Dwight D. Eisenhower
pragmatic
authoritative
decisive
lenient with subordinates
visionary
strategic
militarily hierarchical
Dwight D. Eisenhower, Supreme Allied Commander during World War II and later U.S. President, stands as a historical precedent invoked by President Bartlet in Oval Office debates over military discipline. Bartlet cites Eisenhower's unchallenged relationship with subordinate Kay Summersby to expose double standards: male officers like Eisenhower and Hammond faced no court-martial for fraternization, unlike female counterparts. Leo acknowledges no orders stopped Eisenhower, underscoring chain-of-command norms that Bartlet challenges as unfair.
2 appearances
United States Executive Leadership
Also known as:
Eisenhower
Dwight D. …'s Journey
A timeline through the narrative
Affiliation
U.S. Military Search-and-Rescue Assets
U.S. Military Aviation Search-and-Rescue Operations