If I Had Known Then
Advice for New Lieutenants in the Army Military Intelligence Corps
By Captain Mason J. Aldridge
Article published on: February 03, 2026 in the Military Intelligence January – June 2026 Collection
Read Time:
< 11 mins
When I first stepped into the world of military intelligence (MI) as a brand-new first lieutenant, I thought I
had a
decent grasp of what to expect: briefings, analysis, and maybe some cryptic acronyms thrown in for good measure.
But
it did not take me long to realize that this branch demands more than just technical knowledge. It is about
judgment
under pressure, understanding people as much as patterns, and learning how to leverage some of the smartest
people you
will ever meet to accomplish the mission.
If you are about to enter this field, you are not just starting a new job; you are stepping into a role that
supports
commanders, protects troops, and influences real-world decisions. It can be overwhelming at first. I have made
mistakes, learned hard lessons, and grown in ways I never expected. In this article, I want to share some advice
I
wish someone had given me before day one—not dry doctrine, just some nuggets of advice from someone who has been
where
you are now.
In the Beginning
My dream of becoming an MI officer in the U.S. Army took root in 2003 when I watched Soldiers board C-17s bound
for
Iraq and realized that serving America’s warriors was one of the greatest callings a person could fulfill. As I
grew
older, I believed the best way to support Soldiers was to ensure they had the intelligence they needed to
complete
their missions and return home safely. Fast forward to 2018, and what started as a childhood ambition became
reality.
I was accepted into the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps program at the University of Alabama at Birmingham,
and, true
to my goal, I selected MI as my top branch choice. With hard work and determination, I earned it.
After completing my training at Fort Huachuca, Arizona, I joined an intelligence and electronic warfare unit at
Joint
Base Lewis-McChord, Washington. My three years there were filled with awkward failures and hard-earned
successes,
providing invaluable lessons that shaped me both professionally and personally.
In the following paragraphs, I will share some of my most critical insights that can help you build on success
and
avoid the “are you serious?” looks from field-grade officers. If you do find them helpful, pass them on to
others who
aspire to join our community!
Lesson One: You Have No Idea What’s Going on or What to Do
So, you are a brand-new officer and a brand-new member of the MI community! You may be thinking about how excited
you
are for your future in MI, or how little you know about MI. You may be thinking about your future platoon or the
kind
of people you will work with. These are all good thoughts, and you should be very optimistic. No two careers in
MI are
the same, and there is no “perfect path” for an MI officer, so that positivity can breed a great military
adventure.
However, most people start with worries. We worry about the unknown—what we don’t know, who we don’t know, what
we
don’t know how to do. Let’s tackle that first.
OK, brand-new lieutenant, at your first unit, someone gave you a task, and you reply (hopefully mentally, not
verbally!) with something like, “I have no idea what I’m doing. I don’t know anything about that.” I promise we
have
all been there, and there is no shame in feeling very overwhelmed when you are lost. Here is how we get around
that
impulse and why we do not act on it.
Ease up on yourself. The person delegating the task (along with everyone in your unit) knows
that
you have little to no idea what you are doing. It’s not because they don’t like you or that they have no
confidence in
your abilities; you are simply new. They were there once, too! This task is your first opportunity to show your
team
that you can learn who to go to for answers and how to apply those answers to your problem. So instead
of
verbalizing to everyone, “Hey, I’m the new lieutenant, and I don’t know what I am doing,” say something like,
“I’m
eager to understand how this works. Will you show me?”
Figure out who knows what. Your ability to find knowledgeable people will pay dividends as you
progress in your career, regardless of the types of formations you find yourself in. Going to a Soldier,
noncommissioned officer (NCO), warrant officer, or higher-ranking officer with a desire to learn and problem
solve
will set you apart in the unit. Instead of being the lieutenant running into walls because they think they must
figure
it out on their own, be the lieutenant who leverages your team’s collective experience. If you approach problems
knowing that you can figure them out with the aid of the Soldiers around you, people will want to help you. This
does
not mean you should get people to do everything for you; it just means knowing when to ask for advice and
learning who
the right advisor is in each situation.
Give it your best shot. You are not perfect, and you likely do not know the entire process—but
you
are smart enough. By this point, you are attacking problems with positivity and a little help from the
people
around you. Provide the best product or result that you can, own the work that you have done, and be open to
feedback.
No one respects an individual who refuses to be taught or take responsibility for their actions. It is better to
miss
the mark and own it than to miss the mark and be hardheaded. In the end, you are still not perfect; refusing to
acknowledge that gives the impression that your growth potential is limited. Remember: we are new officers, we
are
progressing, and we must figure out why things are done the way they are.
To conclude Lesson One, do not act as if you “have no idea what’s going on or what to do” because there is simply
no
need to do so. This mindset only reinforces fear and negativity, and it convinces the people around us that we
truly
do not know anything. Since they already know we are new and inexperienced, we should show them that we approach
these
opportunities with curiosity and a humble confidence that we can learn and they can teach us. We have turned a
fear of
ignorance into a chance to build teams (which is also your job!).
Lesson Two: You Can’t Wait to Do All the Intel!
MI lieutenant, you may have built up or bought into the idea that, because you are an intelligence professional,
you
will be “doing intelligence.” You will, but not in the way you may think you will. Most freshly minted
lieutenants
think they are the ones who will make the “big discovery” or run analysis on the “big problem.” Let me challenge
that
assumption, because the truth is that while “doing intelligence” is certainly part of your job, your role is
actually
much broader than that.
As an officer, you are a leader, an administrator, and a manager. As an MI officer, you are a leader within the
MI
Corps, an administrator for MI Soldiers, and a manager of MI systems and policies. Your job is to ensure that
your
NCOs and Soldiers have the training and resources needed to accomplish the mission. Most of the time, that means
you
are not producing intelligence; instead, you are refining it and ensuring it gets done. Before you spiral into a
panic, though, allow me to give you a broad explanation of why this can be so rewarding.
You are the first officer in someone’s chain of command, which means you are the most accessible officer who can
make
a difference in someone’s professional career or life. Are you an officer who helps your Soldiers grow? Do you
set
incentives that reward Soldiers for a job well done? Do your Soldiers know that you will look after their best
interests? You are the one who can develop and inspire a team to greater heights. You are finally “the guy” with
enough power to make a difference. You can set the tone for all the officers in the formation.
You are also in the first line of defense against tasks that do not align with the mission. For example, let’s
say
your unit is tasked with processing, exploiting, and disseminating critical intelligence that could mean the
difference between victory and defeat. You receive a task for one of your analysts to attend a briefing on
painting
rocks. Expanding our Soldiers’ artistic abilities may technically count as professional development, but it does
not
align with the core mission. Your position gives you the authority to brief senior leaders on the negative
impact on
the mission if that Soldier is removed from their current task. You still must follow orders, but you can inform
the
orders process. In this example, you offered an effective justification for why the Soldier’s priority must be
conducting analysis in support of the mission and not learning to paint rocks. The senior leadership agreed with
you
and dropped that requirement. Your Soldier remained properly focused and produced quality intelligence. Hey,
lieutenant, do you smell that? That’s the smell of victory!
As an MI leader, you will certainly know how intelligence is done, but you also retain the greatest
responsibility
within your team. Everything that your team does (or does not do) reflects directly back on you. Of course, you
should
understand what and how your Soldiers are doing, but you get to set the conditions for them to do it. Let your
warrant
officers guide you and help your NCOs take care of your Soldiers. Be the officer who leads their team, takes
care of
the administrative work, and manages the variables of the mission.
Lesson Three: You’re Just a Lieutenant; Nobody Cares What You Do
One of an officer’s critical roles is to “own” the organization and help set the tone for the unit’s culture. I
will
tell you now: no unit is perfect, no matter how cool its mission or how much history it has. Organizations will
always
face issues with leaders, policies, circumstances, and more. It is extremely easy to be negative and get bogged
down
in the bad. I will give a couple of examples involving two company-grade officers I worked closely with and how
their
actions affected their formations.
We will refer to the first individual as “Nick.” Nick possessed the wisdom to know whom to gripe to and when to
walk
away and vent his frustration privately. As a result, the team very rarely saw him frustrated or complicating an
already tough situation. At his best, he helped guide his team through the issue. At his worst, he would turn
red and
lower his glasses to the bridge of his nose, which provided great comic relief in a frustrating situation. As an
assistant operations officer and, later, a formation leader (two challenging positions for very different
reasons),
Nick dealt with many of the intricacies of bureaucracy and countless Soldiers’ issues. He always chose to lead
with
positivity. To him, a challenging situation was an opportunity to improve the team and progress toward team
goals. His
meticulous planning and resourcing, though tedious, always had the silver lining of helping a Soldier somewhere
down
the line. Instead of getting frustrated because someone in the chain was being difficult, he took the
opportunity to
discuss the problem and produce a solution that worked for both parties. By the time his assignment was over, he
left
his teams in much better shape than he found them and created systems that outlasted his tenure in the unit. A
leader
like Nick leads with positivity and encourages those they lead to adopt that positivity. This does not mean
sugarcoating a bad situation; sometimes it is as simple as “embracing the suck” alongside the Soldiers.
Our second example will be referred to as “Rick.” Rick was a brilliant young officer, and everyone knew his
talent.
His ability to solve problems and innovate was second to none. Rick could take a complex concept and break it
down so
that everyone around him understood what was going on. There was only one problem: Rick was often openly
negative
about things he did not appreciate or found silly—for example, when his formation was tasked with conducting
weekly
maintenance on vehicles in the motor pool. In the type of formation that Rick led, the tactical vehicles under
his
authority would not deploy with the unit in a time of war. To Rick, therefore, it was illogical to maintain
them. He
would often complain aloud, in front of his Soldiers, that it made no sense to conduct maintenance. Consider
this: how
much would you care about something that your boss thinks is a waste of time? Thanks to the example
Rick set,
his formation also complained about the maintenance. Despite receiving education on the strategic importance of
preventive maintenance checks and services for the equipment, they continued to turn their noses up at the task,
and
their grumbling spread to other formations. A leader like Rick creates a culture of dissatisfaction, which can
lead to
formations not following orders they may not fully understand. The real issue here is not that Rick should not
have
complained at all; it is that he should have known whom to complain to.
So how do these two examples relate to owning the organization? The answer rests in a piece of advice passed
along to
my team: the best unit in the Army is the one you are in. You are responsible for improving the unit.
If the
unit is lacking, what can you do to improve it? While Nick took those opportunities to transform the unit into a
productive organization, Rick eroded trust between his team and higher leadership. Every day when you fall into
formation, you, a young officer, have a choice. Are you going to turn this dumpster fire into an effective unit
glorious to behold, or will you let it burn? The change starts with you, the junior lieutenant.
Dismounting the Soap Box
Lieutenant, you are going to learn a lot over these next few years, potentially more than you ever have before.
Good
ideas, good advice, and good company will avail you. Do your best, even if you do not feel qualified. I promise
that
you will make it, and you might even surprise yourself. Embrace the positions you land in and grow where you are
planted. If you are the best janitor in the building, well, you won’t be a janitor for long. Embrace your
positions
and roles, and find ways to create meaning in your actions—then spread that meaning to your Soldiers. People
want to
follow others who give them something to believe in. Do not sell yourself short; your words and thoughts matter.
You
are the new addition to the team, and everything you do will be seen. Make what you do and say count for
something.
And finally, welcome to the community that is ALWAYS OUT FRONT!
Author
CPT Mason Aldridge is an intelligence officer with the 311th Signal
Command
(Theater) G-2, Fort Shafter, HI. He previously served as the executive officer for C Co, 502nd Intelligence
and
Electronic Warfare Battalion, Joint Base Lewis-McChord, WA. His other assignments include battalion S-2,
Tactical
Ground Intelligence Station platoon leader, and plans officer. During his service, he has travelled across
the
Indo-Pacific theater three times in support of I Corps missions and exercises. He holds a bachelor of arts
in
anthropology with a focus on southeastern archaeology.