Friday, May 9, 2025
LBNN
  • Business
  • Markets
  • Politics
  • Crypto
  • Finance
  • Energy
  • Technology
  • Taxes
  • Creator Economy
  • Wealth Management
  • Documentaries
No Result
View All Result
LBNN

At Army’s special-ops school, the biggest changes in a generation

Simon Osuji by Simon Osuji
April 28, 2024
in Military & Defense
0
At Army’s special-ops school, the biggest changes in a generation
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


FORT LIBERTY, North Carolina—Clustered around a table in a classroom festooned with Ukrainian-language posters, six Army special operations soldiers chatted in Ukrainian with a visitor this month—not without hesitation, but seemingly ready for their upcoming exams. 

“I’m very proud of them; they’re doing very well,” said a Ukrainian instructor at the Army’s John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School.

The six-month course is among a slew of Ukraine-related changes at the school—and part of Army Special Operations Forces’ broader, six-year plan to revamp instruction in irregular warfare, technology, and psychological operations.  

Students in the Ukraine class are the guinea pigs for a course that didn’t even exist until October. The course was designed from scratch over nine months, the Ukrainian instructor said, vastly condensing a process that typically takes three to five years. 

Upon graduation, students will speak Ukrainian at a 1+ level on the Interagency Language Roundtable scale, a government-defined criteria that corresponds to elementary proficiency. The class aims to teach soldiers to bargain, exchange basic data on weapons, and establish rapport with Ukrainian soldiers who they might train. 

The schoolhouse is also revamping basic-skills education to reflect lessons from Ukraine, according to Brig. Gen. Guillaume Beaurpere, chief of the Special Warfare Center and School. 

Engineer sergeants must now learn how to both build and defeat tank ditches, a defensive feature that stymied Ukraine’s summer counter-offensive. 

Drones have also been incorporated into Robin Sage, the comprehensive test that ARSOF soldiers must pass to graduate from the Special Warfare School; as well, weapons sergeants have renewed training with Stinger anti-aircraft missiles, a reflection of the contested skies over Ukraine. 

“You talk to any soldier in Ukraine: you don’t go anywhere without a drone flying, either in support of you or against you,” said Beaurpere. 

Training for ARSOF medics also now emphasizes that they can no longer depend on speedy medical evacuation. “Austere medicine is really coming back to our program,” said Beaurpere. 

2030 plan

Bigger changes, not necessarily influenced by Ukraine, are also in the works to centralize instruction in the school’s core competencies — irregular warfare, psychological warfare, and civil affairs — by 2030. The changes will create distinct sub-schools, in a process akin to establishing faculty offices at a university. 

By 2027, the school will host a new irregular warfare academy, which will teach the type of behind-the-lines combat that Army special operations forces have long trained in. One of the first steps, updating the Army’s irregular warfare doctrine, is already in the works with an anticipated release date for the new doctrine sometime in 2026. 

“One chapter has been written and there is a logic map that’s out there being circulated in terms of the rest of the content,” said Beaurpere. 

In the meantime, he said, his command will issue training guidance in the next six to 12 months that will preview the doctrine changes. 

“We’re going to start with something that is very tactical, that can get out to the force very quickly,” he said. 

Beaurpere said doctrine would focus in part on disrupting an adversary’s strategy, such as by pre-positioning troops in countries that an enemy might attack or positioning them in friendly countries near an adversary. 

Other focuses for special operations forces include using them to provide access to enemy intelligence, potentially in partnership with other commands. ARSOF can provide “proximal access to areas that are of potential strategic interest to [Cyber Command] or [Space Command],” Beaurpere said. 

Beaurpere also said the irregular warfare school may include new efforts to integrate electronic warfare and signals intelligence training. “We envision a pretty prolonged program of instruction that probably would run several months,” he said. 

Psychological operations and civil affairs instruction will also get their own branch schools under the redesign, according to schoolhouse plans. One key change is appointing commandants for each branch school house, who can use their authority to drive modernization. The Army has designated a commandant for the psychological warfare branch from the reserve, Beaurpere said. 

Beaurpere is also pushing to move the New York-based brigade that trains soldiers in psychological operations to Fort Liberty, although no decision has been made yet. “The next step to the [psychological warfare] school is a total Army school, one that looks at the reserves and the active component,” he said. 

A Defense Department Inspector General report released in March said that the Army frequently had to rely on reservists due to a lack of trained active-duty psychological warfare soldiers. 

In a nod to the increasing use of drones and other robotic systems in Ukraine and elsewhere, the Special Warfare School has also launched the Robotics and Unmanned Systems Integration course in October 2023. The six-week program will train 25 students four times a year on operating drones and advising partner forces on their use. 

ARSOF also plans to launch a military occupational speciality focused on robotics, according to a press officer. 

“We are working with the Army to create this MOS, which will fill a need in ARSOF as well as inform how the Army could approach this on a larger scale,” the press officer said. 





Source link

Related posts

US Army’s New XM7 Rifle ‘Unfit’ for Modern Combat, Says Infantry Captain

US Army’s New XM7 Rifle ‘Unfit’ for Modern Combat, Says Infantry Captain

May 9, 2025
ISS seminar hears DR Congo is quasi-state lacking internal legitimacy

ISS seminar hears DR Congo is quasi-state lacking internal legitimacy

May 8, 2025
Previous Post

How decentralized payments are a gateway to economic development

Next Post

It’s central bank week!

Next Post
It’s central bank week!

It’s central bank week!

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

RECOMMENDED NEWS

Foreign Ministry to support five Finnish higher education institutions in their collaboration with developing countries

Foreign Ministry to support five Finnish higher education institutions in their collaboration with developing countries

2 years ago
AI policy expert discusses changing regulatory landscape

AI policy expert discusses changing regulatory landscape

3 months ago
Illicit banknotes from Russia hit Libya’s dinar

Illicit banknotes from Russia hit Libya’s dinar

10 months ago
5 Best Juicers (2023): Centrifugal, Slow, Masticating

5 Best Juicers (2023): Centrifugal, Slow, Masticating

12 months ago

POPULAR NEWS

  • Ghana to build three oil refineries, five petrochemical plants in energy sector overhaul

    Ghana to build three oil refineries, five petrochemical plants in energy sector overhaul

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • When Will SHIB Reach $1? Here’s What ChatGPT Says

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Matthew Slater, son of Jackson State great, happy to see HBCUs back at the forefront

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Dolly Varden Focuses on Adding Ounces the Remainder of 2023

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • US Dollar Might Fall To 96-97 Range in March 2024

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact

© 2023 LBNN - All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Markets
  • Crypto
  • Economics
    • Manufacturing
    • Real Estate
    • Infrastructure
  • Finance
  • Energy
  • Creator Economy
  • Wealth Management
  • Taxes
  • Telecoms
  • Military & Defense
  • Careers
  • Technology
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Investigative journalism
  • Art & Culture
  • Documentaries
  • Quizzes
    • Enneagram quiz
  • Newsletters
    • LBNN Newsletter
    • Divergent Capitalist

© 2023 LBNN - All rights reserved.