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Home » War Update » Leadership, Iraqi Style

Leadership, Iraqi Style

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. Theyre 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.

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. Iraqs 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 the old regime and old habits die hard,” he adds. There was a ten­dency to dra­mat­i­cally over­sim­plify things not much atten­tion to detail.

Thats 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. Thats 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. Its 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 its 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 forces abil­ity to sus­tain improve­ments in train­ing and devel­op­ment. Dempsey says the coali­tions plan for train­ing Iraqi NCOs is evolv­ing to ensure that enough non-​​coms remain in the train­ing base.

– David Axe

(Cross-​​posted at War Is Boring and Military​.com)

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May 9th, 2007 | War Update | 2507No Comments »http://defensetech.org/2007/05/09/leadership-iraqi-style/Leadership%2C+Iraqi+Style2007-05-10+03%3A27%3A17murdoc You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

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