Recruitment, poetry and tears

Here’s how bad we are at learning the local mores of the various war zones we keep dropping in on, in the words of FPRI’s Adam Garfinkle, in Mali: Understanding the Chessboard, posted recently:

As the article says, when the Tuareg rebellion in Mali gained steam after the denouement of the Libya caper, greatly stimulated by the return of heavily armed Tuareg brethren from that fight, these three Tuareg commanders defected to the rebels, bringing soldiers, vehicles, ammunition and more to the anti-government side. Anyone who was surprised by this is at the very least a terminal ignoramus. And anyone in the U.S. military who failed to understand the ethnic composition of the country’s politico-military cleavages, such that he let U.S. Special Forces training be lavished on Tuareg commanders, was clearly insufficiently trained to do his job. And believe me, that’s about as nice a way to put that as I can summon.

How do things like this (still) happen, after what we should have learned from years of dealing with Iraqis and Afghans and others on their home turf? I happen to know someone who teaches in the U.S. military education system, and this person happens to be a field-experienced Harvard Ph.D. in anthropology. This person tries very hard to clear away the thick fog created by the innocent Enlightenment universalism that pervades the American mind—the toxic fog that tries to convince us that all people, everywhere, are basically the same, have the same value hierarchies, the same habits of moral and tactical judgment, and mean the same things by roughly comparable translated words.

Now imagine how good we’d be at infiltration, getting the anasheed, poetry and stories right…

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  1. Charles Cameron:

    Aargh, comments now open. 

  2. Vladimir:

    Has anyone written anything on the signalling function of the al-Qaeda brand? It seems like it could be researched from the perspective of both screening and signalling. 

  3. Mr. X:

    Meanwhile the end runs around Posse Comitatus become more blatant every day. You’d think it was Jerry Bruckheimer filming an action movie in Miami again, but no, it’s just acclimating the American people to seeing troops and machine gun firing Little Birds on the streets:

    http://occupycorporatism.com/military-training-drills-resume-in-preparation-for-martial-law/