Center for Strategic & International Studies
Iraqi Force Development: Conditions for Success, Consequences of Failure
Iraqi Force Development: Conditions for Success, Consequences of Failure
Couldn't load pickup availability
The effort to create Iraqi military, security, and police forces has been more successful than Iraqi political and economic efforts, but it has not achieved the level of success the United States initially anticipated. The impressive numerical growth of the Iraqi security forces (ISF) masks serious problems in the way the United States and its allies have approached force development. The demands of rapidly creating a large force in the midst of an insurgency and sectarian conflict have been complicated by the lack of preexisting U.S. plans for ISF development, limited resources, and the grindingly slow U.S. responses to the changing security situation. The task has been further complicated by corrupt and/or incompetent Iraqi governance and by sectarian and ethnic politics and feuding. All of these problems have affected the loyalty, discipline, training, desertion rates, and combat effectiveness of the Iraqi Army and police forces.
Iraqi Force Development: Conditions for Success, Consequences of Failure presents a detailed analysis of the entire ISF development effort and its strengths and weaknesses by force element. It covers the Ministry of Defense and Ministry of Interior, the Iraqi Army, National Police, regular police, Departmentof Border Enforcement, Special Forces, Facilities Protection Force, Provincial Security Force, Air Force, and Navy. It addresses progress in developing operational capabilities, the major problems in unclassified U.S. reporting on the effort, and near-term and longer-term limitations on what can and cannot be done. A comprehensive analysis of major ISF field operations from summer 2006 through August 2007 is included.
Share
