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Advising Indigenous Forces - American Advisors in Korea, Vietnam, and El Salvador: Global War on Terrorism Occasional Paper 18 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R478
Discovery Miles 4 780
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Advising Indigenous Forces - American Advisors in Korea, Vietnam, and El Salvador: Global War on Terrorism Occasional Paper 18 (Paperback)
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Loot Price R478
Discovery Miles 4 780
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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It has been said that the only thing new in the world is the
history you don't know. This Global War on Terrorism (GWOT)
Occasional Paper (OP) is a timely reminder for the US Army about
the history we do not know, or at least the history we do not know
well. The Army has recently embarked on massive advisory missions
with foreign militaries in Iraq, Afghanistan, and elsewhere around
the globe. We are simultaneously engaged in a huge effort to learn
how to conduct those missions for which we do no consistently
prepare. Mr. Robert Ramsey's historical study examines three cases
in which the US Army has performed this same mission in the last
half of the 20th century. In Korea during the 1950s, in Vietnam in
the 1960s and 1970s, and in El Salvador in the 1980s the Army was
tasked to build and advise host nation armies during a time of war.
The author makes several key arguments about the lesson the Army
though it learned at the time. Among the key points Mr. Ramsey
makes are the need for US advisors to have extensive language and
cultural training, the lesser importance for them of technical and
tactical skills training, and the need to adapt US organizational
concepts, training techniques, and tactics to local conditions.
Accordingly, he also notes the great importance of the host
nation's leadership buying into and actively supporting the
development of a performance-based selection, training, and
promotion system. To its credit, the institutional Army learned
these hard lessons, form successes and failures, during and after
each of the cases examined in this study. However, they were often
forgotten as the Army prepared for the next major conventional
conflict. These lessons are still important and relevant today. In
fact, prior to its publication the conclusions of this study were
delivered by the author to several of the Army's current advisory
training task forces. We at CSI believe this GWOT OP can contribute
significant insights to the Army as it works to prepare for and
conduct its current advisory missions.
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