Impression: David Berger

When Gen. David Berger (E ’81) first entered the NROTC at Tulane, he didn’t know much about the program or the military. However, the years he spent in Tulane’s NROTC unit, he describes today as “formative,” crediting those years as a starting point for him. 

When Gen. David Berger (E ’81) first entered the NROTC at Tulane, he didn’t know much about the program or the military. However, the years he spent in Tulane’s NROTC unit, he describes today as “formative,” crediting those years as a starting point for him. 

“The foundation underneath, I think it stays with you,” Berger said. “I definitely would not be here without what they provided me there.”

Since the first graduates of the NROTC in 1941, more than 2,000 Naval and Marine officers have been commissioned from Tulane, including Berger, who was first commissioned as an infantry officer in 1981, the same year he graduated.

Since July, his most recent role is serving as the 38th commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps. He was nominated for the role by President Donald Trump in March and was confirmed by the Senate in June. He took office July 11, replacing Gen. Robert Neller, who had served as commandant since 2015. 

As leader of the Corps, one of his biggest responsibilities will be strengthening national security strategies, he said. He also plans to make sure the Corps and the Navy are “viewed as a single force for the nation,” and to improve the level of Marine training. 

Lt. Gen. David Berger (E ’81)
Gen. David Berger (E ’81) (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Morgan L. R. Burgess)

“The world is becoming much more complicated, and we have to train leaders to make decisions independently when we don’t have detailed guidance,” Berger said. 

Something that has contributed to Berger’s own guidance is critical thinking — a skill he said is a result of studying engineering at Tulane. 

“It actually has helped me tremendously in terms of trying to look at very complex problems and break them down into understandable parts and then come up with practical solutions,” he said. 

That skill has followed him throughout his career in other leadership roles including director of operations in the Department of Plans, Policies, and Operations; commander of U.S. Marine Corps Forces, Pacific; commanding general of the Marine Corps Combat Development Command; and deputy commandant for Combat Development and Integration.

Of all his experiences, though, those in which he served as a mentor to younger Marines have been the most rewarding, he said. 

“They ask you periodically for mentoring advice for, ‘What should I do? What do you think about this?’” Berger said. “You just watch them grow into their skin and become people that you knew they had the potential to be, but beyond where they thought they could go.”

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