Washington Pulse 

Is it Major Combat ... Or Is it Peacekeeping? 

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By NDIA Staff 

Since it became clear that the Defense Department didn’t have a comprehensive plan for winning the “post-conflict” phase of the Iraq war, strategists at the Pentagon have been wrestling with how to address the so-called transition from “major combat operations” to “stabilization” and “peacekeeping.” The issue also is being addressed in the Quadrennial Defense Review now under way.

In the real world, however, soldiers don’t care about such categorization, said Brig. Gen. David A. Fastabend, director of concept development and experimentation at the U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command.

“In our doctrine, there is always this seduction of categorization,” he said. Anecdotal evidence from the front lines in Iraq suggests that young officers and soldiers don’t operate under the “combat-vs-humanitarian” mindset, Fastabend said. “Junior officers today are experienced across a range of operations. Frankly, the people who have trouble are those who retired during the Cold War and have trouble visualizing how they would work in this complex environment,” he noted. “There is no better training than experience.”

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