PDA

View Full Version : Training the Operational Staff



Eden
06-17-2009, 02:55 PM
Recent posts on various threads reminded me of the uselessness of much of the training that I received as the member of a three-star staff deploying to Afghanistan. So I thought it would be useful to start a thread on the subject of training the staff for COIN - what, if anything, has worked?

Like most staffs, we prepared through cultural study, rewriting our SOPs to incorporate 'lessons learned', and a series of exercises culminating in a BCTP-like 'certfiying' exercise. Like many of you who have commented elsewhere, we found the training to be inadequate and fairly irrelevent, and faced a very steep learning curve once we had actually deployed. Here is why I think that was the case:

1. The BCTP model - a two week intensive simulation involving the entire staff - works great for conventional warfighting. It is about the right time to fight a set-piece battle involving several phases, decision points, branches, and planning sequels. At the end you can judge success or failure by the change in the relative combat power of the two sides or the amount of terrain which changed hands. It doesn't work for COIN. The pace of counterinsurgency operations is so glacial, and the changes so miniscule (not to mention largely invisible) at the operational level that a two-week exercise consists mostly of running in place. As a result, you can't really judge whether you are doing the right things or doing things right. What you can do is see whether your headquarters processes are working, and this becomes the focus of your training.

2. The exercises - both external and internal - were rich in military detail but very bare bones in anything else. There was no in-depth treatment of the economy, local politics, tribal relationships, drugs, international or non-governmental organizations. There were efforts to involve us in the 'soft' side of counterinsurgency, but the external training organization was ill-structured to do so. Those who were excellent trainers did not have the expertise required, and those who had the expertise were poor trainers.

3. The pace of the exercises were all wrong. On the one hand you had too many 'major' events to deal with, in an effort to involve the generals and other decision makers; on the other, you didn't have the hundreds of 'minor' incidents that the staff found it had to monitor and respond to once we were actually deployed and in charge.

4. We paid lip service to cultural, historic, and linguistic training, but its effectiveness was never tested. Some of it turned out to be wrong or oversimplified once we arrived in any case; more importantly, none of the staff was ever examined to see if the training had stuck. In other words, there was no evaluation phase for that particular aspect of training. As a result, the majority of the staff deployed without being able to differentiate between a Pashtun and a Hazara, without being able to speak even rudimentary Dari or Pahto, without being able to expain the structure of the national or provincial governments.

All of this meant we were very well-trained on our internal processes - we had perfected our meeting agendas, our targeting schemes, our committee structures - but all adrift on what operational approach we should take. In other words, the three-star staff was trained on how to do things, but not on what things to do. As a result, despite a two-year trainup, we floundered on arrival for months. There has to be a better way.

jmm99
06-17-2009, 05:35 PM
a question whose answers everyone one else knows.

When you say a "two-year trainup", was this a part-time effort for everyone - i.e., X hours per week on the trainup; and Y hours per week on "other stuff"; or was it a full-time effort for most everyone ?

As a reader of this thread (surely not a contributor ;) ), I need that for context. Thanx.

Surferbeetle
06-17-2009, 06:32 PM
Eden,

The need for fighting skills on staff cannot be ignored or marginalized, but then neither can the need for populace based COIN skills.

Large parts of COIN fights are populace based and thus it logically follows that consistent training experiences/personnel staffing solutions which acknowledge populace based concerns would be beneficial to operational staffs.

Sometimes it appears that we favor the tried and true square peg/round hole approach for staffs rather than favoring solutions (http://council.smallwarsjournal.com/showpost.php?p=71175&postcount=28) which have a higher probability of success of developing staff members for this type of fight.

What percent of active duty staff personnel have spent time working at the city managers office, the water treatment plant, the wastewater treatment plant, the municipality office, the sheriff's department or the county judges office? Out of a 2 year train up is a 40 hour course of instruction on these civilian populace based concerns enough?

Soldiers with professional experience in the concerns of a civilian populace are scattered across the active duty, national guard and reserve side of the force, however one finds a greater concentration in the national guard and reserve side of the house. Identifying and tracking soldiers with these skill sets is possible (ASI's).

How consistently and closely do we integrate civilian personnel (http://www.army.mil/-news/2009/06/15/22682-national-guard-hosts-civilian-training-for-afghanistan-operations/?ref=news-home-title0) with civilian skills (http://www.usaid.gov/) into the military planning process at BCT or BN level or even lower?

On the solutions continuum should we stick to the extremes and focus on teaching military planning skills to those who have populace based skills or teaching populace based skills to those with military planning skills?

Perhaps instead we need to consistently examine staff composition with an eye towards increasing the ratios of various population based skills on staff. Two solutions to consider:

1) Reviewing/increasing the number of soldiers on operational staffs who have relevant ASI's for the COIN fight at the BCT and BN level (and lower).
2) Reviewing/increasing the number of civilians who are integrated into BCT and BN (and lower) staff's.

Regards,

Steve

Eden
06-18-2009, 02:13 PM
a question whose answers everyone one else knows.

When you say a "two-year trainup", was this a part-time effort for everyone - i.e., X hours per week on the trainup; and Y hours per week on "other stuff"; or was it a full-time effort for most everyone ?

As a reader of this thread (surely not a contributor ;) ), I need that for context. Thanx.

I would chart it as a rapidly ascending curve, with the x-axis representing percentage of time spent specifically preparing for deployment. My planning cell was mostly fully engaged almost from the start, with the rest of the headquarters gradually being drawn in.

But, as with every large headquarters, there is always a large slice of your time that must be spent on housekeeping details, taskers to support other units, and things like equipment checks and individual training that don't directly support training in staff skills. You actually never spend more than fifty percent of your time training as a staff until the very end of the train-up.

One decision that was probably a mistake in retrospect involved our big annual CPX with subordinate units. We had one scheduled at about the nine-month mark (i.e., fifteen months shy of deployment). Traditionally it was a conventional scenario, and it was decided to keep that conventional focus rather than try to make it an Afghan-based scenario. Why?

1. Our subordinate units, with only one or two exceptions, were not deploying with us.

2. Deployment schedules were in flux, and we might not have gone, or might have gone later, so no sense in leaning too far forward in the foxhole.

3. It would have been very hard to put together a completely new scenario in time for the exercise.

4. The staff skills honed in a conventional exercise would be just as valuable to us in Afghanistan.

As I said, it was a mistake. It contributed to our concentration on process rather than on product, but never underestimate the inertia of a large organization.

Eden
06-18-2009, 02:34 PM
What percent of active duty staff personnel have spent time working at the city managers office, the water treatment plant, the wastewater treatment plant, the municipality office, the sheriff's department or the county judges office? Out of a 2 year train up is a 40 hour course of instruction on these civilian populace based concerns enough?

Soldiers with professional experience in the concerns of a civilian populace are scattered across the active duty, national guard and reserve side of the force, however one finds a greater concentration in the national guard and reserve side of the house. Identifying and tracking soldiers with these skill sets is possible (ASI's).

Excellent suggestion. I know that we did have a robust and very competent engineer staff, and a less robust and less competent civil affairs staff. I can't vouch for their previous experience in the areas you mentioned, but I do know there were no '40 hour courses of instruction' offered on any of those subjects.

I am talking about division and corps staffs, the operational level (at least in COIN) staffs that form the kernel of Combined/Joint staffs during deployments. These are structured for conventional warfighting, and must be augmented to obtain the kind of skill sets useful in (I'm holding my nose here) poulace-centered operations. This is a problem for several reasons:

1. They are not, in fact, very common in the military, especially at the field grade level.
2. It takes a long time to grow a competent field grade staff officer. You can't just pluck someone from a city manager's office and expect him to be able to add value in the rarefied air of a three- or four-star headquarters. Thus it is rare to find someone with a specialist skill set who is also able to influence planning or decision making at the operational level.
3. Most of these specialists, while excellent engineers, city planners, or policemen, know squat about warfighting or counterinsurgency.
4. Augmentees, by definition, show up too late in the process of preparing for deployment.

So, while it is better to have these guys than not to have them. I don't see them as a silver bullet. The bottom line is we have a system of preparing large headquarters for operations that is basically a carbon copy of the one we used in the 80's and 90's to prepare for conventional war, only with a different scenario and some cultural sensitivity training thrown in. It doesn't work very well. Moreover, our division/corps headquarters are structured for the wars we would prefer to fight, not the one's we are currently fighting, as SecDef might say. Thus we send them off to the combat zone as ad hoc organizations.

William F. Owen
06-18-2009, 03:48 PM
Couple of points occur to me reading this thread.

a.) Staffs exist to enable Command. That's it. That is all they do. No Commander, no Staff. You don't need staff to support any activity you do not directly command.

b.) Yes staffs are too big. They have been since about the 1950's. Most of what staffs do is utterly irrelevant, to the exercise of command.

c.) Why should a staff for a so-called COIN operation be any different from one concerned with Combat Operations? Command is Command. All the military functions are the same.

...yes I know there are lots of human, social and plain ego stuff that gets in the way, but progress comes from realising it.

Fuchs
06-18-2009, 06:01 PM
I wonder whether the basic mistake was to send a staff for a three-star instead of sending a staff for an undersecretary of state who happened to have a three-star at his disposal.
The latter would have looked like six uniforms and about two dozen white collars, of course.

Surferbeetle
06-18-2009, 06:38 PM
...and enjoyment of the rapid pace of change are some of the constants I have noted across the RA, ARNG, USAR, and DAC/DON/DOS continuum. As you note however, many of our military structures are still Cold War based and warfighting excellence does vary by individual, fire-team, and unit.

Staff work, although fun, can also be very challenging and unforgiving ;) Nonetheless my guess is that there are city managers who would be able to fit in and contribute at the Corps or any other level. Dallas, for example, has a city manager who oversaw a FY 2007-2008 budget totaling $2.65 billion and oversees 13,000 employees (http://www.dallascityhall.com/government/CityManager/city_manager_suhm.html).


I know that we did have a robust and very competent engineer staff, and a less robust and less competent civil affairs staff.

Being a member of both of these communities (civil engineer & CA-bubba) I am pleased by our successes and troubled by our failures. I continue to fight the good fight to prepare my charges within my spheres of influence and hope to have a couple of years left in me to continue the task. In the meantime I appreciate the teamwork in fixing our shared issues and know that when my time comes to move on things will be in good hands.


I can't vouch for their previous experience in the areas you mentioned, but I do know there were no '40 hour courses of instruction' offered on any of those subjects.

My G3 helped me to arrange for a slot at the 40 hour Civil Affairs Planners Course. The setting was superb, the USAF understands infrastructure even in Florida, and more importantly the team of instructors were superb as well (mostly Phd's with extensive DOD and overseas experience). I highly recommend the course as being beneficial to both CA and non CA troops.


I am talking about division and corps staffs, the operational level (at least in COIN) staffs that form the kernel of Combined/Joint staffs during deployments. These are structured for conventional warfighting, and must be augmented to obtain the kind of skill sets useful in (I'm holding my nose here) populace-centered operations. This is a problem for several reasons:

1. They are not, in fact, very common in the military, especially at the field grade level.
2. It takes a long time to grow a competent field grade staff officer. You can't just pluck someone from a city manager's office and expect him to be able to add value in the rarefied air of a three- or four-star headquarters. Thus it is rare to find someone with a specialist skill set who is also able to influence planning or decision making at the operational level.
3. Most of these specialists, while excellent engineers, city planners, or policemen, know squat about warfighting or counterinsurgency.
4. Augmentees, by definition, show up too late in the process of preparing for deployment.

So, while it is better to have these guys than not to have them. I don't see them as a silver bullet. The bottom line is we have a system of preparing large headquarters for operations that is basically a carbon copy of the one we used in the 80's and 90's to prepare for conventional war, only with a different scenario and some cultural sensitivity training thrown in. It doesn't work very well. Moreover, our division/corps headquarters are structured for the wars we would prefer to fight, not the one's we are currently fighting, as SecDef might say. Thus we send them off to the combat zone as ad hoc organizations.

Field grades do not grow on trees, but we have been making them for some time now (current promotion rates to the contrary) and people (military or civilian) are still trainable :wry: To echo your sentiment however, there are indeed no silver bullets and if this was an easy fix they would not hire us to solve the problem.

Balancing the risks associated with the COIN fight is key and it's my belief that by closely examining staff composition from Corps to Company it is possible to identify where we can change the current ratios of kinetic to non-kinetic personnel without enlarging current staff sizes. At these key points we should seriously consider taking the time and making the added effort needed to integrate more COIN experts.

This means actively tailoring units for the COIN fight just as we tailor Light and Heavy units for the conventional fight: specifically it means accepting an added level of risk and integrating more civilians and soldiers with needed COIN skills into the planning and execution of our COIN fights.

Full spectrum to me means the Army can break and build, not just break.

Eden
06-18-2009, 07:56 PM
a.) Staffs exist to enable Command. That's it. That is all they do. No Commander, no Staff. You don't need staff to support any activity you do not directly command.

b.) Yes staffs are too big. They have been since about the 1950's. Most of what staffs do is utterly irrelevant, to the exercise of command.

c.) Why should a staff for a so-called COIN operation be any different from one concerned with Combat Operations? Command is Command. All the military functions are the same.

Hmmmm...I wish you were right. In the perfect world maybe, but in the real world, here is what staffs have become:

a. Staffs used to enable command by gathering information; now they enable command by filtering it. This means that staffs increasingly do things that used to be strictly in the realm of the commander - a trend partly set off by the multiplication of assistand and deputy commanders you find in many headquarters. Moreover, in Afghanistan, anyway, you have staffs routinely supporting activities they do not directly command. We don't own the territory like we would in a conventional slugfest. Instead, we have to coordinate lots of different players, military and civilian, international and host country, who don't have the personnel or expertise to do their own staffwork. This is the cost of unity of effort vice unity of command.

b. Right on.

c. All I can say is that every staff I have seen overseeing unconventional operations looks considerably different from its normal conventional template. Is that because we have lost the bubble? Maybe, but my sense is that the staff functions vary considerably, if only in emphasis. The air defense staff is zeroed out, as are most of the field artillery staff. Long range planning cells wither away, while PA, CA, MP, and others balloon. Info ops cells, however they are structured, gain in influence and size. Liaison cells metastasize and include a whole new range of skill sets, and odd creatures appear like political advisers, red teams, and the like. And don't even get me started on lawyers. This is because, no matter how much we chant 'war is war', the tasks that staffs have to perform in the clash of modern armies are different than the tasks they have to perform in trying to secure an area from insurgents. So, the staff will inevitably mutate, because not only are the military tasks different, but there are a slew of non-military tasks added to the workload.

And, as I have said, after a decade, we still do not prepare our staffs well to enter that environment.

Blackjack
06-21-2009, 01:19 AM
Headquarters, III Corps

Command Group
Commanding General
Commanding General
CG's Hotline Coordinator
Aide-De-Camp
Executive Assistant
Admin NCO

Command Sergeant Major
Command Sergeant Major
Assistant
Admin NCO
Driver 1001

Deputy Commanding General (US)
Deputy Commanding General
Aide-De-Camp
Secretary

Deputy Commanding General (CDN)
Deputy Commanding General
Aide-De-Camp
Secretary

Chief of Staff
Chief of Staff
Aide-De-Camp
Secretary
Admin NCO

Deputy Chief of Staff
Deputy
Admin NCO
Garrison Commander
Deputy Commander
Assistant Commander
Secretary
Sergeant Major
Anti-Terrorism Officer
Garrison Operations Officer
Garrison Operations

Plans, Analysis & Integration Office (PAIO)
Chief
PMR/ABC?Installation Status
ASIP/ICE?Qtr. Stats
CA
Strategic Planning/BOD/ACOE
Lean Six Sigma/BOD/ACOE

Command Staff Inspector General
Inspector General
Secretary
Deputy
Sergeant Major
Operations Officer
Operations NCO
Inspection & Follow-Up Brnch Chf
Maintenance Tech
Supply Tech
Assistance & Invest Brnch Chf
NCOIC
Recorder
CG Hotline

Public Affairs Office
OIC
Deputy PAO
Sergeant Major
NCOIC
Chief, Media Relations
Assistant Media Relations
Chief, Community Relations
Assistant Community Relations
Chief, Command Information
Web Page
Fort Hood Sentinel Editor
Assistant Editor
Broadcast Section
Trading Post
Plans & Operations (PO)
Assistant Plans & Operations

Secretary of General Staff (SGS)
SGS
Assistant SGS
Sergeant Major
Admin Officer
Admin NCOIC
IMO
Ch, Executive Svcs
Operations Officer
DVQ Billeting
Chief Protocol
Protocol
Conference Room Scheduler

Staff Judge Advocate
Administration
Sergeant Major
Secretary
Administrative/Civil Law Division
Contract Law Atty
Bars/Evictions/Juveniles
Environmental Law
Operations Law Division
Criminal Law Division
Magistrate Court Prosecutor
Clerk
Claims Appointments
Medical Claims
Legal Assistance Division
Legal Assistance Appointments
Tax Center Information
Tax Center NCOIC

Corps Staff ACofS, G1
Deputy
Sergeant Major
Deputy AG
Admin
Officer Personnel Mgt
Officer Assign Secretary
Company Grade Assg
WO Assg (Avn)
WO Assg (Tech)
Officer Management Admin
Plans & Operations OIC
Plans Office
FOD
Staff Actions Chief
Staff Actions NCOIC
Staff Actions NCO
Staff Actions Specialist
Automation NCOIC
Automation Specialist
Database Admin
SGM/CSM Assignments
SGM/CSM Assignments Admin
Enlisted Strength Management Chief
Enlisted Strength Management OIC
Director Safety
Deputy Director Safety
Safety Explosives
Aviation Safety Officer
Airfields Safety
Aviation Safety
Safety Hazcom
Safety Education Training
Safety Radiation
Safety Community
Defensive Driving

ACofS G2
ACofS G-2/Secretary
Deputy
Sergeant Major
Admin NCOIC
Operations Division
NCOIC
PLEX Division
PLEX Off
PLEX Off
IMO
SSO
ICRC Director & TROJAN Mgr
ICRC Electronic Maintenance
TROJAN Classic OPS
SIPRNET/JWICS NOC
JWICS Network Operations
IEWTPT Systems Management
ILEX CRSSA Mgr
ILEX CRSSA Admin
ILEX CRSSA FH
CISD Div Chief
CISD DOD II/CCICOMSEC
Industrial Scty/Force Protection
Personnel Security Prgm Manager
G2 Force Mod
Language Training/CLPM

ACofS G3
G3/PTM
Executive Officer
Secretary
Sergeant Major
Administration NCOIC
Assistant NCOIC
Administration Specialist
Training & Exercise Division
G3 IMO SA
G3 IMO IASO
Applications and Development Team
Chief, Training Division
Master Gunner
Training Analyst
Coordinator
BSC Simulations Officer
BSC NCOIC
Field Artillery Liaison
Liaison Officer
NCOIC
Chief, Operations Division
Chief, Force Management Division
Transformation Officer
Force Management Admin
Chief, Air Defense Element
NCOIC
Corps Air Defense Element
Operations NCO
Admin
Deputy. G3 Operations
Sergeant Major
Secretary
RFI/Counrty Clearance Manager
Chief. Current Operations Division
NCOIC
Assistant NCOIC
Installation Task Officer
Corps Task Officer
Task NCOIC
Ceremonies
Chief, Tactical Operations Division
NCOIC
Assistant NCOIC
Command Post Information Manager
Command Post Support team
C2 Specialist
Web Portals Manager
Chief, Con Operations Division
Senoir Deployment Specialist
Deployments OIC
Corps Senoir Deployments Specialist
Corps Deployment Technician
Readiness
USR
GCCS Site Manager
GCCS System Engineer
GCCS Systems Administrator
GCCS Assistant Security Manager
GCCS NCOIC
Corps Operations Center
Corps Operations Center COC
Deputy, Training and Exercises
NCOIC
Admin Specialist
IO Chief
Chief, Exercise Division
Deputy , Exercise Division
Exercise Planner
Exercise Planner
Chief, Aviation Division
Aviation Officer
NCOIC
Plans Division
Chief, War Plans Division
War Plans Planner
Korean Liaison
Planner
ARFORGEN Planner
ARFORGEN Planner
NCOIC
Fixed Tactical Internet

ACofS, G4
AcofS, G4
Deputy G4
G4 SGM
Secretary
Admin NCOIC
Chief, Plans & Ops Div
Plans SGM
Plans Officer
Senior Military Analyst
Operations Plans Officer
Plans & Security Officer
CTO
DCS3
Plans Admin
Chief, Supply & Services Division
Supply Officer
Supply Officer
Cavers Rep
Admin Specialist
Chief, G4 Maintenance Division
Deputy Chief G4 Maintenance Division
Ground Maintenance Officer
Aviation Maintenance Officer
NCOIC, G4 Maintenance Div
Ground Maintenance NCO
Admin Specialist Maint Div
Maintenance Division Fax
Food Service SGM
Food Operations Mgmt NCO
Chief, Force Modernization Div
FMD Admin Assistant
Readiness & Redistribution
FMD Plans & Operations
Readiness & Redistribution
Chief, Log Automation Div
Logistics System Engineer
Logistics System Engineer
Science & Tech Engineer
COMET Officer In Charge
COMET Project Manager
COMET Admin Assistant
COMET C&E/nvd
Maintenance Mgt & Engineer Equipment
Supply Operations
M1, Wheeled Vehicle & Drivers Training
M2/M3 Systems & ADA/Artillery
DS Maint Ops & SAMS
Reset Site Supervisor
Reset Trailer Manager
Reset HEMMT/PLS Manager
Reset HMMWV manager
Reset FMTV/LMTV Manager
Admin Supervisor
SAMS Operator
SAMS Operator
QA/QC Supervisor
Supply Tech
Supply Tech
Corrosion Control Center

Blackjack
06-21-2009, 01:34 AM
ACofS G5
G5
Deputy
Plans Officer
Operations NCOIC
Admin NCOIC
Clerk
321st CA Bde Comm
321st CA Bde Fax Comm
418th Civil Affairs Bn Comm
418th Civil Affairs Bn Comm
490th Civil Affairs Bn Comm
490th Civil Affairs Bn Comm

ACofS, G6
ACofS, G6
Administrative Assistant
Sergeant Major
Admin Clerk
Admin Section
Chief of Operations
Operations NCOIC
Current Operations Officer
Future Operations Officer
Operations Officer/NCOIC
Operations Officer/NCOIC
Operations Officer/NCOIC
Battlefield Spectrum Mgr
COMMS Network Tech
Audio Visual/VTC Section
COMSEC Chief
COMSEC NCOIC
COMSEC Office
COMSEC Clerks
Corps Information Systems
Information Systems Sergeant Major
Deputy Information Systems
Information Assurance OIC
Information Systems Warrant Officer
IA Section
Information Systems NCOIC

ACofS, Reserve Affairs
ACofS Reserve Affairs
SGM, USAR Enl Advisor
SGM, ARNG Enl Advisor
Secretary

G8, Directorate of Resource Management
G8
Deputy G8
Secretary
Mission Budget Chief
Fund Control Analyst
CONOPS Analyst
Systems & Accounting Chief
Accounting Policy
Log/Fin Systems
Log/Fin Systems
Financial Systems Analyst
APC Master File
Account Info/OPLOC
Recycle Funds
Defense Travel Sys/IMO
Plans/Programming
Mgt Control/Travel Card
Training Coordinator
Manpower Analyst
Manpower Analyst

Corps Aviation
Corps Aviation Officer

Corps Joint Fires and Effects Cell
Fire Support Coordinator
Deputy Fire Support Coordinator
JFEC SGM
Assistant Fire Support Coordinator
Operations Officer
Field Artillery Intel Officer
Information Operations
Psychological Operations
Space Operations

Internal Review
Chief
Audit Division
Audit Compliance

Corps Safety
Safety Director
Deputy Safety Director
Aviation Safety Officer
Aviation Safety
Aviation Safety
Safety HAZCOM
Safety Explosives
Safety Education Training
Safety Radiation
Safety Community
Defensive Driving/Motorcycle Course

Corps Surgeon
Corps Surgeon
Deputy Surgeon
Deputy
Senior Medical NCO
Secretary
Medical Logistics Officer
Medical Operations NCO
Senior Physicians Assistant
Operations Officer
GARRISON COMMAND
Director, Civ Pers Adv Center
Locator (Civial Service Employees
Incentive Awards
Labor Relations
MGMT/Emp Relations
Pers Sys Mgr (Automation)
Workers Compensation
Director
Chief, Services Section
Lead Benefits Section
Civilian Pay CSR
Civilian Pay
CPAC Fax
NAF Chief
NAF Job Information & Reception
NAF Fax

Director Human Resources
Director Of Human Resource (DHR)
DHR Secretary
AG
AG Secretary
Retirement Service Officer
Retired Services
Retired Services Asst
Retirement Service
Officer Retirements
DHR Admin operation
DFR
Supply
Plans & Operations Chief
Installation Postal
Assistant
Personnel Automation Branch Chief
EMILPO/PAS Section
EMILPO/PAS Section
Force Integration
Inst Reassign Process Brnch Chf
Customer Svc
Customer Svc
Spec Mgt Cmd/Drill Sgt Records
Officer Reassignments
Non Div Reasgn
Officer Reasgn
Port Calls
Passport/Dependent Travel
Pers Processing Branch Chief
Lead Supervisor
In/Out Processing
Inprocessing
Personnal Processing Br
Inprocessing Officer Personnel
Inprocessing Medical Records
Medical
Personnel
Soldier Service Center Front Desk
ID Cards
Central Clearance Section
AG Orders (TDY)
Orders
Personnel Retention Brnch SGM
Secretary
Reserve Component SGM
Reserve Component Proc
In-Service Recruiter
Career Counselor
Retention Operation
Retention Operation
CAC
Compassionate Reassignments
Congressional Inquiries
MMRB / Congressional Inquiries
Awards
Strength Management Branch Chief
Strength Management
CSM/SGM Assign/Mngt
CSM/SGM Assign/Mngt
NCOIC SMB
Enlisted Distribution
Enlisted Strength Account
Personnel Section
Clerk
SMB
SMB Enlisted
Reaassignments Clerk
Admin Svc Div Chief
Casualty Operations Branch
Ceremonies NCO
Field Operations
Personnel Action Branch
RCSD Career Counselor
Reenlistment
Special Forces Recruiter
Sponsorship
Veterans Affairs Rep

The reason I am showing this list of the III Corps staff is to point out just what we are talking about when we speak of Corps level staff in the U.S. Army. This is a huge monster that makes my head hurt just looking at it. You can tell that a lot of it's function is to filter and at tiems isolate a Commanding General. Not only that, it is a fine example fo staff bloat. Look at the list! We have assistants to assistant assistants in it. Some of it seems more appropriate for garrison staff than Corps staff, yet it is in there. Maybe it is just my dumb inner NCO speaking here but these staffs seem highly bloated and barely managable, let alone trainable.

When I used to think of staff I thought more along the lines of the Battalion level, which is fairly big, but still managable. I think in such a large staff even the field grade officers get lost in the staff soup and it possibly leads to a mild form on staff neglect across the board at the corps level.



COA STATEMENT: ALL INFORMATION POSTED IS UNCLASSIFIED

Tom Odom
06-21-2009, 07:02 AM
Wait until they are augmented for deployment :eek:

Tom

William F. Owen
06-21-2009, 09:03 AM
Sorry I am tardy in reply. Lost the thread....


Hmmmm...I wish you were right. In the perfect world maybe, but in the real world, here is what staffs have become:
I accept that. This is not to say that someone should not try and sort it out. Staffs now essentially resemble soldiers carrying traffic cones, instead of rifles, because they are cheaper and are less dangerous in training.


a. Staffs used to enable command by gathering information; now they enable command by filtering it. This means that staffs increasingly do things that used to be strictly in the realm of the commander - a trend partly set off by the multiplication of assistand and deputy commanders you find in many headquarters.
OK, but there why is it such a stretch to provide the commander with the information he needs to make effective decisions?


c. All I can say is that every staff I have seen overseeing unconventional operations looks considerably different from its normal conventional template. Is that because we have lost the bubble?
I suggest the bubble has been lost. There are some excellent articles in the British Army review based on a year long study of command and staffs, that essentially shows that modern staff are substantially self feeding processes, that "do stuff cos they do stuff."

jcustis
06-22-2009, 12:43 AM
There are some excellent articles in the British Army review based on a year long study of command and staffs, that essentially shows that modern staff are substantially self feeding processes, that "do stuff cos they do stuff."

We call those self-licking ice cream cones in the Marines, and they somehow seem to excel at the self-licking part, but not before dripping all over everyone else and making a major mess.

Red Rat
07-09-2009, 04:25 PM
Interesting thread. My perspective is as a senior staff (big fish) in a one star HQ (small pond) starting the long run up to deployment.

As a HQ we constantly fight the friction of just being - and there is a lot of friction. Resources are very tight and we spend a lot of time trying to get resources and plan training in a very turbulent arena. When not doing this we are trying to:


Understand what to do with all our new staff. The HQ has grown considerably in the last 2 - 4 years, but processes and procedures have not necessarily changed. Configuration in-theatre is very different to that out, we are now trying to mirror in theatre set-ups and TTPs as much as we can.


Intellectually equip ourselves for the challenges ahead - lots of reading and study.

Try and organise training for ourselves and our units that is appropriate to our next deployment, understanding that:



We cannot create Afghanistan in NW Europe
Our exercises are short
The kit we have now is different from the kit we deploy with
We will be considerably augmented when we deploy

I think that our three biggest challenges as an HQ are:


To understand COIN and the environment we will be operating in.
To identify and develop best staff practice; working smart with the extra staff we have, not just adding extra staff process...
To incorporate external agencies into our training as much as possible.

We do this knowing that the staff we have now will not be the staff we deploy with and the situation will undoubtedly have changed again by the time we get there.

It is however a big step forward for us. We are now trying to do the same stuff (produce military effect), the same way (same terminology, same TTPs, same staff processes) in a different context (training not ops). Previously we prepped for ops, deployed, came back, learnt (but did not necessarily apply) lessons and then went back to fighting 3rd Shock Army for another 24 months until we had to start again:D

Red Rat
07-09-2009, 04:30 PM
And I do think that in most HQs there are now too many staff, badly organised and poorly focused with the net result that HQs 'staff' but do not :
effectively support units
or
enable commanders to command.

:mad::mad:Rant over!;)

William F. Owen
07-09-2009, 04:39 PM
I

To understand COIN and the environment we will be operating in.
To identify and develop best staff practice; working smart with the extra staff we have, not just adding extra staff process...
To incorporate external agencies into our training as much as possible.


Rat mate. Don't want to chuck a thundie in the mess, but could I sum up the above as, "trying to work out how a staff supports the commander in counter-insurgency operations?"

Am I over simplifying the problem?

Kiwigrunt
07-10-2009, 12:41 AM
Here's (http://ricks.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2009/07/03/why_can_t_the_regular_us_military_organizations_do _anything) an interesting little read on organisations and staffs. Also touches on 'self licking ice-cream cone' syndrome.:D

Ron Humphrey
07-10-2009, 02:07 AM
Here's (http://ricks.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2009/07/03/why_can_t_the_regular_us_military_organizations_do _anything) an interesting little read on organisations and staffs. Also touches on 'self licking ice-cream cone' syndrome.:D

I found myself thinking all cat in the hatish:D

-----------
There once was a man from nantucket
Who kept him some water in a bucket
For his garden you see
was a pretty as could be
As long as it had a little water

In that area the rain
Never dropped quite the same
Sometimes little here
Sometimes little there
Ofttimes naught but suns rays were droppin

So he kept the bucket filled
Which he'd take up on the hill
To water those plants he had planted

Then along came some storms
Some like hed never seen
and them plants they was watered
Yeah watered to well

And then all heck broke loose when they
started to swell
so he got him a shovel
and dug him a well

then he dug a few trenches to run off the
water
It was raining so fast he got help from his
daughter

oh she had to miss school
but that girl was no fool
and she told him that he'd have to pay

Well the storms disappeared and the rains
went away
But he still had the ditches and a daughter to
pay

But hey at least there'd still be food for the
market

--------------
Sorry couldn't resist

Seriously the topic of organizations and what they bring seems way too often to lead us to inquisitions which fail to remember what got us where we were in the first place

Is there overkill sometimes yes,
But in all truth quite often we have institutions which have become and are exceptionally capable of doing what they do but when something different comes around although they adjust as well as they can it is probably faster (a political bonus no doubt) to simply find a new group which can hit the ground running rather than work to get the old org in good enough shape to keep up.

This works well because the new guys probably will catch up to the new adversary the question is what to do with them when they get them.

The biggest personal problem I think I see with the question of why so many new things; is that they are so often replicas of something you had in the past and failed to keep around. Seems like that might at some point indicate that perhaps they need to be kept around in at least good enough shape to be brought back out when needed.

Probably goes doubly for govt. How many new groups will have to be put together to even get close to the type of capabilities the nation had in years long gone.

Red Rat
07-10-2009, 07:26 AM
Rat mate. Don't want to chuck a thundie in the mess, but could I sum up the above as, "trying to work out how a staff supports the commander in counter-insurgency operations?"

Am I over simplifying the problem?

:D:D I think that sums me up!

Our Boss is quite clear on what he wants, however there is a lot of clutter. Just because we can communicate from the front line to No 10 Downing St it appears to be a growing trend to say that we should; in particular the ability of decision makers to make decisions at a lower level is increasingly erroded. We do not necessarily fight against this as hard as we should because we (the military) are a conservative organisation, like conformity and seem to have an increasing intolerance to risk. Therefore more staffing process shares the burden of military decision making, lessens risk and increases the number of staff required. More staff = more jobs = more prestige...:rolleyes: Oh what a glorious war!
Additionally because we (UK military) have a strong anti-intellectual bias and are not yet comfortable with COIN our officers tend to be more comfortable with process, so we end up with lots of process, this instead of going to first principles and developing a process that is fit for purpose - "supporting the commander in counter-insurgency operations".

Eden
07-10-2009, 03:04 PM
Rat mate. Don't want to chuck a thundie in the mess, but could I sum up the above as, "trying to work out how a staff supports the commander in counter-insurgency operations?"

Now that raises the question: What is the role of the commander in COIN? My observation of an American two-star and a British three-star in Afghanistan was that they had very different conceptions of their roles.

Both did battlefield circulation, and both considered themselves the 'decision makers' for the command. The differences were:

1. The American felt very comfortable making decisions for his subordinate commanders, routinely requiring that company-level operations be approved by him. The Brit did not.
2. The Brit described himself as a 'precision guided munition' and routinely made himself available for interaction with locals, international actors, NGOs, etc., if it contributed to mission accomplishment. He did however, require meticulous preparation for such engagements, which proved to be a heavy staff burden. The American hated doing such things and routinely left those types of engagements to his subordinates.
3. The American wanted routine, twice-daily, detailed briefings on - well, everything. The Brit only wanted to be briefed by exception - when things changed, when things were going off the rail, when certain milestones were reached.
4. The Brit's Chief of Staff was a decision maker, more important than the various deputy commanders. The American's Chief was an office manager whose role was to assist the deputy commanders in making decisions.

This is related to the thread because the different command styles inevitably impacted the size, shape, and focus of the staff - both staffs were, by the way, simultaneously bloated, undermanned, and undermined by the need to continuously rotate in augmentees.

Ken White
07-10-2009, 04:34 PM
The role of a Commander in COIN or COIN-like operations is not identical to his role in MCO; he effectively has less to do and thus more time to devote to minutia if he's inclined to do that. This can have ramifications down to the lowest level, not just to the Staff. Due to the operational tempo, the Staff also has more time...

Then there's the trickle down question; the effect on the working troops. In the first cited unit below, Platoons and Companies just worried about the job at hand -- Brigade was 'the rear.' In the second, they did the job but always with an eye toward appearances at the neglect of performance as Brigade was always in their thoughts -- thus teaching a lot of Lieutenants and NCOs some really bad habits...

I served under two US Brigadier Generals that mirrored your examples. One operated as did your British commander, to the proverbial 'T.' His standing order at night was "Wake me only if all three Battalions are in heavy contact." People were expected to inform him if changes occurred between the Tuesday and Friday A.M. scheduled briefings.

The other was much more into your American model, to the extent that he was insistent that not only did he want company efforts run by him before execution, he wanted reports to the Platoon level and constantly asked the Staff to pursue issues of no real value to be answered in the next briefing (two per day most days, 0800 and 1800; probably averaged only 1-1.5/day or so over the year, sometimes given to the Deputy Commander, the XO or, even the S3 whether necessary or not...).

So your comment:
This is related to the thread because the different command styles inevitably impacted the size, shape, and focus of the staff - both staffs were, by the way, simultaneously bloated, undermanned, and undermined by the need to continuously rotate in augmentees. is quite accurate and, i'd add, affects units down the chain.

The only difference to that in my examples was the Staff for the first rather austere and distant but truly excellent Commander was fairly small but not undermanned while over the months that for the second cited which started as a small but fairly good crew working for a really nice but overly busy guy grew to be just what you describe due to a lot of make-work. Said 'augmentees' of course ripped off from the Battalions...

No doubt in my mind which of those Brigades functioned best and did the better job. Both were good, the first was far more combat effective with far less hassle; benefiting from a good example -- and, as you wisely illustrate, at least partly the impact of a Commander on the Staff.

Red Rat
07-10-2009, 04:59 PM
UK and US mil probably (on paper) see the role of the commander in the same way. I have attached a diagram of how the UK sees the command/staff relationship and divide.

I am not aware how much thought has been given to the role of a commander in COIN. Command and Command style is such a parochial subject with each commander jealously guarding the right to be 'his own man' in matters of style and substance that no guidance per se appears to have been laid down - certainly not on a broadly disseminated basis. My last commander saw his role (in a COIN campaign) clearly as threefold: supervise the supervisors, add substance to main effort, decide where to carry risk.

What Eden descibes matches up very well what I have seen of UK commanders in various theatres. We (as staff) see his job as that of making the key decisions and, in a COIN campaign, a key influence tool where he can go in and engage with select individuals and groups, make promises and keep them. That does impose a heavy staff burden :rolleyes: Staff also get out far too rarely. On my last tour I would see the brigade commander at my outpost every 10 days or so. I saw bde staff once in 6 months... I fail to see (and thought then) how staff could plan effectively in such a nuanced environment without getting out on a regular basis. As a staff weenie in AFG I was out probably more often then required!!:eek:

More of the staff burden (certainly in UK HQs) appears to be self-imposed with staff getting wrapped in process and generating output in order to increase their importance and career profile, or merely to justify their existance (I have yet to hear of a staff branch downsizing themselves voluntarily). An increase in output does not necessarily link to an increase in effect...;)

My personal feeling is that while the role of the HQ is to support the commander and enable subordinate units (right people, right kit, right place, right time and having shaped the battlespace) in fact HQs have lost sight of this and HQs do staff process for the sake of it, but also (and as pertinent) to feed the insatiable demand of the next higher HQ for product.

That aside I like the UK command approach overall, but have a gut feeling that US commanders tend to get out more then their UK counterparts on a rank by rank basis.

davidbfpo
07-27-2012, 11:39 AM
I searched for staffwork and amongst the very few threads shown, this appeared the most fitting.

A KoW article by a Canadian officer on the 33rd Canadian Brigade Group (33 CBG) Headquarters exercise with the USMC in cool Camp Pendleton:http://kingsofwar.org.uk/2012/07/staffwork-the-hidden-hand-of-operations/#more-7235

Which IMHO is doubly interesting as the unit is:
a reserve formation, part-time soldiers, composed of university professors and high school teachers, policemen, software engineers, supply management specialists, occupational therapists and a variety of other occupations. The unit is also a conglomeration of officers and soldiers from militia units across eastern and central Ontario who work as a group only occasionally.......virtually all participating had made at least one tour to Afghanistan.

Some of the points made have appeared in Jim Storr's book The Human Face of War.

There is an interesting different point of view, an Australian one too, on the use of reservists:
The case for committing complex and professional war fighting skills to the Reserve may be tempting for Australian defence planners, but it makes little sense. War fighting is a profession and modern weaponry and tactics are highly technical and complex. Like Olympic athletes, when professional soldiers train less they achieve less. Any decision to warehouse war fighting capabilities in the Reserve is really a decision to let the capability atrophy and fail.

Link:http://www.lowyinterpreter.org/post/2012/07/26/A-leaner-more-effective-Army-Reserve.aspx

I know SWC has recently discussed in the US context the differences between regular and reservist components.