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Cavguy
12-03-2009, 11:42 PM
After a long journey it's finally out. :D Thanks to those that helped and let the discussion begin!

http://smallwarsjournal.com/blog/2009/12/integrating-coin-into-army-pro/


Overdue Bill: Integrating Counterinsurgency into Army Professional Education
by Major Niel Smith

Download the full article: Integrating COIN into Army Professional Education

In the eight years since the invasion of Afghanistan, the U.S. Army has failed to integrate counterinsurgency (COIN) into Professional Military Education (PME). Counterinsurgency instruction remains uneven in quantity and quality throughout Army Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC) institutions, which have failed to define standards, competencies and outcomes for COIN education. This lack of consistency contributes to ongoing operational confusion and poor execution of operations in both Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom due to lack of common concept of what counterinsurgency is and what it entails, despite great advances in COIN application and execution by troops in the field.

Integrating COIN into PME is crucial for improving the ability of the Army to wage our current wars. Ideally, two officers or NCO’s educated at differing TRADOC schoolhouses should emerge with similar skills and knowledge competencies on doctrine and staff processes. This synchronization is crucial to allowing large staffs with multiple specialties to operate seamlessly using shared understandings of the operational environment. No such standardization exists for the topic of COIN, despite adequate published doctrine and historical military literature.

TRADOC must address this shortcoming in one of its key areas of responsibility. This paper will outline several actions executable within the TRADOC commander’s existing authority to address these problems.

Ken White
12-04-2009, 02:28 AM
Long overdue and hopefully will be heeded. This is particularly important:
"As a corollary, TRADOC requires a single integrator for counterinsurgency. Such an integrator would synchronize the efforts of disparate COIN/IW related organizations, allowing a more coherent approach to counterinsurgency and stability tasks."Unfortunately, while I -- and many others- will agree with you (and not only with regard to COIN; many common areas cry for such a rationalization) my fear based on earlier experience at attempts to rationalize core instructional modules across the Branch Schools is that parochialism rules and the 'not invented here syndrome' will defeat the excellent suggestion. Sadly... :mad:

Cavguy
12-04-2009, 04:12 AM
Long overdue and hopefully will be heeded. This is particularly important:Unfortunately, while I -- and many others- will agree with you (and not only with regard to COIN; many common areas cry for such a rationalization) my fear based on earlier experience at attempts to rationalize core instructional modules across the Branch Schools is that parochialism rules and the 'not invented here syndrome' will defeat the excellent suggestion. Sadly... :mad:

I sent the paper to some key individuals, perhaps it will actually get read in the Army before tossed in the recycle bin. The good news is the editor of a major military professional magazine contacted me and wants a modified version of the topic for an upcoming issue. I know the paper is a bit "inside baseball" for general consumption, but that was the point ...

My point was not that instruction isn't happening at all, there is just no rhyme, reason, consistency, or rigor to it.

William F. Owen
12-04-2009, 07:51 AM
Good paper. Well done.

It does suggest a logical and coherent solution to the problem the US Army has created for itself.
However is part of the problem the very variable understanding the US Army actually has of something the US Army has chosen to call COIN?

I cannot tell Neil he is wrong, (nor would wish to) because the problem he faces is one he sees. However, there may be some merit in questioning the start position from which the whole US Army is starting.

Why teach FM3-24, when it may actually be setting you up for bigger issues/problems later on? Education is very distinct from training in most true professions.

Hacksaw
12-04-2009, 06:11 PM
Went to COIN Center web site... its part of CAC-LDE :confused:

Seems like this paper would be fodder for the Blog, splash page scroll, did you provide for their use???:D

Live well and row

Rob Thornton
12-04-2009, 06:56 PM
Niel,
Good paper. I put some comments on the SWJ Blog side. Best, Rob

Cavguy
12-04-2009, 08:16 PM
Went to COIN Center web site... its part of CAC-LDE :confused:

Seems like this paper would be fodder for the Blog, splash page scroll, did you provide for their use???:D

Live well and row

Now Kirk, you know the REAL history of that paper .... ;)

Niel

Schmedlap
12-04-2009, 09:09 PM
Neil,

Wilf just took the words out of my mouth and re-typed them in a more concise and logical manner.

I read this skeptically, originally thinking, "oh boy, here we go again - another bright COIN idea pushing 'COIN skills'." I expected to disagree point by point. However, this seems straightforward and practical.

My only reservation, again, is what Wilf pointed out regarding the fundamental assumption, but even that doesn't seem overly troubling to me.

Ken White
12-05-2009, 12:58 AM
...My only reservation, again, is what Wilf pointed out regarding the fundamental assumption, but even that doesn't seem overly troubling to me.but while flawed, it's where the elephant is headed. I also am not particularly troubled by it, it can be worked through and is better than doing nothing.

Cavguy
12-06-2009, 03:35 PM
Good discussion going on over in the blog comments (http://smallwarsjournal.com/blog/2009/12/integrating-coin-into-army-pro). Keep it up!

slapout9
12-06-2009, 04:41 PM
Good discussion going on over in the blog comments (http://smallwarsjournal.com/blog/2009/12/integrating-coin-into-army-pro). Keep it up!

Cavguy, here is my UW input from my experience. Part of my Guerrilla force included cadets from West Point. So when they graduated they would have a true PHD in War....they could fight conventionally or unconventionally. :)All Officers and NCO's should be able to do that.