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Joe Galloway: Some inconvenient truths, conveniently locked in a safe

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laststeamtrain Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Feb-22-08 12:56 PM
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Joe Galloway: Some inconvenient truths, conveniently locked in a safe
Commentary: Some inconvenient truths, conveniently locked in a safe
Joseph L. Galloway | McClatchy Newspapers

last updated: February 22, 2008 08:31:51 AM

One of the great strengths of the American Army that was reborn in the wake of the disastrous Vietnam War has been a rigorous After-Action Review and Lessons Learned process that’s conducted after field training exercises and battlefield combat.

Not even two- and three-star generals are exempt from standing up and acknowledging their failures in the Army’s Battle Command Training Program (BCTP), where brigade, division and corps command groups test their skills at planning and conducting major operations in computer war games. A wily opposition force (OpFor) staff does its best to make life miserable for those being tested, much as a real enemy would on the battlefield.

If a general overlooks one or two of his mistakes, an OpFor colonel follows him to the stage and points them out for him.

This program, which began in the late 1980’s, has expanded to help prepare Army National Guard commanders and their staffs for what awaits them in Afghanistan or Iraq.

Foreign military observers have been astounded by a process that requires someone wearing stars on his shoulders to criticize himself in front of an audience of lower-ranking officers and sergeants.

So it should come as no surprise that not long after Baghdad fell early in 2003, the Army’s top commanders commissioned an After-Action Review of the planning and conduct of the invasion of Iraq and the post-war occupation and reconstruction effort. The Army hired the RAND Corp., a California-based research organization that’s done this kind of work for the U.S. military and government for decades.

The study was envisioned as a seven-volume examination of the Army’s role in Operation Iraqi Freedom.

What is a surprise is that nearly three years later, RAND’s warts-and-all report on post-war reconstruction, which was completed after 18 months and presented to the Army in the summer of 2005, is still locked in Pentagon vaults.

<more>

http://www.mcclatchydc.com/homepage/story/28405.html
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zytime Donating Member (58 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Feb-22-08 01:02 PM
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1. Really, a surprise???
I didn't think this administration even owned any vaults.
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