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Military Chaplains in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Beyond - Advisement and Leader Engagement in Highly Religious Environments (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,467
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Military Chaplains in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Beyond - Advisement and Leader Engagement in Highly Religious Environments (Hardcover)
Series: Peace and Security in the 21st Century
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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The role of military chaplains has changed over the past decade as
Western militaries have deployed to highly religious environments
such as East Africa, Afghanistan, and Iraq. US military chaplains,
who are by definition non-combatants, have been called upon by
their war-fighting commanders to take on new roles beyond providing
religious services to the troops to also engage the local citizenry
and provide their commanders with assessments of the religious and
cultural landscape outside the base. More specifically, in the
Balkans, Iraq, and Afghanistan, chaplains have occasionally been
asked to provide their commanders with background on the religious
and cultural environment to which they deployed (e.g. Islam and the
Muslim world) and to reach out to local civilian clerics in hostile
territory in pursuit of peace and understanding. Despite some
internal resistance to this expansion of duties, some military
chaplains have engaged local religious authorities in order to
quell misunderstandings and promote peace in the former Yugoslavia,
Iraq, Afghanistan, or the Horn of Africa.In this edited volume,
practitioners and scholars chronicle the changes that have happened
in the field in the 21st century. For example, they explain how the
Multi-National Forces-Iraq command chaplain (who reported directly
to General Petraeus) worked with the NGO Foundation for
Reconciliation and Reconstruction in the Middle East, contributing
to a significant drop in sectarian violence. In the Horn of Africa,
the command chaplain, who was a Jewish rabbi, helped build
relationships between Muslims and Christians. In Afghanistan,
Muslim chaplains engaged with Sunni and Shia religious leaders to
develop local trust and Coalition and a training program for
religious leaders within the Afghan National Army. By looking at
the rapidly changing role of the military chaplain, this volume
raises issues critical to US foreign and national security policy
and diplomacy.
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