CALL Handbook 07-34 PRT Playbook
Happy to say that this one can be downloaded without needing speciall access. If you are working interagency on the ground, this one is a good tool for you.
Best
Tom
CALL Handbook 07-34 PRT Playbook
Happy to say that this one can be downloaded without needing speciall access. If you are working interagency on the ground, this one is a good tool for you.
Best
Tom
Last edited by Tom Odom; 09-10-2007 at 05:46 PM.
Tom, Well Done!
I appreciate the enormous amount of effort that went into this, and really enjoyed page 46, "Operating as a Team of Equals" and "Identifying Different Strengths".
Now if we could only get the State dudes to ready this backwardsPRT members should recognize what each individual brings to the mission, as well as the expertise their agency provides. Each member should see how his skills and his agency’s skills complement the skill sets of other PRT members. Together, the civilian and military components of the team create a shared platform that serves as a critical link between their respective organizations, enabling a more creative application of the full range of USG expertise to address the identified host-country needs in semi-permissive and remote environments.
Last edited by Tom Odom; 09-10-2007 at 05:46 PM.
Thanks mate!
I had nothing to do with this one but I did put the link up
that said, it is a good piece of work--if read and understood ahead of time. otherwise, we end up squabbling over who pays rent and who does not
Best
Tom
I've been waiting for such a publication for some time.
When I deployed to Iraq in 2004 as a CA Team Leader we had little relevant training that would have helped us do our work. Being a Bosnia vet helped a lot but CAPOC could have done more than PT us into the ground every day.
Earlier this year I was again in Iraq this time with USAID and made it a point to ask my former brothers in arms about their pre-deployment training. They did a jump at Bragg and all that goes with preparing for a safe jump. No CERP training, little cultural training, no COIN awareness but a lot of PT and range time. Most of their work in country was taken up with conducting local assessments with little understanding of the significance of that crucial mission. How do we know what the people of Iraq really think?
My first look at the cover makes me wonder if the army should talk to someone in the publishing industry before it creates a cover for such an important book. I hope you can't tell this book by its cover as it seems to reinforce the common misperception that you can win over an insurgent controlled population simply by giving out soccer balls or getting a small child to laugh. Looking at the cover might cause a hard-bitten third tour grunt to dismiss the valuable lesson that I hope are inside.
Instead of the touchy-feely pics on the current cover I'd have pics of a team sitting down with a local community leader asking relevant questions, conducting over-sight of the drilling of a CERP funded water well and most critically training their Iraqi counter-parts in military civic-action TTPs.
Back in Iraq next month.
Creon01
Creon01, Welcome to the forum. Be safe on your next tour.
If I might ask given your background; what are the best practices at the tactical level that you have seen the most success along these lines? What are the best practices for platoons and company sized elements to help you do your job?
Example is better than precept.
Creon,
A cover on a book is a cover; what counts is what is inside. I would suggest that you take the time to write down some of your experiences and share them. After you deployed in 2004 did you consider writing down what you learned?
I can help you with that as can my headquarters. There are several companions to this handbook but you will need to log on to access them.
best
Tom
http://call.army.mil/docs/07-34/toc.asp
The previosuly posted link wasn't working when I went looking, but after a resumed search, I found the html links where the same info (minus .jpeg or .bmp figures perhaps) can be downloaded by chapter.
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