This is topic That Letter From Iraq in forum Books, Films, Food and Culture at Hatrack River Forum.


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Posted by Jim-Me (Member # 6426) on :
 
here's an in depth article about the real situation surrounding the Tal Afar letter and Col. McMasters. The author appears to take a fairly pessimistic overall view (too much so, in my inexpert opinion) but it has some great information and analysis, so far (I haven't finished it myself).

enjoy... and let no one say I've never posted anything critical of the Bush Administration. [Razz]
 
Posted by ClaudiaTherese (Member # 923) on :
 
This is amazing. Thanks so much, Jim-Me. What fascinating reading.

e.g.:
quote:
In Colorado, McMaster and his officers, most of them veterans of the war’s first year, improvised a new way to train for Iraq. Instead of preparing for tank battles, the regiment bought dozens of Arab dishdashas, which the Americans call “man dresses,” and acted out a variety of realistic scenarios, with soldiers and Arab-Americans playing the role of Iraqis. “We need training that puts soldiers in situations where they need to make extremely tough choices,” Captain Sellars, the troop commander, said. “What are they going to see at the traffic control point? They’re possibly going to have a walk-up suicide bomber—O.K., let’s train that. They’re going to have an irate drunk guy that is of no real threat—let’s train that. They’re going to have a pregnant lady that needs to get through the checkpoint faster—O.K., let’s train that.” Pictures of Shiite saints and politicians were hung on the walls of a house, and soldiers were asked to draw conclusions about the occupants. Soldiers searching the house were given the information they wanted only after they had sat down with the occupants three or four times, accepted tea, and asked the right questions. Soldiers filmed the scenarios and, afterward, analyzed body language and conversational tone. McMaster ordered his soldiers never to swear in front of Iraqis or call them “hajjis” in a derogatory way (this war’s version of “gook”). Some were selected to take three-week courses in Arabic language and culture; hundreds of copies of “The Modern History of Iraq,” by Phebe Marr, were shipped to Fort Carson; and McMaster drew up a counterinsurgency reading list that included classic works such as T. E. Lawrence’s “Seven Pillars of Wisdom,” together with “Learning to Eat Soup with a Knife,” a recent study by Lieutenant Colonel John Nagl, a veteran of the Iraq war.
I can't take the time to read much right now, but I'm definitely saving a copy.
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
That's remarkably heartening news. I hoped that something like this was happening. I'm still very (what's a good word for angry and disappointed at the same time) that the groundwork for this wasn't done in the lead up to the invasion of Iraq, or for years afterwards, but it's important that we're doing this now.
 


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