U.S. Forces Should Avoid 'Training Surprise'.

AuthorErwin, Sandra I.
PositionTerrorist attacks were surpise to military in some ways

Pentagon advisory panel says program managers often cut training funds

As they gear up for an extended campaign against global terrorism, U.S. troops will have to sharpen their training, specifically, so they can avoid surprise attacks, said William Schneider, chairman of the Defense Science Board, a Pentagon advisory panel.

In a war against non-state terrorist groups, "training is an extremely important issue," Schneider said during a meeting with reporters in Washington, D.C. "The absence of training can emerge as a threat" to the United States.

The unforeseen hijackings of U.S. airliners and the subsequent attacks on the World Trade Center anti the Pentagon on September 11 could be viewed as an extreme example of what Schneider calls "a training surprise." That happens, he said, "when the adversary focuses efforts on a particular vulnerability and has very high-quality training to exploit that vulnerability."

Earlier this year, the Defense Science Board released a study, titled "Training Superiority and Training Surprise." The report outlines the current shortfalls in military training and recommends ways to shore up training capabilities. "In 1994, Croatia surprised Serbia with a military proficiency built up in one year," said the study. In the future, "others could surprise us." Even though the United States has well-trained forces, said the Defense Science Board, "training superiority is ours to lose and for others to gain."

U.S. forces, said Schneider, could encounter a training surprise," in a war against ragtag terrorist militias, which may turn out to be extraordinarily well trained for some specific thing."

For that reason, he said, "a focus on training needs to be a much higher priority item, much more central to the way in which we acquire weapons systems, for example." Sophisticated, computer-driven weapon systems only are useful if the operators are trained to take advantage of all the capabilities available, Schneider explained. "In the efforts of transformation at the Department of Defense, training is an acutely important thing."

To prepare for an extended conflict against an international terrorist network, for example, U.S. forces need to learn how to fight a "non-hierarchical war," Schneider said.

The al-Qaeda network, allegedly responsible for the September 11 hijackings, is "horizontally integrated," said Robert W. Chandler, a retired Air Force colonel who has written several books on military strategy. The network...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT