The Corner

Bloodless Acclimation

AP:

TWENTYNINE PALMS, Calif. (AP) — Marine Capt. Mike Hoffman sat on the floor of a shack with an Afghan mullah and village elders and accepted a meager meal as he sought their help in the fight against the Taliban.

It was loud and confusing as he tried to listen to them debate what the town needed most — water, electricity, a police station.

“I want to hear everything you have to say. But I can only understand one of you at a time,” Hoffman said through a translator.

Hoffman would later learn from culture and language instructors that he had made a serious error by seeming to dishonor the elders by quieting the debate. That could make villagers refuse to aid his troops — or even aid Taliban insurgents.

But this was not Afghanistan. And on this day there would be no retaliation. This was just practice.

The training taking place this month in the Mojave Desert at the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center aims to give troops deploying to Afghanistan a preview of not only the terrain but also the culture and customs. Helping out with the training are native Afghans under contract with the military.

“When the Marines first come here, they don’t know anything,” said Ahmed Mansur, one of the Afghan trainers. “They don’t know how to talk to the village elder. They don’t know they can’t search the mosque. They don’t know you can never talk to a woman.”

The program follows President Bush’s promise to take a larger, more visible role in the war in Afghanistan. In his Sept. 9 speech, Bush outlined what he called a “quiet surge” of forces there and said even more would be sent soon.

The Camp Lejeune, N.C.-based 3rd Battalion, 8th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division was preparing to go to Iraq this fall when it was ordered to instead replace a battalion due to return home from Afghanistan.

As a result, the Marines spent the better part of September immersed in Afghan combat and culture training scenarios at Twentynine Palms.

The quick shift did not hinder troops because of similarities in combat between the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, said Col. David Odom, the battalion commander. Still, there were enough differences to make some Afghan training essential.

The program takes a page from the Marine Corps’ Iraqi program, which features towns filled with role players who replicate Iraqi life.

Maj. Matt Good, the operations officer for urban warfare training at the base, said events occurring in Afghanistan — from car bombings to Taliban attacks on outposts — are put immediately into the combat training scenarios.

“The lessons have been learned in blood,” he said.

Useful, too, is the American experience with Afghan villagers, many of whom have either had no previous contact with coalition troops or have been made promises by troops that never came to fruition.

So the training exposes Marines to everything from drinking tea with village elders to learning how to search people.

“If we don’t have street credibility, we are much less effective,” Good said.

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