Sunday, November 18, 2007

Human Terrain Team...

Ready to begin another week? From a work perspective, this one will be three days long...so I cannot complain. Hopefully, you too will have some down time to spend with family and friends - we have so much to be thankful for...more about that in a later blog.

I have learned so much during the early months of this 15-month journey with Chris and the 2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment. Here is another learning experience for me.

I assumed that the 2nd SCR had some type of team working with them bringing cultural awareness to the fight. I just did not know how it was done or who was involved.

Now, thanks to an interesting report in the Stars and Stripes, here is a good look at the make-up of what is called a Human Terrain Team (HTT) and their support to Chris' team, the 2-2 SCR working out of COP Aztec...a what? Yep, that's what they are called - an HHT.

K, what is the role of a Human Terrain Team?

They are embedded to help our warriors deal with human terrain - the social, ethnographic, cultural, economic, and political elements of the people among whom a force is operating.

Why does the 2nd SCR need an HTT?

"Cultural awareness will not necessarily always enable us to predict what the enemy and noncombatants will do, but it will help us better understand what motivates them, what is important to the host nation in which we serve, and how we can either elicit the support of the population or at least diminish their support and aid to the enemy." - Major General Benjamin C. Freakley, Commanding General, CJTF-76, Afghanistan, 2006

Man...did you know? I did not. Yet another tool in the tool kit for Chris and his fellow warriors.

Experts help soldiers bridge cultural gaps
By Seth Robson, Stars and Stripes
Mideast edition, Monday, November 19, 2007

BAGHDAD — Middle eastern culture experts are helping 2nd Cavalry (Stryker) Regiment soldiers better understand Iraqis they meet and work with in West Baghdad.

Soldiers from 2nd Cav’s 2nd Squadron are working closely with a four-person Human Terrain Team (HTT) out of Forward Operating Base Falcon in Baghdad’s violent East Rashid neighborhood.

The team of academics, which includes a social scientist, two cultural analysts and a military liaison officer, is charged with bringing cultural awareness to the Army and studying the ethnic makeup of Iraqi populations so commanders can plan courses of action, governance, patrols and provision of essential services accordingly, said HTT member Fouad Lghzaoui.

The Moroccan-born cultural analyst, who studied geography and Arabic literature at the University of Morocco, said the team helps units deal with some of the unfamiliar quirks of Iraqi culture.

“For example, for an infantryman (the Iraqi practice of) holding hands or kissing another man cheek to cheek is a hard thing to get used to,” he said.

The team helps bridge the gap between the squadron and key Iraqi players in its area of operations, said Capt. Travis Cox, 30, of Salem, Ore., 2nd Squadron’s fire support officer tasked with civil military affairs.

“They (the HTT members) are a second set of educated eyes who we can talk through what happens based on Arabic culture,” Cox said, “and aspects of different middle eastern things that being from Oregon I don’t know a lot about.”

Another team member, Lisa Verdon, is a Fulbright scholar to Jordan and has a master’s degree in Arabic international studies from the University of Pennsylvania. But the 43-year-old social scientist is far from academia’s ivory towers these days, walking some of Baghdad’s meanest streets with U.S. soldiers as she studies the population.

The blonde-haired, blue-eyed, Arabic-speaker, who sports a pair of pink Oakley sunglasses and smokes multicolored cigarettes, comes across as a sort of female Indiana Jones, but likes to compare herself to Gertrude Bell and Wilfred Thesiger, two British academic pioneers of Middle East studies.

When she’s interacting with the population in Baghdad, she never asks Iraqis directly whether they are Sunni or Shiite, she said.

“They don’t like to be asked but you can ask them other questions and depending on their response you can tell which one they are,” she said.

Verdon is working on studies of propane distribution to Iraqis by the Coalition and reconciliation between Sunnis and Shiites in Baghdad, she said.

“The influence coalition forces have at the propane distribution point is very different with different units. Some units are very involved in making sure the people get the propane. Others take a hands-off approach,” she said.

Verdon said she has observed successful reconciliation at Combat Outpost Ellis in Baghdad’s Radwaniyah neighborhood where soldiers from Schweinfurt’s 1st Battalion, 18th Infantry Regiment have driven al-Qaida out and brought locals together.

Now she’s making trips with the Strykers to the recently occupied Combat Outpost Aztec, on the outskirts of the city, to examine reconciliation in its formative stage.

Relative peace in Anbar province and the increase in Iraqi forces pulling security is freeing up more U.S. forces to work on reconciliation, she said.

“The Sunni and Shia have lost a lot of lives. There is a lot of anger, frustration and revenge. Reconciliation is about bringing them together. It is about forgiveness,” she said. “You are asking a father to forgive the Sunni for the death of his son and put what happened in the past behind them to move forward for peace stability and a reunified Iraq.”

Verdon said she’s impressed by the cultural knowledge of U.S. personnel.

“Everyone from the privates up through commanders is very astute because there is so much interaction with Iraqis. Maybe a private doesn’t articulate it the same way an officer would but they understand what is going on,” she said.

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Chris, keep using all the tools you have at your disposal - most of all, be safe! We love you son!

v/r,
- Collabman

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