¶ … Leadership Styles:
Charismatic vs. servant leadership
The career of General Colin Powell is by any measure an extraordinary one. Powell was the first African-American Secretary of State and a much-talked about candidate for the presidency in his own right. From the very beginning of his career, Powell eluded conventional definitions of what it means to be black in American politics and created a unique brand of charismatic leadership. Powell self-identified as a Republican but was unafraid to be an advocate for a different point-of-view when debates about the Iraq War raged within in the administration of George Bush. Powell saw the involvement of the U.S. In Iraq as a flagrant contradiction of the principles he had learned while serving in Vietnam, which was to have a clear goal for an intervention; to use military force in a rapid fashion; and also to establish the support of the American people for the intervention through effective PR. [footnoteRef:1] He believed the Bush Administration accomplished none of these goals and refused to remain quiet when he felt that forces were being misdirected. He used his own experience as a guide rather than blindly following those around him. [1: Mordu Serry-Kamal, "Tribulations of General Colin L. Powell," review of Christopher D. O'Sullivan, Colin Powell: American Power and Intervention from Vietnam to Iraq (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2009).]
Powell's career is highly paradoxical -- he voluntarily chose the military, a relatively regimented, white-dominated organization in an era where there was…
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