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Why the U.S. (still) can’t train the Iraqi military

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Why the U.S. (still) can’t train the Iraqi military


Since the Islamic State’s stunning gains in Iraq in summer 2014, the United States has gotten back into the business of trying to train Iraqi security forces. Although it didn’t work the first time — when the United States spent $25 billion over more than a decade in the wake of the 2003 invasion — recently some U.S. officials have expressed guarded optimism about what the new training effort can achieve, both publicly and privately.

Although it is true that recent U.S. efforts may have yielded some tactical improvements in Iraqi forces, these have been limited at best. More importantly, social science research on military effectiveness suggests that these gains are unlikely to translate into the larger operational and strategic military successes that the administration’s “Iraq-first” approach against the Islamic State militant group requires.

This is mainly because the underlying problems with the Iraqi security forces are political. The regime in Baghdad has little interest in building the neutral, nonsectarian professional army that the United States has long wanted to create, and this fundamental clash of objectives, common in instances of security forces assistance, has produced serious obstacles to the Iraqi combat effectiveness needed to push back the Islamic State. Furthermore, the United States has relatively little leverage to pressure Baghdad into conforming to its wishes, in part because it lacks a credible exit option and in part because Iraq can turn to Iran as an alternative patron.


http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/monkey-cage/wp/2015/09/22/why-the-u-s-still-cant-train-the-iraqi-military/
 
Or maybe we just can't get people raised in the muslim cultural milieu to fight like westerners.

Unless we're going to re-jig their culture and society to look like Turkey, I think we're stuck.
 
Shrek1985 said:
Or maybe we just can't get people raised in the muslim cultural milieu to fight like westerners.

Unless we're going to re-jig their culture and society to look like Turkey, I think we're stuck.

The 'loan service' model adopted by Oman and the UK has worked well, but it calls for British Officers and NCOs to work in the Omani Army, as opposed to 'alongside' them as a separate force. It also calls for the Omanis to step up in a way that the Iraqis may not be able to match:

http://www.defenceviewpoints.co.uk/articles-and-analysis/british-treaty-obligations-to-oman

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/4488147/The-staff-sergeant-who-serves-to-save.html

https://www.gov.uk/government/speeches/2011-11-25-sultan-of-oman-s-armed-forces-association-annual-dinner
 
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