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FEATURE ARTICLE
April 2005
Coalition Training
U.S. Special Operations Forces Step Up Collaboration
With Allies
By Harold Kennedy
Efforts by the U.S. Special Operations Command to cooperate with
allies and help train other nation’s military forces are getting
a significant boost in the administration’s 2006 defense budget
proposal.
The
command is slated to receive $4.1 billion, enough to add 200 civilians
and 1,200 military personnel.
The 2006 budget allocates $50 million for new pay incentives that
are designed to retain hard to replace senior enlisted SOF personnel
who are considering retiring to take lucrative jobs in the private
sector. Also included is $362 million during a five-year period
to beef up special-operator language capabilities.
“Language is important,” said Air Force Col. Joseph
D. Clem, deputy commander of Special Operations Command-Korea. “One
thing we’ve learned is that common terms have different meanings
in other countries. Nuance is lost in translation.”
An additional tool, passed into law in 2005, is authority for special
operations forces for the first time to spend up to $25 million
a year to pay foreign military units, irregular forces, groups or
individuals supporting the fight against terrorism, said Thomas
W. O’Connell, assistant secretary of defense for special operations
and low-intensity conflict.
Previously, only the Central Intelligence Agency had the authority
to make such payments. In Afghanistan, special operators often found
themselves waiting for the CIA to pay its indigenous personnel.
“This just makes it easier, if we have to, to do another
Afghanistan,” O’Connell said.
U.S. SOCOM maintains units in every regional unified command around
the world.
Army Maj. Gen. Gary L. Harrell, as combined special operations
component commander for the U.S. Central Command, oversaw “the
largest gathering of special operations forces since World War II,”
about 20,000 personnel, he said. “In addition to providing
forces, coalition partners have made important contributions [in
Iraq] across the spectrum of operations, sharing intelligence, providing
liaison teams and supporting planning efforts, and supplying materiel
assistance; bases, access, over-flight permission, and humanitarian
aid,” he said.
Currently, Harrell said, coalition special operators are conducting
direct-action, reconnaissance, unconventional warfare, civil affairs
and psychological-operations missions.
He declined to name all of the nations providing special operators
in Iraq. “Some countries don’t want their contributions
to become public knowledge,” he said. For example, he noted,
“if you think there is no Arab participation, you’d
be mistaken.”
Coalition special operators have been able to operate together
in Iraq and Afghanistan for several reasons, Harrell said. First,
he explained, Eastern European and Pacific SOF use the NATO standard
for equipment and training, and second, the Central Command’s
special operators worked hard to achieve interoperability with their
counterparts before deployment.
In Korea, joint training between U.S. and South Korean special
operators plays a critical role, Clem said. “Common experiences
are important,” Clem said. “For us, jumping is a shared
experience.” The joint training helped South Korean SOF prepare
for its deployment to Iraq, he said.
In trying to build an international standard for special operations
forces, the United States must not leave the impression that it
is seeking “to apply an American solution to international
problems,” Harrell said.
In other regional commands, the special operations emphasis is
on preventing conflicts, rather than fighting them, said Army Col.
Mark D. Rosengard, operations director of the Special Operations
Command-Europe. “That requires willing and capable friends,
a synergistic effort—a coalition,” he said.
In Africa, Rosengard explained, special operators from the European
Command are conducting a Pan-Sahel Initiative to help local military
forces improve their capability to counter terrorists moving through
their territories.
The Sahel is a vast desert area that stretches south from Tunisia
to Nigeria and west from Chad to Mauritania. Because of the region’s
enormous size and small population, indigenous military forces have
found it difficult to patrol borders and enforce laws. “The
terrorists pretty much come and go at will,” Rosengard said.
The Pan-Sahel Initiative is designed to help countries of the region—Mali,
Chad and Mauritania—counter this problem. Currently, Green
Berets from the 1st Battalion, 10th Special Forces Group (Airborne),
based in Stuttgart, Germany, are teaching mounted infantry tactics
to Malian soldiers at two locations, Timbuktu, Mali, and Nouakchott,
Mauritania, he noted.
“If we can increase the operational reach of our friends
in the region, it will have a significant impact in the global war
on terrorism,” Rosengard said.
In Latin America, special operators from the Southern Command have
been working to overcome impediments to establishing effective multi-lateral
security arrangements, said Army Col. James A. Campbell, director
of operations for Special Operations Command-South.
“Most of the democracies down South are very weak,”
Campbell said. He cited the example of Venezuela, whose president
since 1999 has been Hugo Chavez, a former paratroop colonel and
an admirer of Cuba’s Fidel Castro. Chavez’s presidency
has been racked by a coup attempt, widespread strikes and a failed
recall referendum in 2004.
On the other hand, Campbell said, Latin American countries have
been good at developing ad hoc reactions in response to emerging
crises. In 2004, after Haiti’s government fell apart, nine
Latin American countries contributed troops to an international
peacekeeping force that helped restore a measure of order to the
country, he said.
Campbell cited multi-national participation in the Joint Interagency
Task Force South, which is located at Key West, Fla. JIATF-South,
as it is called, is an international operation that is aimed at
countering the smuggling of drugs, illegal immigrants, terrorists
and weapons in the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific. Led by the United
States, it includes participants from 11 Latin American and European
countries.
On any given day, Campbell said, 12 or more U.S. and allied ships
and 15 or more aircraft are on patrol in the area, which covers
approximately 42 million square miles. Such international participation
has permitted SOUTHCOM to increase its interdiction of drugs despite
cuts in the command’s resources during the past several years,
he said.
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