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Iraq
Leadership, Iraqi Style
2007-05-11
Hat tip Don Surber.
After three years of training by coalition forces - and nonstop combat with insurgents - Iraqi army and police units are battle-hardened, highly motivated and skilled in battlefield drills. "At the tactical level ... we're doing quite well," says Lieutenant General Martin Dempsey, a senior official in the coalition training organization. "They're fighting, dying, being wounded, being moved around country." He says 5,300 Iraqi soldiers from outside of Baghdad have been brought in for the "surge."

That last point - their ability to deploy - is a sure sign that Iraqi army units are improving. "Battalions disintegrated last year when we tried to move them around. Now we have them ready to move," says Major General William Caldwell, top commander in Iraq. "That was not even possible six months ago," Dempsey points out.

"We've run numerous command and control exercises - the ministers themselves participate. Now they appreciate the details."
Even the troubled Iraqi police - suspected by many of having been infiltrated by extremist militias - are apparently getting much better. Police trainer Brigadier General David Phillips says the police "are much more professional" now that systems are in place to punish corruption.

Despite these improvements, leadership remains a major failing for Iraqi forces - both at the national level and at the level of non-commissioned officers on the battlefield. Iraq's highest military leaders, including government ministers, and police and army officers still need babysitting by U.S. and other coalition mentors. "The higher up in echelons in command you go, the more vulnerabilities in leadership become evident," Dempsey says. "Most of the senior leaders are from old regime - and old habits die hard," he adds. "There was a tendency to dramatically oversimplify things Â… not much attention to detail."

That's a problem Dempsey is working hard to remedy. "We've run numerous command and control exercises - the ministers [of the Interior and Defense Departments] themselves participate. Now they appreciate the details."

U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Daniel Speckhard says that ongoing "surge" operations in Baghdad have forced the ministers to learn quickly. In the past, he says, ministry leaders focused solely on strictly military solutions to security problems. That's changing: recently the government formed defense planning committees focused on using diplomacy, reconstruction and other "soft power" functions to resolve conflict. Still, Speckhard is skeptical. "It's too early to draw conclusions that there are encouraging signs" of long-term improvement.

Plus, the relentless demands of day-to-day combat have prevented the slow, steady training necessary to build up an experienced NCO corps, according to Dempsey. "They would like to have a U.S.-style NCO corps, but they realize it's a long way off."

The Iraqi army NCO Corps is growing, but there is a shortage of NCOs in the training establishment because every soldier is needed at the front - and this has a detrimental effect on the security force's ability to sustain improvements in training and development. Dempsey says the coalition's plan for training Iraqi NCOs is evolving to ensure that enough non-coms remain in the training base.
Posted by:Steve White

#5  The USA needs to do what has to be done both to empower and entrench ME democracy, as well as protect itself, even iff it means a "peacetime" draft. Never mind about domestic Radical Activists and related anti-US agendists - WE ALREADY KNOW THEY'LL SUPPORT ANYTHING AND EVERYTHING FROM THE LEFT, CENTER, ANDOR RIGHT THAT PUTS GOVT IN CHARGE WHILE ALSO ARGUING AGAINST THE SAME. Remember, they are no so-called LIBERTARIANS = "LIBERALS" on the Left, ONLY COMMIES, SOCIALISTS, GOVTISTS, and GOVT-CENTRIC POLS WHOM DON'T WANT TO CALL THEMSELVES SUCH. "Fascists" are both despicable criminal Nazis whom are also well-meaning but imperfect defective LIMITED COMMIES-GOVTISTS-ABSOLUTISTS depending on the Politix-Correctness of the moment.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2007-05-11 23:24  

#4  Actually, these failings are epidemic in the Arab world. In most of these countries, the soldier's family is expected to take over the logistical support, and sustain the men when the payroll is "late". As a result, when a unit is moved, the men desert because they will litteraly starve unless they are re-united with their families.

The creation of a police force is an even bigger challenge. There is litteraly nothing in the Arab world equivelent to what we would call a local police force. That job is handled by the tribal or clan militias. Getting the Iraqis to grasp the concept is the first challenge before moving to other concepts.

Al
Posted by: Frozen Al   2007-05-11 16:55  

#3  But, most of us know that the shooters need a strong infrastructure of support and facilities. It is the logistics, the supply train, the C4, the administrators, the trainers, the cooks, the chaplins, et. al. that make a real army mobile and deadly:)
Posted by: Jack is Back!   2007-05-11 10:46  

#2  Who can blame them. When they do deploy they arent allowed to do their job. My father was a policeman for 30 years, he'd arrest the crooks and the judge/jury would let them go. I can tell you from first hand experience, it doesn't take long to demoralize someone when you let the bad guys off the hook on a regular basis.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2007-05-11 08:32  

#1  Hell, there's apparently a growing shortage of mid-level NCO's in the US Army. They are turning in papers after these continued deployments and extensions supposedly. Nothing works well in the Army without a lot of NCO grease.
Posted by: Woozle Elmeter2970   2007-05-11 00:50  

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