it was when you were coming up in it? And maybe what are the challenges they're facing?
America in Decline? Patriotism, Military Recruitment, and Societal Stagnation
Anthony Tata (18:20.714)
Yeah, so great question. One is the military is simply a reflection of the fabric of the country. You could, for the most part, probably higher percentage of
uh, metal and lower metal class folks than there are in the country, but maybe not. It's, it's a pretty good, um, reflection of the country and, and all the values, uh, that, that come with that, uh, or lack thereof. Um, and, uh, so I was concerned the other day, I saw a Wall Street Journal poll that essentially said there had been a 72 to 38% drop in patriotism and.
sort of a commensurate drop in religion, value of religion and community service, all sort of a double having of the people, above 50% to below 50% by a fair margin. And then a opposite trend in the value people place on money. And I got to thinking about
I read a book called the economic stages of growth by Walt Rostow back in the, he wrote it back in the late fifties. And it was, he was predicting the six in final stage of the course of this country from modern society or traditional society to preconditions for takeoff, to takeoff, to high mass consumption. He said, I don't know what comes after high mass consumption, which was sort of the logical end state of an industrialized nation.
with wealth, but he said, I'm going to call it secular spiritual stagnation. And that's, it's a non-religious stagnation of the national ethos and spirit. I think that we may be at some level approaching that where there's this vacuum that for whatever reason is occurring.
Anthony Tata (20:26.898)
There are still many, many patriotic people, but if only 38% are saying patriotism is important, there's some erosion going on in the ideal of America, the support for this country. And I lay all that out because people, mothers and fathers, and students and kids sign up for the military based upon
mostly their desire to serve their country. And in part because of the incentives, economic or education or both incentives, if we get some of the, like Richard Gere and the officer in general, I got nowhere else to go, but we get some of that. But what you really want are people that just wanna be there.
and serve and whether it's they want to play with guns or they want to go see the world or, you know, the Navy used to have the saying about seeing the world and, you know, the Army's, you know, be all you can be. They've actually come back to that after like 50 years about tapping unrealized potential. And so where we are today is we're not able to meet our recruiting goals. Where we were when I came in, we were having to cut the Army in half.
because Vietnam had ended, we were entering the Cold War with Reagan becoming president. And we are at 800,000 troops in the army then, we're at 455,000, I want to say today. And we're having a hard time meeting that standard. So think about that. And it's an all volunteer force. So if we're struggling to meet
really what is kind of our bare minimum standards for army, navy, air force, and Marines, then there's some kind of societal issue there that's a symptom of some societal issue. So I think we're really struggling today to try to figure out with all these divisive concepts that are out there.
Anthony Tata (22:49.562)
And I'm not a political guy, but whether it was the vaccine or the experimentation with social concepts and all of that, I think there are some parents and men and women that are just opting out and saying, I don't want to be part of that. It's not reflective of my values. And so...
There may be the country at a national level, maybe like an iceberg calving off in a direction where a good part of the country still is. Love America, patriotic, want to protect and defend and all of that. And so we're at a real tipping point right now, in my opinion, with respect to patriotism and...
you know, loving this country and wanting to defend this country and provide for the way of life. Cause I, I can promise you, I've been all over the world in many, many different countries, because I'm sure you and, and, and many of your listeners have, there is no better place in the world than the United States of America. And, and it's up to, you know, the, you know, our kids and even, you know, home front brands, I mean, what you're doing about rebuilding the middle class and, and your focus, I respect that so much.
Jeff Dudan (23:48.568)
Yeah.
Anthony Tata (24:14.794)
And that's kind of where it's tied to this conversation and that's where our military comes from primarily. And so how are those people feeling connected with the country? And I would argue that, you know, there's a disconnect right now.
Jeff Dudan (24:34.12)
You know, man, there's so much to unpack there, but if I can just connect, connect a few dots. So, um, I am passionate about that. I am passionate about this country. I am passionate about, I mean, it's why I'm doing what I'm doing right now. You know, I'm not going to take whatever I can contribute and go run away with it. And, you know, take my time to another country in a fishing boat somewhere. I'm going to stay here and do what I can.
Anthony Tata (24:38.349)
Alright.
Jeff Dudan (25:04.244)
I read a book called America Alone. I don't know if you've ever read that book, but it was a pretty interesting read. And it talked about, you know, all the changing trends. It talked a lot about birth rates and how birth rates affect the rise and fall of countries. And, you know, if they get below a certain point, and then how other countries have exceptionally high birth rates or, or groups of people have exceptionally high birth rates. And one of the things that stood out to me was that,
It's the young people that have the passion in a country. It's the young people, you need a high birth rate of young people to wage war because that's where people, you know, the young people have the energy and the passion and they have all of this idealism and they want change and they're trying to make something of themselves and what's around them.
So if you're telling me that we've gone from 76% to 38% in patriotism, that vacuum is going to be filled. The vacuum is going to be filled by something else, but they're not going to be any less passionate about what they choose to fill that vacuum with. So if it's not going to be good for the country, individual responsibility, you know, ask what I can do to contribute in my community.
then it's gonna be something else that's gonna be getting all of that passion. And if it's a lack of respect for authority and some of these other things, then yeah, that's gonna be hugely detrimental because those are the people that are gonna have the energy. I'm 55 this year and a lot of people of my boomer generation or whatever they call us is, I mean, we're pretty much straight up.
Anthony Tata (26:30.22)
Right.
Jeff Dudan (26:53.236)
Right out of the 70s, I mean, you know, we're flag waving and we're, you know, what can I do, what can I do to help you? And if there's a job in the community needs to happen, we're likely to step up and do it and we might a lot of questions, but, you know, we're, I'm also, you know, I don't, I don't have the vitriol that I, the 25 year old Jeff Duden used to have, so it's, it's interesting that you say that. And I think.
That's a concerning trend. I mean, especially it just right off the bat, the military offers so much to people. It offers training. And if you stay in long enough, pension and income and opportunity to get experience, everybody, literally everybody that I know that's been in the military, you can see it in them. I mean, they were just, you know, whatever they're doing now, they have a certain provenance, the way they carry themselves, an amount of discipline that...
you know, they clearly benefited from in their lives. So it's interesting. So how does that then, how does that translate Tony to what's happening with veterans today? I saw a couple of statistics, 200,000 people a year that are becoming veterans from all the services or seven people a month, I saw in another place. So the numbers don't really work. If that many people are leaving the service and we're not able to recruit enough to get our ranks where we want them, like, you know,
What happens? How does that reconcile?
200,000 Veterans a Year: The Urgency of Entrepreneurial Transition Paths
Anthony Tata (28:27.742)
Well, there's a couple of fronts on that question. One is, how do we take care of the men and women who have served our country and transition now to civilian life to be able to enjoy the sacrifices, the environment that they sacrifice for? And one of the things that I'm working with.
with you and Nick Neonakis and Ben Carson Jr. and some others on are tapping into that transitioning pool of active servicemen and women into veteran status and trying to help them.
with their career transition into franchises, small businesses, et cetera. I called, I texted with the chief staff of the army the other day asking him for some help there and he's going to help us out because, you know, he loves his country and he loves his soldiers as well. And so that's one area where people like us can try to make a difference with that community.
Jeff Dudan (29:14.412)
Mm-hmm.
Anthony Tata (29:41.654)
we're only impacting a few thousand men and women. That's a few thousand men and women that otherwise might not be positively impacted. On the other side of it, this imbalance between those coming in and those leaving, you've got to fill that pipeline. And the way the services are doing it,
today is maybe not the best way to do it, but they got to have, you know, warm bodies in the military. And so they're adjusting the standards, shall we say. And so they take a look at, well, it used to be if you'd used marijuana, you couldn't come in. So they lowered that to, you know, some acceptable rate prior.
Jeff Dudan (30:32.36)
Yeah, on the bass. You can't use it on the bass.
Anthony Tata (30:37.234)
Right, right, right, right. And white standards, physical standards, those kinds of things. And there might be an argument where, okay, if we can get enough fit men and women to serve in our combat units, then it doesn't matter the physical condition. Because as you mentioned, there's technology coming in, robots, AI, drones, all that. Maybe there's gonna be this...
offsetting. But at the end of the day, it's a cultural issue as we started the conversation out. And if the culture is not what the parents who are talking to their children about joining the military, if the culture isn't consistent with their themes, then I think we've had a real issue about being able to provide for our national security.
And it's a real red flag that we're 60, 70, 80% hitting our targets and goals.
Jeff Dudan (31:41.46)
Look, nobody rises to low expectations. So if you've got a lower standards and create different classes of people to be able to fill the ranks, I mean, you know, at the end of the day, it's, you know, my, my impression of the military is you have a job, but everybody, everybody fights when you, if you have to, right? I mean, what pitches in and that means if there's anything that needs to get done, you know, needs to get done. So.
Anthony Tata (31:51.915)
Right.
Jeff Dudan (32:08.448)
But I get it. I mean, there's certain people that are going to be really good at, maybe if you've played a lot of video games, you can really drive those drones really well. I mean, where, so there are. It's a big challenge. I can definitely see it. So as we think across the landscape of the world today, the M-
Anthony Tata (32:21.654)
Right, right, right, right.
Jeff Dudan (32:35.508)
I get to see you a lot and we've done a good bit together over the last few years. So I've really enjoyed getting to know you and the time that we've been able to spend together, you know, infrequently, but it's been really a pleasure and an honor to do so. But I also often see you a lot of times on the television talking about current events. And in the times that I get to see you, it's amazing to me.
Anthony Tata (32:46.771)
Likewise.
Jeff Dudan (33:04.364)
the depth of understanding that you have about what's going on out there. So as we think about Ukraine or China, Taiwan, you know, what, what's, what's going on today that you're particularly interested in.
Understanding Global Tensions: Ukraine, Taiwan, and the DIME Model of Power
Anthony Tata (33:20.766)
Yeah, so Jeff, you know, you and I have talked before about the levers of national power. Yeah, you know, I like to think of them in diplomatic information, military economic, only in that order, because the acronym spells dime, and I can remember it easily. But the, when you think about historically the way our country is operated,
Jeff Dudan (33:25.247)
Mm-hmm.
Anthony Tata (33:48.362)
We tend to lead with the chin of the American soldier, Marine, Airman, Sailor. And why do we do that? Because it's the most obvious way to show action and get results. But often the best solutions are a more nuanced mix of those four levers of power.
And it requires some sophisticated understanding of how to apply economic leverage, how to apply diplomatic leverage, how to apply information leverage, control of information, release of information, husbanding of information, and then ultimately how to use the military to do what we call flexible deterrent options.
At the end of the day, I had a friend text me yesterday asking something about, do I think we should go to war with Ukraine? And I'm like, no, absolutely not. And she said, well, that surprises me. And I'm like, what surprises you? I thought all generals would want more. And I said, most general I know don't want war because we've lost men and women in combat. We've been stared into that abyss. And...
To me, war is like, you know, Colin Powell said, you know, it's the last option. It better be, you know, a real serious, vital national security interest to go to war. And that requires us to lay out what our national security interests are so we know what those triggers are to go fight. And, you know, the, when you think about, I'll give you a really good example.
When I was a paratrooper at Fort Bragg, we were going to, I was the chief of plans. We were going to invade Haiti. Jimmy Carter, Sam Nunn, and Colin Powell went down there the weekend that we were supposed to invade. They landed at Port-au-Prince International Airport and they had to remove every obstacle that the Haitians had put on the airfield. The Haitians removed them, the Haitian government did.
How Jimmy Carter Prevented a War in Haiti with 112 Planes in the Air
Anthony Tata (36:09.714)
And Cedrus was being a bad guy, the dictator there in Francois, the chief of police. And, and, um, for two days, nothing, we get told Sunday pack, pack our bags. Uh, we're, we're going. So we fill 112 airplanes full of paratroopers and equipment at seven bases across the Eastern seaboard. It's all very visible. Um, and.
Even though it was a secret airborne invasion, it was all the news there was because CNN, you know, was on the rooftop filming the Port-au-Prince Airport, which was the most obvious drop zone. And so we take off and we're three, four hours in the air, getting ready to shoot the gap between Haiti and Cuba. And we get told to turn around.
So we come back and I'm like, what happened? And we all know what happened. Jimmy Carter, the diplomatic arm of the American government laid an agreement in front of Sadris and said, you better sign this. And Powell said, the 82nd Airborne is on the way. You have a few minutes. And right there, so.
that's diplomacy. And there was an economic component. Essentially, we're going to buy Sager a place to go live in Costa Rica or wherever he went. And no soldier was killed, but we accomplished the mission. Now, you had 4,000 angry paratroopers that didn't get to jump out of airplanes in combat. But at the end of the day, we accomplished the mission without hurting a single soldier. And so today, you've got Ukraine.
Jeff Dudan (37:42.346)
Right.
Jeff Dudan (37:53.132)
Mm-hmm.
Anthony Tata (38:06.51)
Russia has violated that border territorial, you know, the rule of law internationally is very important. And so how do we, through the collective security arrangement with NATO, which is a very important strategic alliance to us, accomplish our own national security interests while not ceding too much of our sovereignty, if any, to that collective security interests? And that I think...
Because it's so politicized nowadays, you can't really have that conversation anymore without being attacked as a Russian stooge or whatever. But at the end of the day, our leadership should be focused on what's best for the United States of America, what's best for the citizens, the people of the United States of America. That's what our Constitution says. That's what the loyalty to the office, when people swear to take.
Jeff Dudan (38:52.129)
Yeah.
Anthony Tata (39:03.67)
you know, protect and defend the constitution. That's what they're swearing to do. Not to help NATO. We help NATO because it's in our strategic interest to have a buffer between Russia and the United States. And it's in our strategic interest to have democratic governments and institutions that have free markets with whom we can trade and that have governments that reflect ours.
The humanitarian aspect is important, believe me, I'm a huge humanitarian, but it's not, at the end of the day, it's not what decisions should be made on. We saw what the humanitarian goodwill stuff does in Somalia. We went in there and there was no amount of love or humanitarian goodwill that was gonna take those
Jeff Dudan (39:44.8)
Yeah.
Anthony Tata (39:59.618)
rogue bands in Somalia and make them understand that we just wanted to help them. There was no strategic vital interest there, and that's a really good comparison. We do have a strategic interest in Ukraine and maintaining the sovereignty of NATO and making sure that Russia doesn't breach that and create an Article 5 attack against one, attack against all incident. But it's...
It's a NATO sort of fractured institution in the wake of the Afghanistan withdrawal that, you know, I don't think that went as well as anybody hoped it would. And where we are now is, you know, we left everybody hanging there essentially, and everybody had to get out. We had 30 nations in there. It could have been a 20 person Provincial Reconstruction Team or a 500 person Combat Battalion.
They all had to take care of themselves to get out of there, which was not the commitment we had made to them, that we come in together, we adjust together, we leave together. And we did the first two, we didn't do the last one. And now you have kind of NATO nations taking care of themselves, buying Russian oil, doing all the things that may be counterproductive, while also saying, hey, give me some of that NATO Article 5 security umbrella. And it's a complicated issue.
say different logistics, external lines of communication coming over water and air. There's no land bridge into Taiwan. Perfect speed is being there. We're not there. China is close. And that's a PhD level battlefield geometry problem that I think you only resolve by a lot of hard combat on the island of Taiwan. So
We say it's our number one priority. I'm not sure that our resources reflect that. You're a businessman. When you look at where you're spending the bulk of your effort, your money, that's kind of what your main thing is, whether or not you believe it. And right now we're spending more money in the Middle East than we are on China, Taiwan. So there's some disparities there.
Jeff Dudan (42:19.468)
The complexity of these matters, as an American who did not serve, I watched these things happening and as I lay my kids down, I've always trusted that we had people that were not political, that there was rooms of people that were leading our military strategy that were kind of...
running the show over there. I wonder today in this highly politicized environment that, you know, are the decisions for people like you and other leaders in our military, are they as easy and clean or has it gotten more difficult for them to check in and make sure that, you know, the decisions that they're making or the actions that they're recommending are going to be politically acceptable to whoever they're reporting into.
Anthony Tata (43:21.79)
Yeah, I think right now we're, we're a fairly divided nation, Jeff. And so I think that, um, there's, there's, uh, uh, you know, a lack of, um, uh, diversity, I'll use that term and, and contributing to the decision-making. And I mean, diversity of, of people who believe that maybe we shouldn't be involved in Ukraine, people that believe that we should be involved as far as. You know,
listening to different segments of society to be able to represent the people that they were elected to represent right now it feels to me a little bit like they're just doing what they want to do and and which is a shame because the you know there's been an opportunity for diplomacy but we're not we're not put you know another really good
Example of diplomacy was Bill Clinton and West Clark, the Bosnia. Bosnia or Serbs attacked Bosnia, Croatia, Herzegovina, Kosovo, just as brutally as Russia's attack in Ukraine. Every bit. Torture, slaughter, tanks, artillery, jets, bombs, you name it. I saw it. I was there. And West Clark and Bill Clinton...
Got the warring factions into Dayton, Ohio and and hammered out a deal closed locked the door Slid pizzas underneath with some diet cokes and said don't come out till you got a deal and they came out with the Dayton piece Accords that created a zone of separation and it stopped the fighting to this day we still send troops to that peacekeeping effort and You know, it's There's not been any real serious fighting going on in and that region for
Jeff Dudan (44:54.296)
I'm going to go ahead and turn it off.
Jeff Dudan (45:14.228)
Yeah.
Anthony Tata (45:16.79)
you know, 30 years. And it's because of diplomacy. And we got none right now. So I think they're kind of frying their own fish to what end I don't think the American public really understands.
From General to Bestseller: Inside Tony Tata’s Military Thriller Series
Jeff Dudan (45:28.064)
No, I certainly don't. Well, let's shift gears because over your shoulder, I see my favorite book that I read last summer, Chasing the Lion. And I would love, I know you've got a hard stop. You've got important work to do, but we have just a couple of minutes left. So I'd love to hear a little bit about your career as an author. I know you've got a new book that's come out right now. So we'd love to hear about it.
Have you have you promoted but I think you're is it 16 or 17 novels that you've written?
Anthony Tata (45:57.962)
Yeah, sure.
Anthony Tata (46:03.59)
So, Total Empire over my shoulder is book 15 that just came out last month. Yeah, and I turned in book 16 called The Phalanx Code and Chase and the Lion is book 14. Chase and the Lion, Total Empire, Phalanx Code are all part of a series with General Garrett Sinclair, our protagonist. And I can remember when I was 12, I think, I was standing in front yard playing catch with my dad and we
Jeff Dudan (46:03.904)
15. 15.
Anthony Tata (46:32.034)
took a break, sat on the steps and he said, so what do you wanna be when you grow up? And I said, I wanna be a fiction novelist. And he's like, where'd you get that from? And I'm like, well, you know how much I like to read. I'd like to write those kinds of books. And he says, well, you gotta put food on the table. My dad's the son of Italian immigrants. My grandparents, my grandfather was a bricklayer, blocklayer. He had his own bricklaying company.
They moved from Italy to Detroit through Ellis Island. And so very humble origins there. And I'll tell you, I just, I kept writing and writing and writing. I've written all my life. And finally, I'd started studying how to write, the craft of writing, reading about how to write. And I wrote three, four books and just met the right people. And...
sent a few manuscripts in and publishers said, hey, this is pretty good. And suddenly I've had eight two book contracts essentially. And that's, I'm with the Macmillan San Marcos Press, one of the larger publishers in the world. And I feel very blessed and privileged. And they're Tom Clancy style novels. The good guy has to stop the world from exploding. And
you know, perhaps meets a friendly woman along the way.
Jeff Dudan (47:57.972)
Well, I tell you, they are freaking good, man. I mean, like really good, you know, and I really, I was on a vacation, I was on a boat with my family and I threw it in my bag and it was the perfect, the perfect thing to keep my mind right where I was and in your story. So, and you have a threat series. And from what I understand, 100% of the proceeds from this get donated to the USO Metro DC Hospital as well. And that's been very material for those people.
to get that. Well, look, congratulations on the new book coming out and thank you so much for the career of service to this country. We can't say enough how much we appreciate what you've done and the impact you've made and continue to make by keeping these issues in front of us and speaking so candidly. Is there a last quick question, and you may or may not have one, but if you had one sentence, this is kind of unfair to dump on you right here, but if you had one sentence to make an impact in someone's life.
Anthony Tata (48:27.487)
Yeah. Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (48:56.192)
You know, what would that be? Do you have a mantra that maybe you used with your kids or your troops or people? What would you tell people?
Anthony Tata (49:08.462)
I've always been a big believer in listening and then in learning and then choosing a path. So, have some humility, listen to people, learn about what's going on, integrate that with your values and beliefs and then
figure out where you're going and what you're doing. Not everybody wants to be a leader. Many people do. You know, there's that old saying, listen, learn, and lead. But a lot of people just kind of want to execute and be somewhere, maybe not leader, but be part of the team. And so listen and learn and be a good team member if you're not gonna be a leader. And there's nothing wrong with that.
Jeff Dudan (49:56.864)
That's fantastic. No, absolutely. Tony, where can people, if you wanted them to connect with you, where's the best place to find you or to maybe consume something, grab a book. Do you have a website or anything?
Anthony Tata (50:15.07)
Yeah, ajtata.com, ajtata.com. And there's a little connect with the author there. And then my email is author at ajtata.com. So, um, that's the best way I welcome, I get tons of emails and I respond to all.
Jeff Dudan (50:28.468)
Well, thank you, Tony. It was so great having you on today. And we didn't talk about it, but you are an advisory board member to Homefront Brands, who is the sponsor of this podcast. So thank you for being on today.
Jeff Dudan (50:43.208)
Thanks, Tony and as always this podcast is brought to you by home front brands all the while We are delivering enterprise level solutions to local business owners out there on the home front where it counts So if this sounds like you check us out at homefront brands comm reach out to myself Tony will be here hanging around and start your next chapter of greatness building your dynasty on the home front We will be looking for you here, Tony Tata
Anthony Tata (50:44.776)
I'm proud to serve with Homefront. Thank you, Jeff.
Jeff Dudan (51:13.848)
359 on the dot, sir. All right.
Anthony Tata (51:13.986)
Thanks, Jeff.
Anthony Tata (51:20.09)
Yep, I gotta start a team. So thanks Jeff. I really appreciate it. Very well done. You're great.
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