NATO HUM I NT CENTRE OF EXCELLENCE
Co o r d i n a t o r s :
COL Dr . Ed u a r d SI MI ON COL Răzva n SURDU
Hu m a n As p e c t s
i n NATO Mi l i t a r y
Op e r a t i o n s
ORADEA
2 0 14
NATO HUMINT CENTRE OF EXCELLENCE
HUMAN ASPECTS IN NATO
MILITARY OPERATIONS
ORADEA 2014
Relized within Human Aspects
Environment Project,
NATO HUMINT Centre of Excellence
of
the
Operational
Coordinators: Col. Dr. Eduard Simion, Col. Răzvan Surdu
Edited by:
Coordinating editor:
Editors:
Dr. Gregory Moore
Dr. Haaris Ahmad
Mrs. Lesley Simm
Col. Răzvan Surdu
Maj. Peter Kovacs
Technical coordination and cover: Col. Răzvan Surdu, Maj. Peter Kovacs
Technical Team: LTC. Constantin Sîrmă, OR-9 Dorian Bănică
Published with Emerging Security Challenges Division / NATO Headquarters support.
NATO HUMINT Centre of Excellence
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations / NATO HUMINT Centre of Excellence –
Oradea, HCOE, 2014
ISBN 978-973-0-17654-4
Project developed under the framework of NATO's Defence against
Terrorism Programme of Work with the support of Emerging Security
Challenges Division/ NATO HQ.
© 2014 by NATO HUMINT Centre of Excellence
All rights reserved
Printed by:
CNI Coresi SA
“Imprimeria de Vest” Subsidiary
35 Calea Aradului, Oradea
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
EDITORIAL NOTE
The complexity of the subject and its research focus areas had the potential to
pose some challenges generated by the diverse methodologies utilized by the
participants who come from widely diverse backgrounds. To better cope with
these challenges a Harmonization Group (HG) for the HAOE Project was been
established. Members of HG possessed a high degree of expertise reflective of
individuals with a solid background in strategic leadership, extensive military
operational service and sound academic expertise. The HG provided a valuable
feedback regarding the project’s relevance for NATO’s adaptation to emerging
security challenges, and acted as a guarantor of the quality and consistency of the
project’s outcomes.
The Harmonization Group was chaired by Dr. Jamie Shea - NATO Deputy Assistant
Secretary General for Emergency Security Challenges, Great Britain, supported by:
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Brigadier General Cristian-Iulian Dincovici - Chief of Military Intelligence
Directorate, Romania,
Major General (Ret.) Andrew MacKay - Former General Officer
Commanding of the Army’s 2nd Division Scotland, Northern England and
Northern Ireland, Great Britain,
and,
Dr. Paula Holmes-Eber - Professor of Operational Culture, Marine Corps
University, United States of America.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................ 5
CHAPTER 1 MAIN DRIVERS OF HUMAN ACTION ................................................... 11
1. Introduction ............................................................................................... 11
2. Important Modifiers of Human Action ...................................................... 19
3. Conclusions and Recommendations: Operational Implications and Human
Security .......................................................................................................... 29
CHAPTER 2 UNDERSTANDING HUMAN ENVIRONMENTS ...................................... 37
1. Introduction ............................................................................................... 37
2. The Importance of the Historical Background ........................................... 38
3. A brief survey of the Impact of Empire and Colonialism ........................... 41
4. Cultural Intelligence ................................................................................... 48
5. Historical analysis develops and maintains popular support for the
operation ....................................................................................................... 52
6. Independence Movements ........................................................................ 56
7. Additional considerations and recommendations ..................................... 57
CHAPTER 3 THE COMPLEXITY OF CROSS-CULTURAL COMMUNICATION ............... 61
1. Understanding the social systems and sub-systems: first step to
communication .............................................................................................. 61
2. What NATO has to improve? ..................................................................... 72
3. Conclusions and recommendations ........................................................... 95
CHAPTER 4 DYNAMICS OF THE LOCAL SITUATION ................................................. 99
1.
2.
3.
4.
Introduction ............................................................................................. 99
Key Components of the Dynamics of the Local Situation ...................... 103
Tools to Assess Actors in the Local Situation .......................................... 119
Conclusion and Recommendations......................................................... 131
CHAPTER 5 PERCEPTION AND ACCEPTANCE OF A NATO OPERATION/MISSION . 139
1. Introduction ............................................................................................. 139
2. A Question of Legitimacy ......................................................................... 140
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3. Colonial Legacy ........................................................................................ 141
4. Kosovo Peace Building Experience........................................................... 144
5. Importance of Maintaining the Moral High Ground ................................ 154
6. NATO instruments analyzing its perception and acceptance by local
population.................................................................................................... 155
7. Conclusion ................................................................................................ 159
CHAPTER 6 MEASURABLE INDICATORS OF THE POPULATIONS’ ATTITUDE
TOWARDS NATO .................................................................................................. 161
1. Introduction ............................................................................................. 161
2. What is an attitude? ................................................................................ 163
3. Attitudes towards NATO in Afghanistan .................................................. 167
4. Conclusion ................................................................................................ 173
CHAPTER 7 TRANSFORMING NATO CAPABILITIES TO ADAPT TO HUMAN
ENVIRONMENT(S) ................................................................................................ 177
1. Introduction ............................................................................................. 177
2. Security environment .............................................................................. 181
3. Future operations .................................................................................... 187
4. NATO’s Role & Mission ............................................................................ 188
5. Remarks on HAOE terminology and strategy .......................................... 199
6. Findings and recommendations............................................................... 202
7. Conclusions and Recommendations ........................................................ 217
CONCLUSION ........................................................................................................ 219
BIBLIOGRAPHY...................................................................................................... 221
ABOUT CONTRIBUTORS........................................................................................ 239
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS ....................................................................................... 253
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“Every age has its own kind of war, its own limiting conditions,
and its own peculiar preconceptions.”
Carl Philipp Gottfried von Clausewitz
“Cultures are never merely intellectual constructs. They take form
through the collective intelligence and memory,
through a commonly held psychology and emotions,
through spiritual and artistic communion.”
Tariq Ramadan
“The questions that universals raise, above all questions of human nature,
will find their answers and their implications in thought and study
that cross the boundaries of biology, the social sciences, and the humanities.
Seeking answers to these questions will lead to a truer account
of what humanity is and who we are.”
Donald E Brown
“Learn all you can.... Get to know their families, clans and tribes, friends and
enemies, wells, hills and roads. Do all this by listening and by indirect inquiry.
... Get to speak their dialect ... not yours. Until you can understand their
allusions, avoid getting deep into conversation or you will drop bricks.”
T.E. Lawrence
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INTRODUCTION
The Human Aspects of the Operational Environment (HAOE) project has
its roots in the challenges posed to current North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO) operations in Afghanistan. However it is obvious that focusing only on
Afghanistan would not be enough since in the future NATO will be presumably
involved more and more in operations outside its territory, and that the large
majority of such operations will be represented by Non-Article 5 Crisis Response
Operations (NA5CRO).
The local population has been always one of the most important features
of the operational environment, and as the conflict between the adversaries
increasingly spreads among it, gaining local population’s support becomes the
new centre of gravity of military operations.
In NA5CRO NATO will have to interact directly with the local population
that encompasses the entire range of ethnic groups and cultures and different
actors from military/paramilitary, local governance, NGOs, criminality, security
domains. Different environments require different capabilities. Therefore, a solid
environmental understanding is vital during the operational planning and
preparation phases, in order to ensure that appropriate capabilities are deployed.
A thorough understanding of the local population is needed to
comprehensively approach the operational environment, to enhance population
support for NATO operations, and to improve the operational effectiveness and
security.
The NATO HUMINT Centre of Excellence (HCOE) assumed that the right
manner to overcoming these challenges could be found only by a comprehensive
approach, involving the military alongside academia and international and
governmental organizations. Therefore the present project brought together
subject matter experts (SME) from different domains with the goal of sharing
their knowledge and current understanding of human aspects of the operational
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environment, in order to contribute to the improvement of NATO’s
Comprehensive Approach Strategy, and to act as a catalyst for the
multidisciplinary research related to this topic.
This book consists of seven chapters, each of them encompassing the
report drafted by the corresponding research panel and their focus areas are
shortly described below.
The first chapter defining the main drivers of human action presumes
that a military force has limited ability to meet all the requirements of a
stability/security operation. Even though the local population is the likely centre
of gravity of many future NATO operations, not all relevant local population
characteristics can be understood in advance of an operation, but some general
patterns concerning the basic drivers and motivators of human actions can be
discerned from the scholarly literature, and these main drivers may help guide
tactical and field leaders. Furthermore, understanding the goals of the relevant
parties can minimize conflict and maximize cooperation. Conflict is likely when
the people’s goals appear to frustrate each other. Alternatively, when a group
believes that by pursuing its own goal and another group can facilitate the
realization of their goal, cooperation is likely.
Behavioural science research has demonstrated that a people’s explicit
attitudes are only part of the story. Drivers of which a person is not consciously
aware can motivate one’s actions. As a result, simply asking community and
political leaders, “What do your people want?” can reap information that is
inadequate and misleading. This chapter summarizes current scholarly
perspectives on basic human needs and the main drivers of human action while
recognizing that there is no one simple way to capture all drivers. Three common
models of human motivation illustrate the difficulty of creating one
comprehensive model – the rational choice theory, the evolutionary fitness
maximization model, and Maslow’s hierarchy of needs.
These views are critically summarized and then some further
considerations that deepen our ability to predict drivers of human action are
offered. Finally, we end this treatment with a model of human security that draws
upon many of the successful features of the previous models of drivers of human
action.
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The second part assumes that for understanding human environment the
use of history is a critical component in perceiving local populations and
developing parameters for analyzing them in conjunction with the social sciences.
The role of history is important because it serves as a source of information about
how societies and peoples behave. Past experiences offer significant insights into
current behaviours, attitudes, beliefs and actions, as well as explanations as to
how societies have become what they are today.
History offers the most critical evidence for explaining how people
behave in current social settings, and provides extensive data that can be used to
understand how societies function. This understanding of how societies function
is a key element in enabling security missions to build rapport with and support
from local populations. Working in conjunction with the social sciences, the
historical understanding of a population will aid the effectiveness of developing
cultural awareness among those forces operating in unfamiliar environments.
The third chapter examines the challenges posed by communicating
across different cultures and proposes a communication strategy based upon a
constructive approach.
Cross-cultural communication is a key element in building rapport with
other cultures. Understanding how people get information and adapting the
message to the level of the target audience are the fundamentals of efficient
communication. For effective management of a constructive cross-cultural
communication it is essential to understand the cultural and social environment,
particularly the social system, its sub-systems, and dynamics.
‘Cross-cultural competence’ is viewed as a fundamental pillar for NATO
military and civilian personnel who must interact with people from other cultures.
We should consider also that NATO’s own multiculturalism can represent an
important advantage in portraying the Alliance to the others.
The fourth chapter assesses contemporary dynamics of the local
situation, positing them as crucial elements of the Human Aspects of the
Operational Environment that should be more formally incorporated in NATO
planning and operations in order to yield success and ensure a stable peace. The
first portion analyzes the change in contemporary war by depicting the
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complexity of the operational environment and defining the multitude of actors.
Here, the salience of narrative and identity in various locales is examined. The
nature of conflict in the information age is also addressed, including social media,
strategic communications as well as official and unofficial information flows.
The second portion describes how to best analyze dynamics of the local
situation. Various group typologies and organizational structures are provided.
Also, ASCOPE (Area, Structures, Capabilities, Organizations, People, and Events),
Social Cultural Analysis (SOCINT) and Social Network Analysis (SNA) are defined
and presented as under-utilized tools that can effectively depict the connection
between and among apparently disparate structures and actors. The chapter
concludes with recommendations on the most effective training and uses of these
mechanisms to supplement traditional analysis.
In the fifth chapter the understanding of population’s perception and
acceptance of NATO operations starts from Admiral James Stavridis warning that
we have to keep in mind that locals will always look differently at military
personnel than civilian one, even when providing humanitarian assistance.
Based on this observation, the intent of this chapter is to provide tools
and advice on ways NATO can influence the perception and acceptance of its
mission based on the realities of 21st century kinetic and non-kinetic military
operations, especially, as NATO continues to expand its operational focus well
beyond its traditional sphere of influence as it is the case with on-going or
recently concluded operations in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA).
The book’s sixth section focuses on the issue of measurable indicators of
the population’s attitude toward NATO. It deals with basic questions, such as:
what are attitudes? And how can we measure them? But it also deals with a
military application: How are attitudes survey findings currently used in the
operational environment? And how can we improve the efficiency of
measurement and the use of survey research for tactical, strategic, and policy
objectives?
It is argued that there is considerable room for improvement both when
it comes to our understanding of attitudes and actual measurement, as well as
the translation of research findings to military application. Despite a large number
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of NATO doctrinal publications which mention the importance of attitudes of the
local population relative to NATO operations (PYSOPS, INFO Ops, COIN), there has
been no comprehensive effort to consider, analyze, integrate, and publish
doctrine on attitudes of the local population.
The final chapter addressing NATO capabilities transformation to better
adapt to the human environments presumes that analysing NATO operations over
the last two decades and examining NATO’s role in present and future Security
Environments, as defined by the NATO Strategic Concept, it can be concluded that
NA5CRO will continue to represent the core of NATO missions.
At present, the entire NATO military machinery is primarily focused on
meeting the requirements of major combat operations. Therefore most of the
NATO (as well as national) doctrines and procedures, are designed to support this
type of operation. The current education and training process is mainly focused
on combat skills, thus taking precedence over meeting the specific requirements
of Peace Support Operations. Nevertheless, since the main task of the armed
forces is defending NATO territory and our shared values, changing this approach
is not desirable.
However, some changes in the current operational thinking and planning,
as well as reshaping the education and training process have a real potential to
increase our forces capability to cope with the challenges they are facing in
current operations. The chapter’s conclusion highlights the need for recognizing a
comprehensive approach as the key for understanding HAOE, and the human
aspects as a key element of the comprehensive approach. Acting in this respect by
adapting strategic communications, the NATO Defence Planning Process (NDPP),
and the proposals of the Joint Capability Integration Development system (known
as well as DOTMLPFI) would result in improving NATO’s effectiveness in achieving
the objectives of stability operations.
The book ends with a brief conclusion that highlights the increasing
relevance of the human aspects for the current and future NATO operations.
Recent experiences in the field proved that the lack of detailed knowledge of
military about the human aspects, the way that culture influence them, and
furthermore, some prejudices and stereotypes, is still an impediment to
successfully fulfil the strategic tasks and objectives.
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Whatever combination of terms we will use for defining it, the
Human/Cultural Aspects/Dynamics/Environment/Factors remain a key element of
the future military operational environment, especially in counterinsurgency,
irregular warfare, stability, and support, transition, and reconstruction operations.
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CHAPTER 1
MAIN DRIVERS OF HUMAN ACTION
Dr. Justin BARRETT (Panel Leader)
MAJ Dr. Alexandru KIŞ
Dr. Alexandru ILIEŞ
Mr. Ross LISMAN
Mr. Matthew JARVINEN
Ms. Christina KEYS
Thrive Center for human development in
Fuller Theological Seminary’s School of
Psychology, USA
HUMINT Centre of Excellence, NATO
University of Oradea, ROU
The Fuller Theological Seminary, USA
The Fuller Theological Seminary, USA
The Fuller Theological Seminary, USA
1. Introduction
A military force has limited ability to meet all the requirements of a
stability/security operation. Even though the local population is the likely centre
of gravity of many future NATO operations, not all relevant local population
characteristics can be learned in advance of an operation. Therefore, to conduct
advance planning, NATO needs an information source for salient features of a
local population. Also, tactical and field leaders need a repertoire of appropriate
questions to ask members of the local population in order to gain necessary
information about that group. To these ends, this first panel presents general
principles and raises questions about key drivers of human actions. There will be
specific exceptions to these general principles; yet, this panel seeks to describe
drivers of human actions which appear to apply across diverse local populations.
Human goals vary across time and place, but most spring from a set of
basic drivers of human actions including fundamental needs. Recognizing the
features of these “universal” basic needs and drivers enables military planners to
anticipate the goals of groups and individuals in any particular operational
environment. Furthermore, understanding the goals of the relevant parties can
minimize conflict and maximize cooperation. Conflict is likely when people’s goals
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appear to frustrate each other. Alternatively, when a group believes that by
pursuing their own goal another group can facilitate the realization of their goal,
cooperation is likely.
One obvious strategy for determining someone’s goals and motivations is
to simply ask that person. Behavioural and psychological science research,
however, has demonstrated that a people’s explicit attitudes are only part of the
story. Actions can be motivated by drivers of which a person is not consciously
aware. Further, explicit beliefs and attitudes are shaped by the actions that spring
from these non-conscious drives. As a result, simply asking community and
political leaders, “What do your people want?” can reap information that is
inadequate and even misleading. For these reasons, a general portrait of the
typical drivers of human action as discerned by the relevant sciences is necessary
for considering the human aspects of the operational environment.
This panel summarizes current scholarly perspectives on basic human
needs and the main drivers of human action with recognition that there is no one
simple way to capture all drivers. Three common models of human motivation
illustrate the difficulty of creating one comprehensive model: (1) rational choice
theory, (2) the evolutionary fitness maximization model, and (3) Maslow’s
hierarchy of needs. Below we summarize the insights provided by the models and
note important limitations that prevent any one model alone from being a
sufficient model for anticipating the goals of individuals or groups in operational
environments. We then offer some further considerations that deepen our ability
to predict drivers of human action. Finally, we end this panel with a model of
human security that draws upon many of the successful features of the previous
models of drivers of human action.
To set the scene, one anecdote is illustrative—particularly as similar
events have been reported in multiple parts of the world. The story goes this way:
NATO forces (or another well-intended foreign group) build a well so that the
women of a community have safe, ready access to drinking water. NATO
recognizes the importance of good drinking water—that it satisfies a basic human
drive or need for potable water. Nevertheless, soon thereafter the well is found
destroyed or has been abandoned. Why? Because walking to fetch water some
distance away met needs beyond obtaining water, such as time to socialize away
from the watchful eye of the men folk. The resources and efforts to create a well
were wasted because of failure to consider all of the drivers of human action and
a failure to harmonize those drivers. Satisfying one driver at the expense of others
may ultimately be fruitless.
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1.1. The Complexity of Human Behaviour: A Preliminary Caution
Unlike the explanations and predictions offered by physics and
chemistry, those offered by the human and social sciences are always partial and
probabilistic. For instance, whereas we may be able to say with almost perfect
certainty that pure water at sea level will boil when it reaches 100 degrees
Celsius, our predictions concerning human behaviour can never be held with such
certainty. Human behaviour is much more complex than the behaviour of water
molecules. Nevertheless, the relevant sciences can improve dramatically upon our
experiences, casual observations, or “common sense” that yields understandings
of human aspects of the operational environment. The observations from this
panel—and indeed, the rest of this document as well—draw upon our best
understanding of what typically happens and so can generate informed best
guesses for tactical purposes.
1.2. Rational Choice Theory
Rational choice theory casts humans as rational economic decisionmakers. According to this model, people make a choice to act by balancing
economic costs versus benefits to maximize their gains and get as much of a good
for the lowest material cost. Such a view comes from microeconomics and can
sometimes predict broad-scale trends in economic systems well. However, at the
small-scale or individual level, such a view of human decision-making has major
weaknesses. People do not always rationally calculate the costs and benefits
associated with various goods and activities. For instance, one experiment
showed that university students tended to regard an object (coffee mug) that had
just been given to them as more valuable than if it did not belong to them, as if
mere possession increases value (Van Boven, Dunning & Loewenstein, 2000).
Likewise, economic games show that people will sometimes reject an offer of
money that they perceive as unfair and rather accept no money at all. For
instance, in economic games, when an anonymous other offers to share only onetenth of a pool of money, keeping nine-tenths, people across cultures typically
reject the one-tenth even if they will receive no money at all and they have no
reason to think they will engage in exchange with the anonymous person ever
again. That is, people will punish others at cost to themselves even though this is
“irrational” from a rational choice theory perspective (e.g., see Henrich, et al,
2005).
Perhaps more importantly for HAOE, it appears that some valued items
fall completely outside of rational economic decision-making. Those goods are
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called “sacred values” (Ganges, et al., 2011). These sacred values, whether they
are sacred lands, free religious exercise, or one’s mother, cannot be traded for
monetary compensation or the like. In fact, in contrast to regular economic
goods, the suggestion that they could be bought or bartered is offensive and may
become more offensive the greater the price offered for them. Consider if
someone were to offer $1000 for your mother. Offensive? But if they then offered
$10,000, would you be less or more offended? Most people would be more
offended because such negotiations suggest that at the right price one’s sacred
values can be bought. Though it may be that in some places selling a family
member (e.g., a daughter or mother-in-law) is not offensive, in every place, some
actions are motivated aside from economic considerations and to treat them as
economic may be disastrous.
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Main Implications from the Rational Choice Model
On a population level, humans will tend to move toward decisions
that minimize personal costs and maximize material gains.
But on the individual level, in specific situations, many other factors
trump economic considerations, particularly moral and religious
values.
Local populations will tend to be attracted to arrangements they
regard as economically beneficial to them, but economic
considerations cannot be the only drivers considered of large tactical
mistakes can be made in terms of human factors.
1.3. Evolutionary Fitness Maximization Model
The fitness maximization model comes from evolutionary sciences
(including anthropology, biology, and psychology), and regards humans, like all
animals, as vehicles for genetic propagation. That is, humans are naturally driven
to behave in ways that maximize the likelihood that their genes (off-spring) will
out-reproduce others’. Basic predictions from this model include drives to:
• Obtain nourishment including water and food, particularly foods
of high caloric and nutritive value that were scarce in ancestral
environments such as fats, proteins, sugars, and salts.
• Create or find shelter as necessary and otherwise protect selves
from the elements as the natural environment requires. Because
this drive is tailored to particular environmental concerns, it is
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knowledge that is passed down culturally rather than what would
be considered “instinctual”.
• Fight or flee enemies or predators, and create secure spaces that
minimize risks from violent harm. As with shelter, though the
fight-or-flight instinct seems to be part of evolved human nature,
the particular modes of fighting or fleeing appear to be heavily
culturally shaped, as are the techniques for creating secure
spaces.
• Procreate by balancing the number of offspring birthed with
ability to provide for those offspring until they are mature enough
to provide for and reproduce themselves. Importantly,
reproductive strategies are not the same for men as for women
given that men can reproduce more rapidly at a smaller personal
cost than women. Likewise, a fitness maximization model predicts
that typically sons will be valued more than daughters because of
their greater potential to spawn offspring, and children
approaching reproductive years will be more valued than younger
children.
Such an evolutionary perspective, when applied creatively, has been very
productive in explaining patterns in human behaviour. Nevertheless, this model
fails to solve many problems relevant to operations planning and execution. For
instance, if humans are fundamentally driven to maximize the success of their
genetic line, entire families fighting to the death and/or engaging in suicide
attacks appears inexplicable. If you and your siblings are dead, your genetic line is,
obviously, in a poor position to out-compete others.
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Main Implications from Evolutionary Fitness Maximization Model
Like other animals, humans have a basic drive to survive, reproduce,
and maximize the number of their children and grandchildren.
Women and men typically have importantly different strategies in
fulfilling these drives.
Unlike other animals, humans can and do sometimes act against their
“genetic best interest”.
Nevertheless, in general, harmonizing NATO objectives with the
survival and reproductive goals of a local population likely will reduce
conflict and increase cooperation.
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1.4. Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
Maslow’s hierarchy of needs is a widely applied theory of human needseeking behaviour. Maslow’s hierarchy asserts that people have a set of needs
that must be met in order, starting with the most basic and progressing in
complexity. The five classes of needs in ascending order are:
(1) physiological (i.e., food, water, sleep, sex),
(2) safety (i.e., security for one’s self, family, and resources),
(3) love and belonging (i.e., relationships, community, sexual
intimacy),
(4) esteem (i.e., achievement, reputation), and
(5) self-actualization (Maslow, 1954). Self-actualization is highly
subjective but can be characterized by an individual seeking
mastery, attaining ideals, and expanding their skills.
Figure 1.1: The hierarchy of human needs – A. Maslow (Maslow, 1943)
According to Maslow, lower needs must be satisfied before higher needs
and only one level is satisfied at a time. For instance, once basic physiological
needs are met (enough food and water) then security becomes a concern. Put
another way, one will typically risk safety to obtain physiological needs. Likewise,
if people are starving to death, they will not be concerned with their reputation. If
lower order needs are not met, individuals will abandon the pursuit of higher
needs in order to gratify the lower. The fulfilment of these needs, according to
Maslow, leads to both health and happiness (Maslow, 1954). When considering
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human development, children are more concerned with the first three levels
(minus sexual drives and intimacy).
While Maslow’s hierarchy is popular, it is only partially supported by
empirical research. Tay and Diener (2011) conducted a study with a sample of
people from 123 countries examining how the fulfilment of needs is related to
subjective well being (SWB, people’s feeling of being happy or well off). This study
confirmed that the needs described by Maslow are present in a broad range of
cultural contexts. The data partially supported Maslow’s hierarchy order in that
basic and safety needs were met before psychosocial needs (Tay & Diener, 2011).
Psychosocial needs refer to the human need to exist in a community and
participate in meaningful relationships. Basic safety and psychosocial needs were
generally met before more abstract needs such as autonomy (i.e., people perceive
themselves to be free, able to choose what to do with one’s own time), respect
(i.e., feeling respected by others, being proud of something), and mastery (i.e.,
experience learning new things, doing what one is best at; Tay & Diener, 2011).
Each of these needs is met faster if the needs preceding it have been met (ibid).
For example, while it may be possible for people to obtain respect in a war-torn
area where their safety needs are not met, they could have exerted more effort
toward achieving respect had their safety needs already been met.
Basic and safety needs are the lowest order needs and they were
generally found to be met before higher order needs. Operationally, these results
suggest that to have the most impact on SWB in the shortest amount of time, it is
important to secure basic physiological needs and safety needs first. That said, it
is possible to have higher needs met before basic and safety needs. For instance,
people can gratify their need for belonging by finding solace in a community while
their need for safety is frustrated in a war zone. Additionally, each need was
found to have a unique impact on improving SWB, independent of other needs.
This finding suggests any approach aimed at increasing SWB should be multifaceted, including efforts directed at fulfilling each need simultaneously. For
instance, employing locals to perform jobs—even small jobs—may increase SWB
more than simply giving aid, particularly if those jobs contribute to the needs of
the local community. Level 1 basic needs are met simultaneously with Level 4
esteem needs.
In addition to these findings, an individual’s basic and safety needs were
largely contingent upon the country in which one lives while higher order needs
were more dependent upon individual experiences (Tay & Diener, 2011). Basic
and safety needs are determined more by factors beyond the control of the
individual. Such events could be famine, war, and natural disasters that may
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disrupt food production and distribution and impinge upon the safety of
individuals and their families. Psychological needs (i.e., psychosocial, autonomy,
respect, mastery) are more related to individual experiences such as their
experience living in a community, feeling free and respected, and being able to do
something well. This suggests that the fulfilment of basic and safety needs might
be better fulfilled at the societal level (e.g., ensuring peace in a region and basic
food and shelter) while higher needs should be met though measures that are
aimed at individual experiences (e.g., interactions with occupying forces, personal
opportunities). It was also found that the when a society had higher rates of
needs being fulfilled, the nation’s average SWB was higher; more so than would
be predicted by individual fulfilment of needs (ibid). This further supports the idea
of national efforts to increase SWB.
Maslow’s theory has also been critiqued for being geared specifically
towards the fulfilment of needs in a western, individualistic society. Different
cultures may prioritize different needs. For instance, individual esteem needs may
be more highly valued in an individualistic culture than in a collectivistic culture
(Oishi, Diener, Lucas & Suh, 1999). When striving to meet the needs of people in
different cultures, the relative importance of each need should be assessed and
the plan to meet these needs should be adjusted accordingly.
•
•
•
Main Implications from Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
Lower-level, basic needs (such as need for food, water, safety for self
and children, health, and property) tend to be higher priority for
people and less cross-culturally variable.
Nevertheless, local contexts and other factors (such as moral and
religious concerns) may importantly modify how these needs are
prioritized.
It may be most effective to target several levels of needs
simultaneously.
1.5. Limitations of the Models
These three models have some meaningful convergence. The models
agree that people will generally act in ways to get those things that they want or
need with the least amount of loss of other things they want or need. The most
common and fundamental needs will relate to food, water and survival needs,
and core social relationships, particularly concerning family relations.
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Nevertheless, these general patterns must be augmented by other concerns or
else they remain very crude pointers.
To date no one model capturing all main drivers of human action has
been successfully discovered by social and behavioural scientists. Each of the
models above has shortcomings and limitations. Perhaps it is best to use them in
conjunction with each other to predict or explain those aims that motivate human
action. Further, all three may be usefully augmented by considering the
foundations of human sociality, morality, and religion. We consider these shapers
below briefly.
2. Important Modifiers of Human Action
Humans are distinctive among animal groups in the complexity of their
social arrangements. These social arrangements are managed in part by value
systems. Some of these we identify as morality. Others, often including
postulated relationships with spirits, ancestors, gods, or other supernatural forces
and powers, we call religions. The foundations of human sociality, morality, and
religion inform and shape the drivers of human action. To illustrate the
importance of these modifiers on basic needs and drivers, consider the error of
air-dropping pork in predominantly Muslim areas of the Balkans. The good
intention was to meet a basic human need for food, but it ignored the fact that
social, moral, and religious factors can dramatically impact how people seek to
satisfy these needs and act on their common drives. Consequently, the food drop
failed to meet that need and, instead, offended and alienated the local Muslim
population for whom pork was considered religiously taboo, morally
reprehensible, and disgusting.
2.1. Human Sociality, Networks, and Social Dynamics
A leading theory for why humans have evolved such large brains for their
body size is the social brain hypothesis: humans have particularly large brains to
manage the large number of social relationships they develop and maintain.
These relationships are critical for cooperative resource-sharing practices, for
passing down locally-important survival information, and for collective problemsolving including building, farming, hunting, and defence. Human sociality is
structured around nested rings of intimacy and trust. People average about five
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closest, most intimate relationships (which typically includes the closest friends
and family members); then approximately 15 (inclusive) in the next layer of
relational closeness, and typically around 150 in their active network of personal
relationships (including family members). When it comes to who to trust and who
one feels obligation toward, this 150 is particularly important: “These individuals
seem to be characterized by a level of reciprocity and obligation that would not
be accorded to individuals who fall outside this critical circle” (Dunbar, 2008, p. 9).
The drive to help and reluctance to harm individuals in this 150 will be high.
Researchers in this area have observed that not only are personal social networks
organized around this number, but traditionally, villages, churches, and even
military units have tended to average around 150 members (Hill & Dunbar, 2003).
It appears that 150 is roughly the size a group can be to self-regulate through
social pressures and personal obligations without strong hierarchical power
structures. Everyone can know everyone else and monitor each other’s
behaviour; hence, in intimate social groups of 150 or fewer, defection is rarer
than in larger social units.
Naturally, discovering key players’ social networks in an operational
environment could be critical human intelligence because of its implications for
identifying personal motivations and obligations. Observing how different
individuals’ networks overlap could likewise reveal potential for cooperation or
conflict. Becoming part of another’s personal active network immediately changes
one’s relationship and triggers a different level of trust and potential cooperation.
More details on the local dynamics appear in Panel 4.
As already suggested, human sociality has implications for moral and
religious reasoning. Humans will tend to be most morally concerned about those
in their circle of 150. That is, these individuals will be attributed moral rights and
responsibilities even when others are not. Someone is likely to make sacrifices for
a member of this personal social network (and particularly the inner circles of 15
or 5) that he or she would not make for others. Likewise, at least in traditional
societies, members of one’s active social network of 150 will tend to be members
of one’s own religious community and share one’s religious commitments. Moral
and religious shapers of human action are discussed below.
•
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Main Implications of Research on Social Networks
A high level of trust and moral obligation is reserved for
approximately 150 personal relationships. Become part of that circle
of relationships and you gain influence and opportunity for
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
•
•
•
cooperation.
To influence a person, be trusted by or influence members of that
person’s primary social network.
Identifying the social networks of key persons in an operational
environment is critical human intelligence.
Teams or communities of fewer than 150 are easier to manage
through social obligations and pressure without strong hierarchical
power structures once everyone knows each other.
2.2. Social Influence and Dissemination of Ideas
The main drivers of human action are shaped into particular local
expression through social learning dynamics. A full discussion of such learning is
beyond the scope of this panel, but a few observations may be helpful when
NATO forces are placed in a position of needing to either monitor how opinion
and action is being shaped by local dynamics (see also Panel 4), or trying to
influence local attitudes and behaviour.
Evolutionary psychologists and anthropologists have suggested that
humans do not blindly respect the testimony or imitate the example of just
anyone, but are subject to a number of social learning biases that help them pick
out models for learning or imitation. Similarity bias is the tendency to imitate or
learn from those that we regard as similar to ourselves on important dimensions
such as age, gender, clan, tribe, ethnicity, religion and class (Henrich & Gil-White,
2001). Young children even prefer to learn from people with similar accents to
one’s own, using accent as a more important marker of similarity than race
(Kinzler, K. D., Shutts, K., DeJesus, J., & Spelke, E., 2009). Prestige bias is another
powerful shaper of learning. People who appear prestigious are more likely
trusted as sources for learning information and used as examples for acting—
even if the prestige is borrowed from an irrelevant domain (Chudek et al, in
press). For instance, a prestigious athlete or musician may be regarded as a
credible source for information on politics or international policy, not because of
demonstrated competence in those areas but because of a halo of general
prestige. Of course skill in a particular domain is important. If someone wants to
learn to hunt, they will gravitate toward the practices of the most skilled hunter
(or at least the hunter who appears most skilled and/or successful). On top of
these three, conformity is a general pressure that humans experience. We tend to
think and act like the majority of people in our social group.
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•
•
•
Main Implications of Social Learning Biases
To know who it is that someone is influenced by, consider who it is
they regard as relevantly like themselves (e.g., in terms of age,
gender, and ethnicity), and regard as prestigious and skilled.
For NATO to influence local populations, soliciting the aid of
individuals who are prestigious and relevantly similar to the various
subpopulations in question (including young people, elderly, women,
men, different clans, etc.) would be advantageous.
Sometimes NATO forces themselves will be regarded as particularly
skilled and/or prestigious already but may not be relevantly similar to
the local population but can elevate the prestige of locals
strategically (e.g., through associating with them publically).
2.3. Moral Foundations
When people are committed to moral ideals they may radically break
away from the patterns of action predicted by rational choice theory, the
evolutionary fitness maximization model, or Maslow’s hierarchy of needs. People
have been known to commit their lives (even to death) to deeply held values.
Though these deeply motivating values vary across individuals and cultural
groups, nevertheless, there may be some cross-culturally recurrent patterns in
moral intuitions and judgment.
Leading theorists in human values (Rokeach, 1973; Schwartz, 1992) have
attempted to narrow down basic morals by supporting their premises based on
underlying social and biological necessities of human beings. Moral Foundations
Theory (MFT), (Haidt & Graham, 2007) proposes five facets of morality that occur
cross-culturally (Haidt, Koller, & Dias, 1993; Shweder, Mahapatra, & Miller, 1987),
underlying most societies. MFT encompasses the following foundations:
• Harm/Care is a foundation springing from the fact that humans
are intensely social animals having uniquely close attachments to
others. Specifically, humans feel for others through kindness,
gentleness, and nurturance. Harming others (particularly in one’s
social group) without their consent is generally considered
immoral in any cultural environment. Likewise, failing to care for a
member of one’s group (e.g., family) is generally considered
immoral.
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• Fairness/Reciprocity is associated with the evolution of reciprocal
altruism, in which a human being may reduce his or her own
wellbeing in order to increase another’s wellbeing while expecting
the other will act similarly at a later time. Humans appear to be
very sensitive to violations of these kinds of fairness relationships.
• In-group/Loyalty concerns the sense of obligation people sense
that they have to their core social group. The size and character of
the group may vary depending on the size and complexity of the
society. Core family members and close friends are part of most
everyone’s in-group in which certain loyalty expectations govern
interactions. It is generally considered reprehensible to betray
one’s in-group and virtuous to make personal sacrifices for the
greater good of the group. A family member may make personal
sacrifices for the betterment of their family or nation. Someone
who is disloyal to an in-group may be ostracized because they can
no longer be trusted.
• Authority/Respect is a moral foundation associated with human
beings’ history of hierarchical social arrangements, beginning
within the family unit with children respecting the authority of
parents. This foundation is primary to leadership, support, respect
for authority, and honour for traditions. It follows that certain
people are entitled to hold power or privilege and the authority to
make certain decisions, and submitting to recognized authority is
regarded as a moral imperative. The idea that harming or
betraying a leader is the same as harming or betraying someone
of comparable rank and status is unusual.
• Purity/Sanctity may have evolved from human’s disgust and
contamination instinct that evolved for avoiding pathogens by
setting apart clean spaces and having strong visceral reactions to
contact with contaminating objects. These disgust mechanisms
and related actions have been co-opted by cultural systems so
that certain groups of people or actions could be seen as
disgusting and contaminating and marking off special “clean” or
sacred spaces is a good way to avoid contamination. Behaviours,
people, places, and objects may all become impure in a viscerally
felt, morally charged way. Sometimes such emotional reactions
are mysterious to outsiders as when a holy space is “defiled” by a
foreigner entering it without being ritually “purified”.
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These five foundations appear to drive moral reasoning in most all
societies and operate largely through emotions and intuitions rather than through
reasoned reflection (Haidt et. al., 1993; Shweder, et. al., 1987). Nevertheless,
these foundations may vary in terms of their relative importance as well as the
particular size and shape of the relevant moral circle. That is, whom it is that
counts as having moral status can range from all of humanity (and even some
animals) to only one’s kin group. For instance, it may be perfectly permissible to
harm people who speak another language in many societies, but it is almost never
permissible to harm one’s family members. It is important to recognize that the
universal expansion of moral considerations to humans and even many animals
(apart from religious protections for some animals) is a product of western
cultures and their Judeo-Christian heritage, and should be regarded as rare even
as it becomes more widespread. On the other hand, the relatively high degree of
collective social identity in non-western cultures is associated (generally) with
stronger affirmation of the loyalty, authority, and sanctity foundations—
foundations that some westerners do not recognize as morally important but
regard as negotiable social conventions.
Note too that moral judgments may be driven more by the unconscious
processes behind these five foundations than by explicit teachings, moral heroes,
and morality tales. Thus, even when popular moral tales or exemplars are
universally celebrated, the population within any nation may be split. Careful
observation and research are necessary in order to determine a culture’s most
valued morals.
•
•
•
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Main Implications Concerning Moral Foundations
Moral norms importantly shape how people seek to satisfy their basic
needs and their other behavioural choices.
Local variability exists but generally people’s moral sensibilities focus
on a few basic foundations that are cross-culturally recurrent and
emotionally driven.
Traditional moral foundations are broader than many western
societies and concern loyalty, authority, and sanctity, as well as harm
and fairness.
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
2.4. Religion
In this section we discuss (1) the naturalness of religion, (2) the
importance of religion as a driver of human action, and (3) suggestions for how to
approach religion.
According to a 2009 Gallup World poll, 84% of adults in the world say
religion is an important part of their life (Crabtree, 2010). Many cognitive and
evolutionary scientists of religion argue that the prevalence of religious belief is
because of what they call “naturalness of religion”. They propose that a belief in
gods or a God naturally occurs as a result of typical cognitive development
(Barrett, 2012, p. 4; see also Boyer, 2002). Specifically, Barrett argues that all
humans have natural cognitive systems that are used to make coherent sense out
of the world around them (e.g., ones that serve to recognize the presence of
other intentional beings, like humans or animals in one’s surroundings). He argues
that these cognitive systems cooperate to make people naturally receptive to
religious belief (Barrett, 2011, p. 130). These cognitively natural predispositions
are then culturally elaborated and acted upon in order to form religions—
individual and communal thoughts and actions related to the believed existence
of superhuman agents.
Two important implications can be drawn here. First, some type of
religious commitments and activities will likely be encountered in almost all
operational environments. Therefore, religion represents a significant human
aspect of the operational environment during strategy development. Second, the
specificities of religious expression will vary greatly from culture to culture as
cognitive predispositions are elaborated on by cultural worldviews, history,
geography, political climate, etc. Understanding the influences of these factors on
religion is an integral part of preparing for religious engagement.
There may be nothing more fundamentally human than the ability to
imagine future outcomes and develop plans for living out goals (Emmons, 1999).
While general goals are important, those that involve “striving toward the sacred”
are psychologically of ultimate concern (Emmons, 1999, p. 6). They are what make
human life meaningful, purposeful, valuable, significant, and consequently, they
substantially amplify goal commitment and motivation. The implication is that if
religious goals, convictions, or rituals are impeded by NATO missions/forces, the
amount of resistance relative to other blocked goals will be substantially greater.
Emotion theorists posit that anger results when one’s goals are frustrated or
blocked (Power & Dagleish, 2007, p. 95). Impeding religious goals will likely result
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in emotionally powerful and motivationally significant resistance, of both
psychological and physical nature. In addition, moral emotions likely have evolved
through selection pressure because of the way they bond social groups together
(e.g., see previous section on moral foundations regarding harm/care and ingroup/loyalty; Haidt, 2001, p. 826). In other words, moral groups survive to pass
on their genes. Therefore, righteous anger not only manifests itself individually,
but through social bonds and networks. Impeding religious goals is a recipe for a
highly motivated, angry mob. Holy wars of all sorts are a testament of this
dynamic.
Alternatively, finding avenues of commonality between NATO goals and
the religious goals of local people would go a long way toward building rapport
and encouraging peaceful cooperation. A preliminary way of identifying
commonalities is by asking local religious leaders and laypeople about their
religious traditions, and listening for common concerns, then cooperating
together toward the development of a list of common goals. (Official religious
leaders are not necessarily the best source for information concerning the
laypeople’s religious goals and so both sources are important.) For example,
promoting peace is a core value of many religions. Encouraging joint participation
toward peaceful goals that are situated within religious ideology would be a
powerful means of uniting people together. The Truth and Reconciliation
Commission in South Africa following Apartheid is a great example of uniting
people through common goals (see Lederach, 2005 for further examples and
theoretical approaches to uniting enemies towards peaceful efforts). A great deal
of psychological research has exhibited the power of common goals on group
cohesion. For example, a classic experimental study called the Robber’s Cave
experiment demonstrated how the group friction between ardent enemies was
dramatically reduced through the introduction of common goals (e.g., pushing the
broken-down bus that they were riding in together; see Sherif, 1961). In addition,
honouring religious expression and facilitating the accomplishment of religious
goals is likely to result in positive emotions of trust and happiness, rather than
anger.
One common way in which religion has helped to create cooperative
communities is through group religious practices. Research shows that people
who participate in religious practices together tend to trust each other more, are
more cooperative, and have more stable and economically successful
communities (Bulbulia, 2009; Sosis& Ruffle, 2003). This bonding effect may be
because ritual participation provides an opportunity to display or signal one’s
commitment to the group and the group’s values that is relatively hard to fake.
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•
•
•
•
Main Implications Concerning Religion
NATO nations are among the least religious in the world. Religion is a
prehistoric, natural way to organize life.
Religious values are highly motivating.
For the operational environment it would be helpful to consider:
(1) understanding how religion informs and facilitates the goals of the
local people,
(2) avoiding frustration of specific religious goals,
(3) listening, collaborating, promoting and encouraging goals that are
common to the local religion (such as peace, conflict resolution, and
reconciliation), and
(4) finding ways to participate in those common goals together.
Participation in religious rituals (if permissible) may be an effective
way to build trust.
2.5. Expectations and Frustrations of Drivers
Humans typically accommodate to levels of resources and how much
their drives are typically satisfied in their environments, and adjust their
expectations accordingly. Hence, reduced access to jobs, health care, and
education in some places leads to demonstrations against the government or
rioting but not in neighbouring societies with poorer conditions. Frustrated
expectations can create conflict above and beyond absolute levels of drive
satisfaction.
2.6. Heuristics for determining the main drivers of human action
The main drivers of human action summarized above represent general
patterns based upon current research. Exceptions will arise and science and
experience will produce new insights that may be relevant to the operational
environment. NATO’s decision-makers and field commanders cannot always wait
for these developments but must have tools for evaluating probable main drivers
in a specific operational environment. The use of social and human sciences in
operations planning and execution may be valuable to nuance these observations.
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Additionally, below are some heuristic questions—some ways to generate best
guesses—at what the main drivers or motivators in a given place might be.
2.6.1. Is the driver present in the first 6 years of life?
Many of the most fundamental aspects of human drives, preferences,
and ways of thinking arise early in life due to evolutionary selective pressure, and
continue to structure human thought and action throughout life. Typically preschool-aged children across cultures have more in common with each other than
older children or adults who have been formally educated or more thoroughly
enculturated and indoctrinated. Hence, asking one’s self, “How important would
this driver be in motivating a five-year-old?” is a good heuristic for evaluating a
possible driver. Some important exceptions exist, especially concerning
reproductive motivations—a five-year-old does not have important reproductive
and related drives.
2.6.2. Has the driver been with us for thousands of years?
Many of the most fundamental aspects of human drives are due to
evolutionary selective pressure that shaped our species over hundreds of
thousands of years and are relatively unchanged for the past 10,000 years (at
least). If ancient peoples were driven by this driver of action, chances are that so
are people who will be part of the HAOE. A variant on this heuristic question is,
“Was the driver invented by someone at sometime during history?” If it was, it is
less likely to be a fundamental driver than if it was not.
2.6.3. Does the driver involve or require special tools, technologies, or
organized institutions?
Generally, those aspects of human expression that require cultural
innovations are newer, more transitory, and less recurrent across cultures. Being
able to speak and gather with whom one wishes requires no tools, technologies,
or institutions. These are human fundamentals. Getting a high school degree
requires an educational institution. Access to the internet requires information
technologies. Hence, these specific wants (a high school degree or internet
access) are less likely to be a main driver across HAOEs, but older, more ancient
drives (e.g. for acquiring important skills and information), are more crossculturally recurrent.
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3. Conclusions and Recommendations: Operational Implications and Human
Security
The limitations and convergence among the models presented above and
the additional factors identified as main drivers of human action lead us to make
one broad recommendation and several specific ones concerning human aspects
of the operational environment. The first general recommendation is to adopt a
broader view of human security for security operations (see below). We then
conclude by briefly summarizing and adding to some of the implications offered
above.
3.1. Human Security Model
Identifying the main drivers or motivators of human action is a critical
human aspect of the operational environment if one’s aim is to minimize conflict
and work collaboratively with local populations. Identifying local goals—typically
variants on the themes suggested by the three models above—would be the first
step to identifying sources of potential conflict and cooperation. Of course, the
direct relevance of these main drivers will vary depending upon the level of
operational goals under consideration. Likewise, the reality of goal conflict versus
goal harmony is not the only relevant factor here. If local or NATO perception is
that there are goal conflicts when there are in fact none, conflict may arise
nonetheless (see Chapter 3 and Chapter 6). Nevertheless, identifying actual
drivers of human action will help limit the problem space for tactical planners and
field commanders to identify real goal convergence and real goal conflict, both
important aspects of the operational environment.
Our primary recommendation is for NATO to take a broad view of human
security for use in security-stability operations on the strategic, operational, and
tactical levels. This broad view may be called a Human Security Model, and treats
security to satisfy basic needs and drivers as part of the security aims of an
operation. If winning security for local populations to act to satisfy their basic
drives is a NATO objective and is duly implemented, cooperation with local
populations will be high and operational success more likely. The Human Security
model recognizes certain fundamental drivers of human action and then argues
that to have “security” requires that one has reasonable access to satisfying those
drives. That is, security is not merely about being safe from bodily harm—as the
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term “security” is often used—but security consists of being safe from threats
against one’s basic drives being satisfied.
The foundational concepts of the Human Security model were first published
in the United Nations Development Programme’s (UNDP) 1994 Development
Report, but have undergone development subsequently. Drawing upon this
development, we present for consideration seven aspects of human security that
may be grouped under three “freedoms” that NATO stability operations should
seek to guarantee for local populations:
• Freedom from Fear refers to an individuals’ condition of
protection from violent conflicts, conflict-precipitated poverty,
and protection from the effects of a government’s inability to
perform its duty to prevent various forms of inequality.
Emergency assistance, conflict prevention and resolution, and
peace building promote freedom from fear. The aspect of security
that Freedom from Fear captures is
(1) Personal (physical) security. Personal Security is the absence
of violence toward the person, and is one of the vital
elements of the human security, represented in Maslow’s
second level of needs, and the basic self-preservation and
survival drives identified by the Evolutionary Fitness
Maximization model of action drivers. The predictability of
violence varies by time and place. There are many types and
sources of violent threats. Some of these include: one’s own
state (physical torture), other states (in war), other groups of
population (as a result of tensions provoked by various
issues), delinquency and organized crime (urban violence),
threats mostly specific to women (rape, domestic violence),
or even the person himself, by addiction (e.g., to drugs), selfmutilation, or suicide. If individuals and communities are to
have personal security, they must have the right to preserve
their life and healthiness, and to live in a safe and sustainable
environment (Head, 1991).
• Freedom from Wants moves beyond basic physical security,
recognizing those just as fundamental to humans (and even a
more fundamental level on Maslow’s hierarchy) are drives to
secure physiological needs such as food, water, and protection
from elements. Pursuing Freedom from Wants involves a holistic
approach for meeting human needs thwarted by famine, diseases,
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and natural disasters, events that affect many more people than
violent conflicts. These sources of uncertainty should be
addressed by four other aspects of security:
(1) Food security is mankind’s permanent access (both physically
and economically) to basic food. Food is “available” when
people have the right of gaining necessary food, by own
production effort, by purchasing or receiving it through
social services support. Thus, food accessibility is prefigured
as a necessary – but not sufficient – condition of security.
(2) Health security means freedom from diseases and maladies
that have a high mortality rate. Many of these illnesses have
roots in malnutrition and precarious life condition, but
unhealthy lifestyle and diet may also increase susceptibility
to such illnesses.
(3) Economic security primarily means the assurance of a basic
income. Income is normally obtained by performing a
remunerated lucrative activity; otherwise, it can be obtained
via publicly budgeted social assistance service networks.
Economic security also implies adequate measures to reduce
imbalanced access to working opportunities thereby
eliminating artificial poverty and improving the quality of
community’s material life.
(4) Environmental security: Human beings depend on a healthy
physical environment; the main environment threat to
environmental security is the sometimes irreversible decline
of local and global ecosystems.
• Freedom to Live in Dignity is a variation of “freedom to act on
one’s own behalf” (Ogata & Sen, 2003), a construct that advocates
for the rule of law and democracy. In 2005, the UN Secretary
General's report, “In Larger Freedom: Towards Development,
Security and Freedom for All” (2005), brought this third dimension
to the concept of human security. It captures two additional
aspects of human security more closely associated with higher
1
levels of Maslow’s hierarchy:
1
Freedom to Live in Dignity is typically elaborated to include a right to live under Western democratic
ideals, but as such an elaboration cannot be scientifically justified as a basic, pan-human natural drive
or need, we leave these freedoms or ‘rights’ aside here, and employ a reduced version of Freedom to
Live in Dignity.
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(1) Community security is achieved by ensuring protection
against legal/political discrimination on the basis of age,
gender, ethnicity or social status. It also includes maintaining
access to safe social networks, knowledge, and information,
as well as the right to free association. The concept of
community security is based on the idea that a person’s
social context is a fundamental aspect of their humanity.
Furthermore, individual security is predicated on the security
of the person’s reference group/ community/organisation.
Belonging to a certain community constitutes a risk factor to
the personal security if that group is a target of traditional
oppressive practices that survived modernization.
(2) Political security, the last dimension of the UNDP human
security model, requires a society to be built on basic human
rights and values. This political dimension also includes
individual and collective rights of access to justice and
protection against abuses, and freedom to exercise religion.
Figure 1.2: Human security assessment models – peacetime vs. crisis (Kis, 2012b, 228)
If NATO operations pursue these three freedoms (Freedom from Fear,
Freedom from Wants, and Freedom to Live in Dignity) and their seven constituent
aspects of security, NATO’s aims will share a general mapping onto basic drivers
of human action. Highlighting these different drivers in a security framework
elevates the need to consider all drivers simultaneously in a security operation.
In addition to its comprehensiveness, this broad view of human security
also recognizes that the relative importance of drivers of human action may
change during crises and other contextual changes. The illustration below is a
representation of some of the human aspects within a given territorial system
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(Ianoş, 2000) from human security standpoint. 2 The aspects are categorized by
evaluation/importance level (strategic/ operational/ tactical) and by degree of
local stability (peacetime vs. crisis situation). Assessment of the human aspects of
an operational environment requires military analyses and condition estimates,
while peacetime assessments offer researchers the chance to gather baseline
data that can be used to calibrate the local matrix. The diagram notes a difference
in the order of perceived priorities in matters of security related to the change of
safety condition in the general life environment.
In a crisis response operation, security stakeholders demand clear ranges
of action wherein their contribution will be valued (e.g., one stakeholder may be
exclusively interested in relieving human physiological needs to ensure human
survival, perhaps by providing food or potable water). Relevance of the external
actors on each stage of the human needs varies, and in each situation we must
establish a cohesive estimation of the needs along with a robust understanding of
how they can be prioritized, fulfilled and sustained.
3.2. Additional Recommendations
In addition to adopting the Human Security model for security-stability
operations, we make a number of further recommendations. By way of summary,
we synthesize the conclusions provided in each sub-section presented above, and
then offer some additional recommendations that emerge from our general
treatment of drivers of human action.
To influence key individuals, become part of their personal social network
or influence members of their personal social network. A high level of trust and
moral obligation is reserved for approximately 150 personal relationships.
Become part of that circle of relationships and you gain influence and opportunity
for cooperation. Alternatively, if one can “win over” a number of people in a key
player’s social network, it will be much easier to “win over” that key player
through their influence.
To be a credible source of information or target for behavioural imitation,
it is best to be regarded as relevantly similar to the audience as well as skilled in a
valued domain or prestigious. Likewise, to know by whom it is that someone is
2
A security stake in the definition of territorial systems embodies: safety indicators, resources’
sufficiency and perception of freedom, all these characteristics outlining a certain level (status) of
human security (Kis, 2012a).
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
influenced, consider whom it is they regard as relevantly like themselves (e.g., in
terms of age, gender, and ethnicity), and regard as prestigious and skilled. For
NATO to influence local populations, soliciting the aid of individuals who are
prestigious and relevantly similar to the various subpopulations in question
(including young people, elderly, women, men, different clans, etc.) would be
advantageous. Sometimes NATO forces themselves will be regarded as
particularly skilled and/or prestigious already but may not be relevantly similar to
the local population but can elevate the prestige of locals strategically.
Identify how moral foundations are manifest and discover religious and
“sacred values”. The important modifiers of these needs – moral and religious
values and practices – must be identified for any operational environment. These
values and practices often generate considerable social cohesion and willingness
of people to make enormous personal sacrifices. They also fall outside of
economic negotiations. Traditional moral foundations are broader than many
western societies and concern loyalty, authority, and sanctity, as well as harm and
fairness concerns. Promoting and encouraging goals that are common to the local
religion(s) and NATO’s objectives and finding ways to participate in those
common goals together may be particularly fruitful.
Manage expectations and frustration. Frustrated expectations can create
conflict above and beyond absolute levels of drive satisfaction, so it may be
strategic to seek to gauge and influence expectations as much as satisfy perceived
wants and needs.
Relative importance of drivers change with context, status, sex, age, etc.
Understanding the specific local manifestations of these basic action drivers
cannot be determined by simple consultation with the leading class of that
community. The drivers will likely vary considerably by rank, status, age, sex, and
so forth. Hence, a broadly representative picture of drivers is needed.
Create conditions that address multiple needs/drivers simultaneously.
Because drivers vary by age, sex, status, and so forth, and also because their
priority may vary as a function of expectations and environmental stressors, often
a good strategy when trying to create security to satisfy these drives is to address
multiple categories simultaneously. Returning to the illustration of the un-used
well, the failure of the well was not because it wasn’t useful to meet a basic need.
It failed because it pitted two needs—two drivers—against each other instead of
harmonizing multiple drives together.
Main Drivers are not always consciously accessible. It is easy to support
that determining the motivations and passions of a people is relatively easy: just
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
ask. But research in the psychological sciences has shown that people often are
not aware of their own primary drives and motivations. So, direct questioning will
not always reveal them accurately. In many cases it is better to systematically
observe behaviour and emotional responses to situations to identify root drivers.
Another heuristic amplified in the document is to consider those needs that
humans have had for millennia, all over the world. Generally, the old needs are
still the most basic and most recurrent ones.
Social and human scientists are needed in the operations planning and
execution process. We echo the US military initiative “to provide socio-cultural
teams to commanders and staffs in order to improve the understanding of the
local population and apply this understanding to the Military Decision-Making
Process (MDMP)” 3. NATO, like the US, recognizes the great need for the MDMP
to have access to and use better understanding of the local population.
This research panel (and those that follow) stress the necessity of
understanding the human aspects of the operational environment through
synthesizing data, and analyses of people as they live and act as a part of
societies, populations, communities, and other groups, including their activities,
relationships, and perspectives (stakeholders, drivers, enablers and processes).
This identified need ensures support for new efforts to understand the local
population and leaders welcome new suggestions about how to achieve this.
However, any plan must ensure that a wide range of social sciences are involved:
cultural studies, demographics, social geography, political science, religious
studies, sociology, and especially scientific psychology (e.g. social and
evolutionary), and anthropology (e.g. cognitive and evolutionary), so that they
each can provide a unique contribution. It may be possible in many cases for
civilians with appropriate clearance to contribute to operations in various
capacities, but it may also be important for NATO and the military forces of the
alliance to cultivate officers with training in critical areas of the human sciences.
Recommendations
•
33
Primary recommendation is for NATO to take a broad view of human
security for use in security-stability operations on the strategic,
operational, and tactical levels. This broad view may be called a
http://humanterrainsystem.army.mil/
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•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
36
Human Security Model, and treats security to satisfy basic needs and
drivers as part of the security aims of an operation;
To influence key individuals, become part of their personal social
network or influence members of their personal social network;
To be a credible source of information or target for behavioural
imitation, it is best to be regarded as relevantly similar to the
audience as well as skilled in a valued domain or prestigious;
Identify how moral foundations are manifest and discover religious
and “sacred values”;
Manage expectations and frustration;
Relative importance of drivers change with context, status, sex, age,
etc.;
Create conditions
simultaneously;
that
address
multiple
needs/drivers
Main Drivers are not Always Consciously Accessible;
Social and human scientists are needed in the operations planning
and execution process.
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
CHAPTER 2
UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
ENVIRONMENTS
Dr. Greg MOORE (Panel Leader)
Mrs. Lesley SIMM
MAJ Antonio MORALES
LTC (Ret.) Hubertus KÖBKE
Dr. Sorin-Gabriel SEBE
Notre Dame College, Cleveland, Ohio, USA
Allied Rapid Reaction Corps (ARRC), NATO
NATO Combined Air Operations Centre
Torrejon
UNHCR Security Management Team
Botswana, UN
University of Bucharest, ROU
1. Introduction
“History is not a cookbook which gives recipes; it teaches by analogy and forces us
to decide what, if anything is analogous. History gives us a feel for the significance
of events, but it does not teach which individual events are significant. It is
impossible to write down a conceptual scheme and apply it mechanically to
evolving situations. Certain principles can be developed and certain
understandings can be elaborated through a study of history, but it is impossible
to predict in advance how they apply to concrete situations.”
Dr. Henry Kissinger
“Awareness of the cultural dimension will not necessarily guarantee victory, but
ignorance of it, history shows us, will guarantee defeat.”
4
Dr. Huw Lewis , Lecturer in Defence Studies, King's College
4
Lewis, Dr. Huw, “Will history repeat itself in Afghanistan?” BBC News, July 15, 2009.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/8151294.stm
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
Objectives
Use history and other disciplines from the humanities and social
sciences to establish parameters for the analysis of local populations.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Impact of interaction (or not) with the “West” (i.e.
colonialism/imperialism) on politics, economics, society, values,
national aspirations and so forth.
How do these experiences (or lack of them) affect local perceptions
of the West (NATO)?
Historical analysis is a significant element in the development of
country profiles.
Help provide insights as the decision making process is studied.
Provide insights into propaganda and other mass persuasion
mechanisms.
Enhance understanding of human networks that are able to
transform vision into policy.
Apply history as part of a multi-disciplinary approach in an effort to
understand cultural similarities and differences.
2. The Importance of the Historical Background
History serves as an important vehicle by which these objectives can be
achieved, especially when utilized in conjunction with other disciplines from the
humanities and social sciences. History gives us a storehouse of information about
how people and societies behave. The experiences of the past also provide
insights into current behaviours, attitudes, beliefs and actions as well as how
communities have come to their current status. Therefore, history gives us key
evidence about past behaviours and actions and how they have shaped present
day communities in a variety of ways.
Critical to developing a working relationship with the local population is
an understanding of how these people behave in social situations. Again,
historical knowledge can play a vital role by providing critical evidence which can
help explain how people have come to behave in a variety of social settings.
History offers the only set of extensive data and evidence for analyzing how
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
societies function, and this is an essential component for the success of a security
mission as it tries to build rapport and support within the local population.
As an effort is made to understand the circumstances that have brought
about the development of present day societies and cultures, it is important to
keep in mind that the present is built upon the past. Therefore, understanding
current situations requires some knowledge of events that took place. It must be
kept in mind, however, that events in the recent past may offer clues to the
occurrence of a major development, but the causes of change may have to be
explained by looking further back in the past in order to identify them. It is this
ability to examine the past that enables us to understand and analyze why things
change and apply this understanding to the present day. By identifying the factors
that precipitate change, it becomes possible to understand not only the process
of change but also why some societies or cultures resist change.
Finally, it is important to keep in mind that history provides the most
extensive source of evidence for the study of humankind. It offers a database that
brings to light the complex processes of social change, both in the past and the
present. It also gives societies and cultures as sense of identity. The data provided
through the study of history reveals a wealth of information about the formation
of families, groups, institutions and nations and can help explain how they have
remained cohesive over time. Many different groups and institutions use history
in order to reinforce their sense of identity and a failure to appreciate this can
5
lead to misunderstandings or conflicts that might otherwise be avoided.
However, it must be understood that history does not offer absolutes,
nor does it provide complete answers. Whether utilized alone, or paired with
other disciplines in the humanities and social sciences, history, despite the many
sources of evidence that are available to us, does not offer a complete picture of
the past. It is a discipline that requires interpretation of the existing evidence, and
not all scholars may agree on historical interpretations. Moreover, events from
the past, while they may appear similar to events taking place in the present, will
also be different in any number of ways. It is just as important to identify and
learn from these differences in order to produce historical analogies that may be
applicable to a current situation, especially in making an effort to understand an
6
unfamiliar society or culture.
5
See Peter N. Stearns, “Why Study History” at
http://www.historians.org/pubs/free/WhyStudyHistory.htm
6
The process of developing effective historical analogies, especially for decision makers, can be found
in Neustadt and May, Thinking in Time: The Uses of History for Decision Makers, 1986.
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
Using history effectively both as an analytical tool, and for trying to
determine how best to interact with foreign cultures and societies will not be an
easy task. The role of the historian has been compared to that of explorers and
cartographers mapping an unknown land as they fill in bits and pieces to create as
accurate a picture of the strange territory as possible. No matter how complete
the map becomes, there will always be empty spaces that well require additional
7
exploration. The same holds true for historical analysis.
History can also be used for political or other purposes. Historical
memory can be selective, for example. There may be a tendency to respond to a
NATO security or stability mission on the basis of past experiences with outsiders.
Depending on that experience, the local population may have a preconceived
viewpoint about the presence of NATO forces in their homeland and that will
affect how they respond to that situation. Opponents to a NATO mission may
twist the historical record to present an interpretation of the past that
emphasizes the negative experiences of a foreign presence at some time in the
past, even though that event may have proved extremely beneficial, in order to
build a sense of suspicion and antagonism toward the presence of foreigners on
8
their soil. Or, the opposite could take place. Proponents of a NATO mission to
their country could downplay negative consequences of dealing with outsiders in
the past in order to encourage support of the mission, perhaps for their own
purposes. Therefore, it is essential to be sensitive to the historical viewpoint of
any foreign society or culture in which NATO may become involved in order to
have as complete a historical analysis and understanding of the local population
as possible before beginning any operations there.
•
•
•
•
•
7
Why History?
Aids in the understanding of people and societies
Provides an understanding of change and how present-day societies
have come to be
Gives us the only extensive body of evidence and database for the
study of humankind
Focuses attention on the complex processes of social change,
including those that take place in the present day
Provides societies and cultures with a sense of identity
See John Lewis Gaddis, The Landscape of History: How Historians Map the Past, 2002.
The ways in which history can be manipulated are examined in Jill LePore’s The Whites of the Their
Eyes: The Tea Party’s Revolution and the Battle over American History, 2010 and Margaret McMillan’s
Dangerous Games: The Uses and Abuses of History, 2008.
8
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
•
Offer clues as to how a society might react or respond to a security or
peacekeeping mission
3. A brief survey of the Impact of Empire and Colonialism
From the earliest days of recorded history, the organisation of human
habitation is written down in terms of “culture”, “civilisation” and “empire”. Long
before the organisation of the modern world into the Westphalian state system,
the ebb and flow of the ancient, classical and medieval empires left a layering of
historical myth/memory that modern concepts of nationalism and local
community identity have absorbed to a greater or lesser degree. “The notion of a
collective memory implies a past that is not only commonly shared but also jointly
9
remembered.”
There is hardly a place on Earth that has not experienced some form of
“conquest” in the past, or been responsible for such adventure. There are various
interlinking and overlapping experiences that have impacted on the community of
nations. Roughly, there are six key processes, ranging from the immediate
traumatic to the gradual consensual:
•
•
•
•
•
•
Colonialism,
Occupation,
Conversion,
Absorption,
Transplantation and
“Voluntary” unions.
The legacy of each of these on present day community perspectives will
depend on the degree of historical memory and interpretation and the nature of
the “takeover”, as is obvious.
The terms “imperialist” and “colonial” are, today, closely associated with
European global adventure. However, in the United Kingdom a famous comedy
10
group coined a phrase that has become popular, “What did the Romans ever do
for us?”, an amusing recognition that the Roman invasion of Britain, two
9
Anna Catalani “Telling Another Story: Western Museums and the Creation of Non-western Identities”,
2010
10
Monty Python’s Flying Circus ‘The Life of Brian’.
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
thousand years ago, and the subsequent absorption of Britain into the Pax
Romana still resonates and defines aspects of life in the UK, and large parts of
Europe, to this day. The same can be said of the ancient dynamic colonisers who
left memory of conquest, slavery and profound change in language, religion and
social structures such as (to name but a few) the Greeks under the Macedonian
dynasty (Alexander), the Persians (Darius and Cyrus), the ancient Egyptians, the
Mongols, the Umayyids, Abbassids, and Fatimids, the Saffavids and Moghuls, the
Chinese Qin, Han and Tang Imperial dynasties as well as in the Americas,
famously, the Aztecs, Incas and Mayans, and in Africa the Benin, Zimbabwe and
Zulu Empires. From the safety and comfort of text books and armchairs we are
able to read of acts of aggression against neighbours, of armies pitched against
each other, of sieges and seizure followed by the appalling experiences of the
defeated, sacrificed, massacred or sold into slavery. All histories recall brutal
episodes of great cruelty, inexcusable injustices of oppression, cultural
destruction, obliteration of language and religion, and enslavement.
The modern European High Imperialism, beginning in the nineteenth
century, defines the world today and was of an entirely different order. There
had always been the notion of technological advantage in expansionist activity in
the past, such as the bow and arrow, the stirrup and the axle. High Imperialism
was much larger in scale and characterised by the enormous disparity in power
between colonisers and colonised, because of industrialisation and the
technological advantages of the steam ship, rapid firing rifles, machine guns, the
telegraph and the railway. “Whatever happens we have got the Maxim gun, and
11
they have not”. Motivations for colonial expansion in this period have also left
indelible marks on the colonised. In the simplest terms, the search for raw
materials to feed the industrial revolution, of luxury goods to amuse and feed the
growing consumer class, for land to provide for aspiring scions of lesser noble
families or the new industrial wealthy, for a supply of people for cheap labour,
servants and slaves.
The second key experience is that of occupation. This is a human
experience that, again, reaches back through ancient times. When the population
of the whole earth was a few millions, before the drawing of boundaries and
delineations of territories in the pre-agrarian era, groups and families of humans
would move around, travelling vast distances, in search of grazing for animals,
water, safer fishing, more agreeable climate, a better future for the clan. People
move when stressed. In the past this was easier because the perception of the
11
Hillaire Belloc, the character of William Blood in “The Modern Traveller”.
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
world in the age of exploration, in Europe, from the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries was that of vast open spaces, of unclaimed land, of total ignorance or
dismissal of the peoples already inhabiting the coveted spaces.
From the turmoil of the religious wars of the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries, all across Europe, persecuted groups began to think about escaping, to
rebuild their lives in a new place, led by God to lead lives dictated by Biblical truth
in a promised land. The most notable of these groups, spearheading a wave of
migration from Europe into other continents which had the most far-reaching
consequences, were the Pilgrim Fathers into North America and the Boers into
Southern Africa. The speculators, traders and armies followed over the centuries.
A third occupation occurred in Australasia. Having secured Australia and New
Zealand for the British Empire, the “empty” lands were filled by adventurers
looking for life-changing opportunities in trade, prospecting or ranching, and,
most notoriously, as a convenient empty space on the other side of the world on
whose shores the United Kingdom could dump its felons. Transportation to
Australia was a statutory punishment. Most of the condemned stayed in Australia
at the end of the sentence. The original nations of North America, Australia and
New Zealand were driven off their lands so that these states are now referred to
as part of the “Anglo-Saxon world”. White European settlers into the African
colonies acquired land, status and political pre-eminence, but were never secure
after these colonies gained independence and outcomes in the post-colonial years
have varied considerably and continue to fuel provocative policies concerning the
12
ownership and use of land. Therefore, migrating populations have been a
source of conflict as they settled or occupied land and displaced or dominated
indigenous groups across all continents. Long memories of previously owned
land, access, lost traditions and language have emerged as grievances in civil
unrest.
Overlapping the first two examples, a third could be the experience of
conversion. Dating from the first religiously motivated exodus of Muslim Arabs
from the Arabian Peninsula in the century after the prophet Mohammed’s death
in 632 CE, colonisation and conquest across Northern Africa, around the
Mediterranean into the Middle East and Asia was the start of a massive, largely
natural and convenient, conversion of all the indigenous populations. Established,
centuries old religions were marginalised or became largely extinct and the
12
In 1800 the Western powers held 35% of the Earth’s surface. In 1878, land holding had risen to 67%
and by 1914 Western powers held 85% of the world’s land. During this period, Britain gained 66
million new subjects, France 26 million and Germany 12 million. The Italians, Portuguese, Belgians and
Spanish also had significant subjects.
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
universal use of Arabic dominated local languages. There is confusion now as
nationalist and democratic sentiments in the Middle East and North Africa
compete with Islamic/Islamist notions of supremacy in the struggle to shape
futures. For example, the Berbers, whose ancient writ runs across North Africa,
have reclaimed their pre-Islamic alphabet and are beginning to resist Islamic
culture in some areas.
The experience in South America was shaped by Roman Catholic religious
revival during the Reformation era in response to the Protestant challenge to the
th
th
supremacy of Rome in the 16 and 17 centuries – the Age of Discovery. The
Catholic Church inaugurated a great mission to spread Christianity in the New
World and to convert the Native Americans and other indigenous peoples. The
missionary effort was a large part of the justification for the colonial conquests of
the Native Americans by the catholic powers of Spain, France and Portugal. “For
Prince Henry the Navigator of Portugal and his contemporaries, the colonial
enterprise was based on the necessity to develop European commerce and the
13
obligation to propagate the Christian Faith.”
The Spanish were committed by Vatican Decree to convert the New
World indigenous subjects to Catholicism. “If we had to choose a single,
irreducible idea underlying the Spanish colonialism in the New World, it would
undoubtedly be the propagation of the Catholic Faith. Unlike other European
rivals, the British or the Dutch, Spain insisted on converting the natives of the
lands it conquered ... More than any set of economic relationships with the
outside world, more even than the language first brought to America’s shores in
1492, the Catholic religion continues to permeate Spanish-American culture
today, creating an overriding cultural unity which transcends the political and
national boundaries dividing the continent.” (5) Rather like the Umma in the
Muslim world order. However, critically “The catastrophe of South America’s rape
at the hands of the Conquistadores remains one of the most potent and pungent
examples in the whole history of human conquest of the wanton destruction of
14
one culture by another, in the name of religion”
Protestant Christian missionary incursions into the African continent
converged with the ‘Scramble for Africa’ from the mid-nineteenth century.
Missionaries from the newly formed biblical societies in the United Kingdom were
moved to visit little-known regions and peoples, at great risk to life and limb. In
many instances they became explorers and pioneers of trade and Empire, the
13
14
Jan van Butselaar, “Bridge or Barrier: Religion, Violence and Visions for peace”, 2001.
Adrian van Oss, “Catholic Colonialism: a parish History of Guatemala”.
44
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
most famous of whom was David Livingstone. “The missionaries played manifold
roles in colonial Africa and stimulated forms of cultural, political and religious
15
change.”
Britain had been exploiting the African continent for some years before
Congress of Berlin in 1884, when the other European powers, and the newly
formed powers of Italy and Germany, joined in the challenge to British supremacy
in Africa. This overt colonialism had a huge effect that completely changed the
nature and face of a continent. “Boundaries did exist but not in the modern
European sense. They were linguistic, cultural, military or commercial and they
tended to criss-cross and overlap, without the neat delineations so much beloved
by Western statesmen since the treaties of Westphalia. Colonial European logic
16
played havoc with the delicate cobweb of relationships”.
The colonialists created capital cities, railway networks, administrative
structures and western schools, introducing European languages. It was not a
uniform impact for it depended on which western power was in control, the
industry surrounding the extraction of raw materials, minerals and other goods
and the extent and purpose of European settlements. “The greatest single effect
was the totally artificial boundaries which united at least two, but usually very
many more, recognisably distinct peoples, and, conversely, divided homogenous
17
groups between two or more different countries”. Also, the huge size of the
colonial administrative areas laid down the blue print for the doubtfully viable
states. The colonial powers’ answer to managing the complexity of the different
and various lands they governed was the tendency to use one favoured or
dominant ethnic group. Following independence the scene was set for explosive
re-organisation of what had been workable only with highly centralized and
sporadically brutal enforcement.
More seriously, in terms of community identity was the impact of
slavery. At its peak, whole nations were hollowed out, the fittest and best being
selected for transport to the New World, or the Middle East. Slaves had been
traded for centuries before the arrival of the Europeans. In the aftermath of tribal
conflicts, defeated enemies and their families were routinely sold. However, the
industrial scale of the trans-Atlantic slave trade changed the nature and ethnic
15
M Jordan “In the name of God: Violence and Destruction in the World’s Religions” 2006; Heather
Sharkey in “Christianity and Colonialism in South Africa”, John Comoroff, 1986.
16
Gerard Prunier, “From Genocide to Continental War: The ‘Congolese’ Conflict and the Crisis of
Contemporary Africa”, Hurst, 2009.
17
Paul Gifford, “African Christianity; Its public Role”, Hurst, 2001.
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
dynamics of North, Central and South America and, possibly, sent West African
civilisations into stagnation.
The European powers did not limit the drawing of lines of maps to Africa.
Many tribal cultures on the receiving end of great power expansion and post-war
settlements, found themselves arbitrarily bound together, as unequal partners,
or torn apart according to the convenience of the Imperial powers. Present state
boundaries bear witness to this as turmoil rages in significant parts of Africa, the
Middle East, Central Asia and the Indian sub-continent. Tensions remain in large
parts of the world, including Europe, where separatist and liberation movements
still exist as violent groups or political parties. The list is exhaustive.
Simultaneously with the pressure of growing independence movements
in the post-war world, the global political division was being played out in
increasing intensity as the Cold War dominated decision-making and support in all
the immature nations. The highly centralised, authoritarian administrations
created by the colonial powers, and which created a sense of alienation amongst
the governed, were usurped by “Liberation Movement” cadres to create new
exploitative elite kleptocracies before the newly independent states had any
chance to evolve. The impact has been to create extreme poverty through
distorted development, and vulnerability because of dependency on aid.
Much of the focus of discussion of “Empire” tends to concentrate on the
European model of global empire, dependent on sea power. However, there are
the nation-states that are, in fact, contiguous empires and have grown through
expansion and absorption of neighbouring peoples through the centuries, and
now find themselves facing rebellion, subversion and resistance as cohesive
cultural groups fight for recognition. China, Ethiopia and Iran are modern
examples. In attempts to prevent coherent resistance, or to dilute ethnic
homogeneity many authoritarian leaders have resorted to transplantation of
peoples internally. The Soviet Union, memorably, used this method both as
punishment and as inducement across all the soviet states. Pakistan, China and
Saudi Arabia, for example, have relocated favoured ethnic or religious groups to
take over key positions in troublesome areas. As a result, the former elite ethnic
groups have been “stranded” in newly independent states. The response of Serbs
finding themselves as minorities in the successor states to Yugoslavia is an awful
warning, as was the decision at Versailles to gift the Sudetenland to
Czechoslovakia.
The euphoria following the end of the Cold War masked a worrying
development in the family of nations. The break-up of the Soviet Union led to a
cascade of states into the United Nations, notably those that had been subject to
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
conquest, or absorption. The notion of strength in unity seemed to be irrelevant
as peace broke out between the two super powers. “Voluntary” unions of all sizes
began to be fragile as the need to hang together diminished. The notable
dissolution of a nation state was the “Velvet Divorce” between the Czechs and the
Slovaks. A catastrophic break-up was that of Yugoslavia. The European Union has,
unwittingly, provided cover for small nations to declare their interest in breaking
away from old unions. The most notable of these is Scotland and the rise of the
Scottish Nationalist Party, with independence at the heart of its agenda. The
United Kingdom is a prime example of a political entity forged by historic
occupation and ‘voluntary’ union of crowns in 1707. Ireland has resisted from the
first day of Union in 1802 to this day, bar the six counties of Northern Ireland.
Quebec in the Canadian Union has a powerful nationalist movement. Catalonia
and the Basque region are other such in Spain Most states with ‘Union’ as in the
USA and ‘Federal’ as in Germany or Ethiopia, reflect the decision to join together
to form one political unity and all our histories reflect the struggle and heartache
in the making. The extent to which this process was a success and how it was
achieved is a clue to the future integrity of some states, and the likelihood of
breakdown in the future.
As previously discussed, the world has been defined in terms of empire,
and of memories of lost cultures, languages, religion and traditions. The intensity
of the experience of loss and destruction quite clearly is linked to distance in time,
the relative progress of the nation and the advantages delivered. Economic
grievances, demographic stress and literacy levels play into the hands subversive
groups. Significant ancient minorities continue to exist and are persecuted or
tolerated, but can become catalysts for nationalist, separatist movements
depending on geographical location, religious differences and sense of betrayal.
Language revival/retrieval has been on the increase as a marker of growing
confidence amongst minorities, whether oppressed or not. Where borders have
sliced through clearly defined ethnic groups border disputes erupt, or regional,
political meddling in the spirit of ‘my enemy’s enemy is my friend’, has the
potential to destabilise large areas. We are all aware of these global problems and
the complexity of resolving such long-running grievances.
The lines drawn on the map are the states defined in the current world
order. We must be very clear about how the states formed - by revolution,
resistance, colonial independence, occupation/acquisition or evolution. It is
crucial to understand not only the recent history, but the historical myth/memory
of status, language, religion, old tribal, cultural boundaries and kinships, the
natural trading and dealing instincts, the nature of loyalties and folk heroes past
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
and present whose name can be invoked for ‘glorious’ purposes. By
understanding and, more importantly, by using that knowledge a security or
peace-keeping operation is much more likely to move from grudging
acquiescence to positive acceptance.
•
•
•
•
•
•
Implications of Empire and Colonization
th
th
18 and 19 century colonialism help define the modern world
Colonial/Imperial occupations of the past may have left long standing
grievances in the present
Past imperial/colonial occupations have set up present day conflicts –
nationalism/democratization vs. Islamic fundamentalism as an
example
Arbitrary redrawing of maps in Africa, Asia, India and the Middle East
Implications created by transplantation or forced removal of peoples
Emergence of modern day nationalist movements
4. Cultural Intelligence
In 21st century warfare, a lack of understanding of culture not only can
have negative consequences to military operations at all levels of the operational
spectrum but also (and above everything else) put in danger the lives of soldiers
and civilians alike. As a consequence, a solid understanding and application of
cultural awareness should be a pre-requisite in the planning and execution of
military operations, particularly in low intensity conflicts, such as the ongoing
conflict in Afghanistan. To this end, one way to lighten cultural challenges in low
intensity conflict is by developing cultural intelligence, which in a military sense,
“is a complicated pursuit in anthropology, psychology, communications,
18
sociology, history, and, above all, military doctrine.” As a result, the application
of cultural intelligence (at times) can be more effective and even surpass that of
traditional military intelligence.
Unfortunately, there is not “a one size fits all” that encompasses human
culture which is extremely diverse and intricate, as we are not dealing with
machines or clones but rather with human beings that have rational thoughts and
18
Center for Advanced Defense Studies (CADS), 2.
48
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
feel emotions. Therefore, as one studies culture one must take into consideration
many aspects of a specific country/society to include:
• Composition (ethnicity, sex, languages, level of education, etc.)
• Institutional influences (religious, political, economic, etc.).
• Where an individual falls within that society (opportunities of
advancement, pluralistic vs. individualistic society, interests, etc.
Consequently, the study of history of any country/society is essential to
understand many of these aspects. The example of T.E. Lawrence provides an
excellent case study on the benefits of understanding the history and culture of a
particular society.
T.E. Lawrence, better known as Lawrence of Arabia, was a British officer
assisted Bedouin Arab tribes in their fight against the Ottomans Turks during
World War I. Prior to the outbreak of war he had been an anthropologist and
archaeologist with a deep understanding of Arab customs and culture. This
enabled him to obtain “a profound understanding of native [Arab tribal] ways,
[thus becoming] a nationalized Arab instead of merely a European visitor in Arab
19
lands.” He wrote; “In my case, the effort for these years to live in the dress of
Arabs, and to imitate their mental foundation, quitted me of my English self, and
let me look at the West and its conventions with new eyes: they destroyed it all
20
for me.”
Beyond his battlefield successes, one of Lawrence’s greatest
achievements was in providing insights to understanding Arab culture by penning
The Twenty Seven Articles. Originally published in 1917, The Twenty Seven Articles
provide guidelines on how to deal with Arabs based on his keen observation of
their customs and culture. A close study of his observations and dictums as they
appear in the Twenty Seven Articles reveal universal codes that are critical to
deciphering any country/society. Two critical dictums are discussed below.
Dictum 1: “The beginning and ending of the secret of handling [Arabs] is
unremitting study of them”
The first step to understanding this dictum is to remove the word Arab
and replace it with a specific target audience, whether they are, for example,
Sudanese, Berbers, Bedouins or Kurds. Moreover, what this dictum implies is that
19
20
Liddell-Hart, B.H. Lawrence of Arabia, New York, NY: Da Capo Press, 1989, 11-12.
Lawrence, T.E. Seven Pillars of Wisdom, New York, NY: Anchor Books, 31.
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
you must learn everything about a specific society/culture: their books, their
history, their customs, and, if possible, their language. Strive to achieve language
proficiency. Learn how historical events have affected behaviour, beliefs, and
relationships with others. Learn about religious beliefs and practices, their food,
their tastes, their customs, and so forth. Opportunely, there are many tools
st
available in the 21 century to assist in the study of a specific society/country,
including, among others, anthropology and other social science books, language
classes and cultural exchanges.
A perfect example of how this comes into play occurred back in World
War II with the publication of The Chrysanthemum and the Sword, written by
American anthropologist Ruth Benedict in 1944. This book included a
comprehensive study aimed at understanding Japanese culture and how to
comprehend and predict the behaviour of the Japanese by making references to a
series of contradictions within their traditional culture. In her study, she tried to
“use Japanese behaviour in war as an asset in understanding them, not as a
liability” in order to comprehend how “the Japanese would behave, [and] not how
21
we would behave if we were in their place.” As such, this book was extremely
influential in shaping American ideas about Japanese culture and even affected
the way the United States used Emperor Hirohito as a unifying symbol in the postwar period, not unlike the way he was used during the war, thus ensuring a
smooth transition of power, enabling the occupation as well as legitimizing the
new power structure.
The successful application of the first dictum leads to the second dictum
which states:
Dictum 2: There is nothing unreasonable, incomprehensible, or
inscrutable (enigmatic) in the [blank] experience of them, and knowledge
of their prejudices will enable you to foresee their attitude and possible
course of action in nearly every case.
Having a basic understanding of a specific country/society is just the first
step as it is imperative to recognize the intricacies of their culture. To this end, an
understanding of their prejudices or biases is indispensable, including the
treatment of minorities, women or other specific groups within that society.
Determining if these prejudices are driven by religion, education, social structure,
21
Benedict, Ruth, The Chrysanthemum and the Sword: Patterns of Japanese Culture, Boston: Houghton
Mifflin, 1989, 5.
50
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
political systems or other elements is critical to this understanding. It is equally
important to remember that we also come from a stereotyped culture with
prejudices of our own that must be overcome. These realizations can help shape
the attitude of the local population toward a NATO operation taking place in their
country.
The experience of Lieutenant Colonel (LTC) Christopher Hughes during
the initial stages of Operation Iraqi Freedom serves as a case in point. On the
rd
morning of April 3 2003, the men of LTC Hughes reached the holy city of Najaf
and were approaching the Imam Ali Mosque to request from Grand Ayatollah Ali
Sistani a religious proclamation allowing an American presence in the city. In the
meantime, a large crowd of locals blocked the soldiers’ path, fearing they were
going to destroy the mosque. The situation grew tenser by the minute until LTC
Hughes asked his soldiers to stand down and point their weapons to the ground.
He then directed his soldiers to smile at the crowd and wave at them while slowly
backing away until they were far away from the mosque. The crowd understood
the universal goodwill gesture and calmed down and a dangerous situation which
could have resulted in unnecessary bloodshed was defused. Later that day, Grand
22
Ayatollah Sistani issued the requested decree. Not only did the actions of LTC
Hughes prevent unnecessary violence, but by preventing damage to the mosque
there were strategic ramifications to the overall Iraqi campaign. By avoiding
damage to or the destruction of the Mosque the possibility of a revolt by the
Shi’ite majority against the coalition was prevented.
In conclusion, the level of cultural understanding depends on the
individual and how much effort is invested in expanding that knowledge. Yet,
regardless of an individual’s level of cultural knowledge, it does not take a cultural
expert to recognize the significance of culture and how culture can work to their
advantage by simply applying these dictums as advocated by one of the foremost
cultural experts in history, T.E. Lawrence.
•
•
22
Cultural Intelligence
Cultural awareness is essential prerequisite for all planning and
execution of political-military operations
Need for “cultural intelligence” – melding of historical and social
science analysis, linguistics and military doctrine
Field Manual (FM) 6-22. Army Leadership. October 2006, 6-43.
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
•
Identify and determine how cultural prejudices may impact upon
building popular support for a security or peace-keeping mission
5. Historical analysis develops and maintains popular support for the operation
Military operations have taken place for thousands of years, however the
importance of popular support for them and their success has not always been
acknowledged. Some variables for the justification of military operations have
been identified as, for example, anticipated financial or political benefits,
prospects for success, costs, the tolerance of casualties and consensus support
from political leaders. Perceived advantages of warfare have included new
colonies and economic growth of the enterprises supporting the military machine
with their requirements, such as weapons, uniforms food and other supplies.
While considering and planning for security or peace keeping operations, NATO
would be well advised to keep in mind past responses of individual members to
military operations. Any failure to prepare the home population’s understanding
of the rationale for taking part in such operations may result in growing
opposition that could undermine a member’s ability to participate successfully in
them. It is just as important to understand the participant’s previous experience
with popular support or opposition to its involvement in past wars or military
operations in order to gain acceptance for planned involvement in a current arena
of conflict. Doing so carries the same level of importance for NATO members as
does an understanding of the human terrain in which these operations may be
taking place. Thus, detrimental events that may occur in the operational
environment due to a lack of cultural understanding may also serve to undermine
support for the operation back home. Therefore, an understanding of the human
environment within the operational theatre is essential not only to avoid harmful
or adverse incidents that can be damaging to the operation itself, but also to
maintain popular support back home. The following case studies highlight some
cornerstones of acceptance for military operations.
5.1. Case Study: Spain 1808: Anticipated Political Benefits Result in Resistance
The secular ideals of the Enlightenment and those of the French
Revolution found supporters in Spain among those who supported the idea of a
constitutional monarchy and some progressive reforms. The term “Afrancesado”,
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
meaning “turned French” was applied to those who favoured these principles,
and likely supported the alliance between France and in the early years of the
Napoleonic Wars. However, by late 1806, Napoleon had grown increasingly
dissatisfied with his ally’s performance, particularly at the Battle of Trafalgar.
Following the 1807 invasion of Portugal, the occupation of Spain and the
placement of his brother, Joseph, on the Spanish throne in 1808, Napoleon may
have hoped to rely on the support of the Afrancesados in the administration of
the occupation. Some Afrancesados seem to have viewed the French domination
of the Spanish throne as a better option than the dismemberment of their
country, while others may have hoped that the Napoleonic Code might bring
23
about the reforms they hoped for.
However, Napoleon misjudged the situation badly. Although, through his
brother, Napoleon would follow through on his promises to abandon feudal and
clerical privileges, the installation of Joseph as king helped precipitate resistance
to French interference in Spanish affairs. Riots in Madrid a month before Joseph’s
coronation were soon put down, but more uprisings occurred and by the time of
Joseph’s official installation as king, most of Spain had taken up arms against the
24
French invader. Most Spanish liberals came to oppose the occupation for the
violence and the brutality that followed.
Although Napoleon had intended to bring Spain under French control for
some time, as he had grown suspicious of his ally, he failed to plan effectively for
doing so. He may have overestimated the degree of support he had among the
Afrancesados, and the degree to which the Spanish people would resist his efforts
to integrate Spain into the French Empire. Totally misunderstood was the role of
the Catholic Church and its importance in the rural areas. The destruction of
churches due to the maxims of the anti-clerical French revolution was another
factor that moved the Spanish population to resistance. By failing to plan
adequately for the invasion of Spain and underestimating the reaction to his
interference in the politics of the Spanish throne, Napoleon significantly reduced
his chances for success in the Iberian Peninsula. He may also have overestimated
the degree of support he would receive from the Afrancesados and failed to
consider the reaction to the implementation of liberal and anti-clerical reforms
among those in the rural areas of Spain. Taken together, the combination of poor
planning and misjudgements locked France into a military conflict in Spain that
might otherwise have been avoided.
23
24
http://eres.lndproxy.org/edoc/FacPubs/loy/WardT/Afrancesado-08.pdf
http://www.historyofwar.org/articles/campaign_french_invasion_spain_1808.html
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
5.2. Case Study: Failure to Build Popular Support at Home
For the majority of individuals, support for their nation’s involvement in a
conflict is built upon expectations about key factors including the outcome,
direction, value and costs of the conflict. Among the critical factors that will come
under consideration is the number of military and civilian fatalities that may be
sustained during a security or peacekeeping operation. Without appropriate
information and context the home population has no real basis upon which to
build an informed opinion about national participation in actions of this sort.
Japan entered World War II with strategically limited aims and with the
intention of fighting a limited war. Its principal objectives were to secure the
resources of Southeast Asia and much of China and to establish a "Greater East
Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere" under Japanese hegemony. The failure of this strategy
and the eventual victory of the Allied Powers inflicted substantial losses on the
civilian population through constant bombardment from the air, while the
military suffered heavy casualties in a variety of naval and land engagements.
25
More than two million Japanese died during World War II.
The suffering experienced by the Japanese, along with Article Nine (the
“no war clause”) of the Japanese Constitution of 1947, may have made Japan
reluctant to assist another country in a peacekeeping operation sixty years later.
The Japanese Prime Minister, Junichiro Koizumi, was able to persuade his
government in 2003 to authorize sending a small military force to Iraq in support
of the American invasion. The Japanese contingent was tasked primarily with
humanitarian work and was prohibited from combat except in self-defence.
Threats from Iraqi insurgents against the Japanese force along with protests at
26
home led Japan to withdraw its small contingent in 2006. After six decades of
peace, Japan’s political leaders may have determined that the Japanese people
would support a small military operation of this sort. Another explanation might
be that the government’s leaders agreed that the objectives of the operation
were worth the cost and risk, increasing the likelihood of support from those who
found their leaders credible and trustworthy. However, in the case of Japan and
many other supporters of the Iraq intervention in 2003, this construct failed.
25
http://www.japanww2.com/wt_list.htm; http://warchronicle.com/numbers/WWII/deaths.htm;
http://www.holocaust-history.org/~rjg/deaths.shtml; http://www.worldwar-2.net/casualties/worldwar-2-casualties-index.htm.
26
Sobel, Furia and Barrat (eds). Public Opinion and International Intervention, pp, 109 – 134;
http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2003/12/japa-d16.html;
http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5hgvCrCTt0km-ijKgQQmoBDy3hkBg;
http://www.cnas.org/files/documents/publications/CNAS_WorkingPaper_NIC_Japan_PatelCampbell_
Oct2008.pdf.
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
Similar examples could be found within NATO and elsewhere: Spain's government
had sent about 1,400 troops to Iraq, despite widespread public opposition. It
removed its troops in 2004. Thailand, Hungary and Iceland were among those
nations that removed their forces in 2005. Norway and Italy withdrew in 2006,
Slovakia and Denmark in 2007 and more than a dozen nations removed their
27
forces in 2008. Media reports about accusations of the mistreatment of Iraqi
prisoners and the fear of high casualty rates during the support of the mission by
these countries, among factors, may have caused popular support to decline as
28
well.
Another example is the Federal Republic of Germany, which sent troops
to Afghanistan in support of the United States in 2002. The resulting shock from
the 9/11 attacks led the government to believe that it had to assist its American
allies. Adding to this conclusion was a traditional friendship between Germany
and Afghanistan dating back to the 1920s. However, studies have shown that
most of the German population did not consider the Afghanistan conflict to be
29
urgent political issue. In the end, Germany eventually joined other war-weary
NATO states in minimizing their participation in the mission. This, along with the
economic issues that have affected Europe over the past several years, has
contributed to a planned reduction of NATO forces in Afghanistan.
Therefore, political leaders urging popular support for their military in
missions like the present ones in Iraq, Afghanistan or Libya need to explain to
their populations, in detail, the advantages of these commitments. In effect, this
is about expectations management. Negative side effects such as casualties or
alleged atrocities reported in the media can undermine popular support for even
a successful military operation. The people’s trust in their political leaders must
be high and can be easily lost. Understanding previous popular responses to a
nation’s involvement in earlier conflicts can serve as a useful guide to preparing
the home population as a nation plans to take part in a new one. Therefore, clear
and achievable mission goals must be established along with a definite plan for
the eventual end of the mission.
27
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multi-National_Force_%E2%80%93_Iraq
See Sobel, Furia and Barratt, Public Opinion and International Intervention.
29
Ibid., pp. 137-156. Although the chapter discusses the German role in the 2003 Iraq War and the
following occupation, the lessons from that conflict are instructive in regard to Germany’s
participation in the Afghan War; http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/sep/12/western-supportafghanistan-war-collapsing;
http://afghanistan.blogs.cnn.com/2010/04/28/declining-support-ingermany-for-afghan-operation/ ;
http://www.pewglobal.org/database/?indicator=9 ; http://www.economist.com/node/15954464.
28
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
•
•
•
•
•
Developing and Maintaining Popular Support for the Mission
Political/military leaders need to explain in detail the anticipated
advantages of the mission to local populations in order to earn their
trust and support
Negative side effects can undermine popular support quickly
A people’s trust in their leaders can be easily lost
Understanding previous responses to involvements in earlier conflicts
can be a useful guide to preparing a population for a new one
Clear and achievable mission goals must be established and
communicated to the home population
6. Independence Movements
Historical assessments must also take into account the aspirations of a
people to have their own state. This is especially true with the dissolution of the
“voluntary unions” such as Czechoslovakia following the end of the Cold War. The
experiences of the states that were once under Soviet domination, for example,
might lead to the creation of a historical connection with those nations that were
once part of colonial empires. The possible affinity that these states might have
with former colonies might be useful to NATO in terms of building support for a
security or peacekeeping mission among local populations in these types of
states. Units from these nations may be especially valuable in the effort to build
local support for a NATO mission as they may be less likely to be perceived as
Western “occupiers” or “neo-colonialists”.
•
•
•
56
Popular Aspirations and Nationalism
Cultural/historical assessments must account for aspirations to
statehood – particularly in line with dissolution of so-called “voluntary
unions”
Affinity of such states with nations that were once colonies may be
useful for efforts to build popular support within a local population for
a NATO mission in their country
May be less likely to be perceived as Western “occupiers” or “neo-
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
colonialists”
7. Additional considerations and recommendations
While historical analysis can serve as an effective foundation for
understanding unfamiliar societies and culture, it must always be kept in mind
that history is not an exact science. History is a discipline that relies on
interpretation, while teaching by both example and analogy. Since historians
often deal with evidence that is incomplete, they must rely on their best
judgement in trying to explain historical causes and effects. Ultimately, history
does teach by analogy, but determining whether or not an analogy is appropriate
requires careful analysis and consideration of a variety of factors, especially in
regard to the effort to understand another culture that may be quite different
30
from one’s own. It should be kept in mind, that the population in those regions
or countries where NATO might find itself conducting security or peacekeeping
operations will apply their own past experiences and historical analogies in their
assessment of the operation as they determine whether or not to support it. The
natural inclination may be to seek out areas of commonality as both sides try to
understand one another. This may be a good thing, but it is in seeking out
commonalities and differences that analogies must be carefully considered and
analyzed. Effective application of historical analogies requires recognizing and
31
understanding both likenesses and differences when doing so. This is especially
so when analyzing cultural similarities and dissimilarities. Making assumptions
about cultural similarities may result in overlooking differences that may be of
greater importance than what both sides may have in common.
Political-military organizations rely on intelligence analysis for the
process of planning policies and/or operations. This requires identifying patterns
of behaviour and predictions about how local populations might react to toward
NATO intervention in their homeland, and historical analysis can play a key part in
this process. Therefore NATO operational planning processes should include
elements of intensive self-study in regard to some of the issues noted above, as
well as the careful analysis of those cultures that with whom NATO may be
30
An excellent discussion of the process of determining whether or not historical analogies may be
relevant to a present day situation can be found in May and Neustadt’s Thinking in Time: The Uses of
History for Decision Makers.
31
Neustadt and May, pp. 89, 156, 235, 237, 269.
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
interacting. While intelligence analysts are often required to provide assessments
and forecasts within a brief period of time, this may not be beneficial to effective
cultural analysis and preparations for building support from the local population
for an intervention by NATO in their homeland. NATO might be well advised to
consider the creation of a permanent cultural analysis unit that can begin the
work of identifying those regions or nations where intervention may be most
likely in the foreseeable future. Such a unit could be tasked to begin research and
analysis of critical areas and their populations where NATO forces may be sent.
Utilizing and implementing historical analysis and social science methodologies,
plans can be formulated by a unit such as this that contain critical information
about the cultures of these regions/nations and recommendations for training
NATO personnel in regard to building local support for the mission in which they
might be involved. Such a unit would likely need to be a permanent structure, as
constant monitoring of conditions and events in these critical areas will be
necessary.
As a political-military organization, NATO requires the tools necessary to
effectively study the processes that shape the attitudes, beliefs and opinions of
the cultures in which it might be required to carry out an operation of some sort.
This will be especially so when dealing with non-democratic nations or
organizations that oppose democratic values. What will be required is intelligence
analysis that will incorporate not only the techniques of historical analysis, but
also those of the various academic disciplines within the social sciences, including
cultural anthropology, psychology, political science and sociology to name but a
few. Analysts will be asked to deal with a great many variables, both independent
32
and dependent, as they study other cultures. Therefore, the integration of the
methods of thinking utilized by the social sciences and humanities into the
process of intelligence analysis will be critical to effective preparation in terms of
dealing with non-western cultures. In this regard, history will serve to provide a
foundation from which the diversity of human interactions can be analyzed in
st
order to prepare NATO forces for 21 century operations.
32
See Gaddis, The Landscape of HIstory, pp. 53, 55, 60, 64-65, 73 and 91, regarding thinking about
variables in historical analysis.
58
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
Recommendations
• Historical analysis should be the foundation for preparing to build
support among the local population for peacekeeping/security
operations.
• Utilize historical analysis along with other disciplines to develop
cultural awareness in order to maximize opportunities to build
rapport with the local population.
• Historical analysis should not be limited to the recent past, but
should take into account long term factors and influences that
have created a sense of identity within the local population.
• Analyze the local population’s history of relations with outsiders in
order to anticipate how they may view the presence of NATO
forces in their country.
• Learn everything possible about the culture in which the operation
will take place, utilizing history, linguistics, and the social science
disciplines to do so.
• Local populations need detailed explanations of the anticipated
benefits of the mission in order to earn their trust and support –
this is true for the home population as well.
• Learn about a population’s previous responses to conflict to
anticipate possible reactions to a new one, especially a NATO
intervention in their homeland.
• Minimize the possibility that NATO forces may be perceived as
occupiers” or “neo-colonialists”.
• Develop and maintain a cultural analysis unit to identify regions or
countries where NATO intervention might be most likely in order to
prepare NATO personnel for operations in such places.
• The integration of the methods of thinking utilized by the social
sciences and the humanities into the process of intelligence
analysis will be critical to effective preparation in terms of dealing
with other countries.
• Keep in mind that historical analysis can provide insights, clues and
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
guidelines in preparing NATO forces to interact with local
populations – but it does not deal in absolutes! Because history
teaches by analogy and example, it will take careful study and
analysis to identify the critical elements that will help NATO forces
build support from the local population within the operational
environment.
60
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
CHAPTER 3
THE COMPLEXITY OF CROSS-CULTURAL
COMMUNICATION
CPT Dr. Claudio Bertolotti (Panel
Leader)
LTC (Ret.) Hubertus KÖBKE
Mr.Aemal KARUKHALE
Mr. Ralf-Joachim MUMM
Italian Military Centre for Strategic
Studies (CeMiSS), University of Torino
UNHCR Security Management Team
Botswana, UN
International Security Assistance Forces,
NATO
The Defence Committee of the Federal
German Parliament, DEU
1. Understanding the social systems and sub-systems: first step to
communication
Knowledge of a culture is the way to communicate with respect. Respect
between cultures is the key to success.
In a world that is increasingly interconnected, the success of
organizations and their people depends on effective cross-cultural
communication. In all these interconnections, communication needs to be as
constructive as possible, without misunderstandings and breakdowns. Research
on the nature of linguistic and cultural similarities and differences can play a
positive and constructive role.
Why is it important to improve intercultural communication? Lack of
knowledge of the other culture can lead to embarrassing or amusing mistakes in
communication; but such mistakes may confuse or even offend the people we
wish to communicate with, making the conclusion of agreements or relationships
difficult or impossible. To conduct a constructive cross-cultural communication it
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
is fundamental to understand the cultural and social environment: in particular
the social system and the sub-system structures and dynamics.
33
The conduct of operations in “other” cultural areas needs an approach
oriented to local «systems» and «sub-systems» and not a simple and generic
approach to «tribes» (often used in theatres of operations as well as Afghanistan
and Iraq); in brief, the concept is: «local instead of tribal».
The term “social system” is a large classification and the elements that
compose it can include family, cultural groups, religious organizations, ethnic
organizations, and states, among others. The social system is a complex unity
formed of many often diverse components subject to a common plan or serving a
common purpose.
A society is a system of sub-systems and social changes are driven by
internal dynamics of the parts (not excluding external influences) and by the
coupling together of the parts into the whole; social actions are seen as a
consequence of the dynamic tendencies of each sub-system and of the
34
interaction of the sub-systems.
A social system is a bounded set of interrelated activities that together
constitute a single entity; it is based on individuals or groups of persons who
interact and mutually influence each other’s behaviour. These groups and
organizations within the social system can be identified as “sub-systems” of the
social system. If a part of a system is itself a system then that component is
classified as the sub-system of the larger one. Thus, any organization or group can
be classified as a sub-system of the society. Society contains various types of subsystems because the society at large expects and gains some advantages from the
existence of such sub-systems.
35
According to Talcott Parsons, there are four primary constituents that
are part of the more general system of social dynamics:
1.
2.
3.
33
social systems,
cultural systems,
personality systems,
The term “cultural area” as used here is meant to define a specific social group with common values,
norms and traditions, but not confined by formal boundaries as well as country or regional borders,
divisions, administrations.
34
Robert Hanneman, Systems and subsystems. Alternative views of societal dynamics, in “Computer
assisted theory building. Modeling dynamic social systems”, SAGE publ., Newbury Park 1988, p. 283.
35
Talcott Parsons, The System of Modern Societies, Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, SNK ed. 1971,
pp. 4-8.
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
4.
behavioural organisms.
All four are abstractly defined relative to the concrete behaviour of social
36
interaction.
Sub-systems are social units created and maintained by the society in
order to help the society itself accomplish tasks that are impossible to achieve if
there are no such sub-systems:
• Provision of means to achieve common needs: sub-systems
provide means to achieve group’s various types of needs ranging
from basic to advanced (Example: job opportunities, security and
safety, collective support).
• Sub-Systems preserve knowledge, traditional norms, rules, and
justice: most of the common rules are respected, applied and
transmitted to new generations by the sub-systems.
• Sub-Systems make the entire society: conventionally, especially in
sociology, it is believed that society is a collection of individuals
and their families; in specific cultural groups, individuals are a
subordinated part of the group (sub-system),which is located in a
predominant position (individual needs are less important than
group needs).
Finally, because any society is a collection of various types of subsystems, it is fundamental be aware of internal equilibriums and external
dynamics in order to interact and communicate with its elements. In brief,
subsystems are the subject NATO needs to communicate with.
•
•
•
•
36
Main Implications Concerning Social Systems And Sub-Systems
The success of organizations and their people depends on effective
cross-cultural communication.
Lack of knowledge of the other culture can lead to embarrassing or
amusing mistakes in communication.
The conduct of operations in “other” cultural areas needs an
approach oriented to local “systems” and “sub-systems”.
Sub-systems are social units which helps society itself to
accomplish fundamental tasks:
Talcott Parsons, The System of Modern Societies, cit.
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•
(1) Provision of means to achieve common needs.
(2) Sub-Systems preserve knowledge, traditional norms,
rules, justice.
(3) Sub-Systems make the entire society.
It is fundamental be aware of internal equilibriums and external
dynamics: sub-systems are the subject NATO needs to
communicate with.
1.1. The social sub-system's environment
In line with Parsons’ approach, analyzing the interrelations among the
four aforementioned sub-systems of action – and between these systems and the
environments of action – it is essential to underline the phenomenon of
interpenetration. Perhaps the best-known case of interpenetration is the
internalization of social objects and cultural norms into the personality of the
individual. Learned content of experience, organized and stored in the memory
apparatus of the group, is another example, as is the institutionalization of
normative components of cultural systems as constitutive structures of social
systems. The boundary between any pair of action systems involves a “zone” of
structured components or patterns that must be treated theoretically as common
to both systems, not simply allocated to one system or the other.
It is by virtue of the zones of interpenetration that processes of
interchange among systems can take place. This is especially true at the levels of
symbolic meaning and generalized motivation. In order to communicate
symbolically, individuals must have culturally organized common codes (cultural,
traditional, ideological codes and rules) that are also integrated into systems of
37
their social interaction (a clear example is the Pashtunwalì Code for the Pashtun
people of Afghanistan and Pakistan).
37
Pashtunwali is a non-written ethical code and traditional lifestyle which the indigenous Pashtun
people follow. Some in the Indian subcontinent refer to it as "Pathanwali". Its meaning may also be
interpreted as "the way of the Pashtuns" or "the code of life". Pashtunwali dates back to ancient preIslamic times and is widely practised among Pashtuns, especially in rural tribal society. In addition to
being practiced by members of the Pashtun diaspora, it has been adopted by some non-Pashtun
Afghans or Pakistanis who live in Pashtun regions or close to Pashtuns, and have gradually become
Pashtunized over time.
There are ten main principles of Pashtunwali. Although Pashtunwali is believed to date back to the
pre-Islamic period, its usage or practice does not contravene basic Islamic principles.
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
The structure of social systems may be analyzed in terms of four types of
38
independently variable components: values, norms, collectivities, and roles.
•
•
•
•
Values take primacy in the pattern-maintenance functioning of
social systems; they are conceptions of desirable types of social
systems that regulate the making of commitments by social units.
Norms, which function primarily to integrate social systems, are
specific to particular social functions and types of social situations.
They include specific modes of orientation for acting under the
functional and situational conditions of particular collectivities and
roles.
Collectivities are the type of structural component that have goalattainment primacy. They include statuses of membership:
members and non-members (inside or outside the system). There
is also differentiation among members in relation to their statuses
and functions within the collectivity, so that some categories of
members are expected to do certain things that are not expected
of other members.
Roles are the type of structural component that has primacy in the
adaptive function (a group of individuals who, through reciprocal
expectations, are involved in a particular collectivity). Hence, roles
comprise the primary zones of interpenetration between the
social system and the personality of the individual.
Many norms regulate the action of indefinite numbers of collectivities
and roles, but only specific sectors of their action. Therefore, a collectivity
Pashtunwali rules are accepted in Afghanistan and Pakistan (mainly in and around the Pashtunistan
region), and also in some Pashtun communities around the world. Some non-Pashtun Afghans and
others have also adopted its ideology or practices for their own benefit. Conversely, many urbanized
Pashtuns tend to ignore the rules of Pashtunwali. Passed on from generation to generation,
Pashtunwali guides both individual and communal conduct. It is practiced by the majority of Pashtuns
and helps to promote Pashtunization.
Pashtuns embrace an ancient traditional, spiritual, and communal identity tied to a set of moral codes
and rules of behaviour, as well as to a record of history spanning some seventeen hundred years.
Pashtunwali promotes self-respect, independence, justice, hospitality, love, forgiveness, revenge and
tolerance toward all (especially to strangers or guests). It is considered to be the personal
responsibility of every Pashtun to discover and rediscover Pashtunwali's essence and meaning.
Although not exclusive, the following ten principles form the major components of Pashtunwali. They
are headed with the words of the Pashto language that signify individual or collective Pashtun tribal
functions: Melmastia (hospitality); Nanawatai (asylum); Badal (justice); Tureh (bravery); Sabat
(loyalty); Imandari (righteousness); Isteqamat (trust in God); Ghayrat (courage); Namus (protection of
women); and Nang (honour).
38
Talcott Parsons, The System of Modern Societies, cit.
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
generally functions under the control of a large number of particular norms. It
always involves a plurality of roles, although almost any major category of role is
performed in a plurality of particular collectivities. However, social systems are
comprised of combinations of these structural components. To be
institutionalized in a stable fashion, collectivities and roles are "governed" by
specific values and norms, whereas values and norms are themselves
institutionalized only insofar as they are "implemented" by particular collectivities
39
and roles.
Example: Afghanistan as study case.
Afghan society is based on durable social and cultural connections
between groups (sub-systems) as part of a complex system. Afghanistan is home
to a multiplicity of ethnic and linguistic groups, as well as several religious sects
and other religions. Historic and geographic factors created and preserved this
diversity although varying degrees of cultural assimilation continuously take place
and a considerable degree of cultural homogeneity exists. Ethnicity means
different things to different groups. Any simple classification is bound to have
exceptions for an Afghan society that has never been static within fixed
boundaries.
Tribal society organization (supra-system), in particular the Pashtun one,
descends from a common ancestor, who is the reason for the relation between
the subjects; the subjects are thought of as family groups and not individuals.
Every group, as a sub-system, uses the identification term qawm to explain a
complexity of affiliations, a network, of families or livelihood. Each has a rich
density of meanings. Every individual belongs to a qawm, which provides
protection from outside encroachment, support, security, and assistance, which
can be social, political or economic. Frequently a village corresponds to a qawm,
but it does not necessarily exist in a precise geographic setting. In a more
restricted sense qawm refers to descent groups; in tribal areas qawm refers to a
common genealogy from an extended family (khor), or clan (khel), to tribe (millat)
or tribal confederation (watan). Most simply, qawm defines an individual's
identity in his social world.
The Pashtunwali code (system of values, norms, collectivities, and roles)
is the source of legitimacy of the tribal institutions. Knowledge and application of
traditional norms is a responsibility of the elders (spingiri) and of the “wise
39
Ibid.
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
individuals” who take part to the collective assemblies (jirga and shurà), the
jirgadar.
The hierarchical organization of tribal groups is structured on concentric
circles of solidarity (fig.1):
• The core group of Afghan tribal society is khor (“home”, or
“family”);a very close relationship that ties all the components of
the family to the head of the family. It is based on loyalty among
its members and respect for hierarchies.
• The second level is the khel (or khankhel) the «clan», composed of
some khor strongly linked by social and historical reasons. Usually
it is led by a community representative (malek, or walì, or wakel)
elected by the jirgadar.
• The third level is the qawm, which is the primary solidarity group;
it is formed by more khel who are linked according to security,
cooperation, source access, and opportunity reasons. The qawm
defines the individual within his social environment.
• This is followed by the millat (nation, people or ethnic group), in
which most qawm may be included.
• The mamlakat could be envisioned as the “country” of a people; it
is the presence of a specific and defined extended community
(without a formal geographic delimitation) which contributes to
form the highest level of the group: the watan, translated by the
term «homeland» of all Pashtuns.
Nota bene: In conclusion, what is fundamental to understand is the fact
that loyalties and connections between and within the sub-systems are based on
a bottom-up process; essentially for this reason, a communication process must
follow a specific track based on these lines and connections between the
(sub)systems, therefore avoiding an approach based on “modern institutional”
lines of communication.
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© CB
Figure 3.1: Afghan Pashtun tribal organization
•
•
•
•
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Main Implications Concerning Social Sub-System's Environment
In order to communicate symbolically, individuals must have culturally
organized common codes.
The structure of social systems may be analyzed in terms of four types of
independently variable components: values, norms, collectivities, and
roles.
Afghanistan as study case:
(1) Afghanistan is home to a multiplicity of groups.
(2) Tribal society organization (supra-system) descends from a
common ancestor.
(3) Pashtunwali code (system of values, norms, collectivities, and
roles) is the source of legitimacy of the tribal institutions.
The communication process must follow a specific track based on the
lines and connections between the (sub) systems, avoiding an approach
based on a “modern institutional” line of communication.
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
1.2. Approach to social systems and local matters
A social systems perspective could provide the best theoretical basis for
the application of the cross-cultural communication.
The adoption of systemic thinking – using the mind to recognize patterns,
consider unity, and form some coherent wholeness – is considered useful in order
40
to complete the picture of the social systems.
In brief, “Macro vs. Micro” and “Whole vs. Part” represent two different
points of view in regard to social systems:
• The Holistic Viewpoint (where the whole determines the actions
of its parts and the people are determined by society); implies
“downward” causality
• The Atomistic Viewpoint (in which the whole is the sum of its parts
and the persons determine the society); implies “upward”
causality.
These two positions are important and powerful when applied to the
task of deciding how to intervene in human behaviour. This duality has emerged
as the historical distinction between “casework” and “community organization”,
or as “individual change” vs. “social change”. Both positions are significant and
should be considered when examining human affairs and going through local
systems. An approach inspired (not exclusively) by the Atomistic viewpoint is
recommended.
It is very important to be aware of the concept that each social system
whether large or small, complex or simple, is simultaneously a part and a whole. A
social unit is made up of parts (sub-systems) of which it is the whole (suprasystem) while, at the same time, it is part of some larger whole (sub-systems).
Therefore, any system is by definition both “part and whole”.
Furthermore, it is important to comprehend the system (supra or subsystem) which will be approached, identifying the perspective from which the
observer (NATO operator) views, and analyzes the system and its environment.
The idea of “part and whole” requires the observer to be aware of both the
components of the sub-system and the supra-system in order to understand it
adequately.
40
Social Systems Theory. Human Behavior and the Social Environment, Lecture Paper, California State
University, in http://www.csub.edu/.
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Exploring a system means being able to understand the dynamics of subsystems and to be accepted within the system as observer or recognized
counterpart in a constructive dialogic relationship. Schematically, a social system
approach requires:
1.
2.
3.
4.
Definition of the social system object of the study;
Definition of the components that constitute the social
system;
Definition of the significant environmental systems;
Definition of one’s own position relative to the supra-system.
The basic “stuff” of a system is information and resources. System action
can be understood as the movement of information:
• Within a system;
• Between a system and its environment.
What occurs in and between social systems in order to establish a crosscultural communication are “transfers of information” and reciprocal trust
between the external actor (observer, operator, and counterpart) and the subsystems; in such circumstances, the cross-cultural communication must be based
on the following operator’s capabilities:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Competence;
Capacity for action;
Action;
Trust;
Power to take decision.
Finally, information collection is the effect of a positive communication
activity and is derived from a variety of sources including the physical capacities of
the members, social resources such as loyalties, shared sentiments, common
values and resources from its environment. It should be kept in mind that an
important source for personal appreciation is the recognition of one’s status by
society and one’s colleagues in a group.
Systems and subsystems are permanently linked because each one is the
reason for the existence of the others, according to the principle that the whole is
the sum of the parts and the parts are recognized in their entity as elements of
the whole. Recognition, respect, dynamics, economy, justice, and so forth are not
separate entities; a system performs them at the same time. In any exchanges
between the whole and its parts, all elements receive some input, results,
advantage/disadvantage, and have some goals met.
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
The reciprocal nature of the transactions and exchanges should be kept in
mind because interaction with a sub-system could have consequences affecting
the equilibrium between sub-systems and supra-system (part and whole). If one
function (or other dynamics) is always dominant, the other functions could be
neglected, to the detriment of the total system.
It is important to consider the social (as well as the political and
traditional) organization keeping in mind that organization is not synonymous
with higher levels of complexity. Furthermore, the measure of effectiveness of
the organization is its capacity to fulfil the system’s goals, as well as the goals of
its components.
Groups (within sub-systems) with problems are generally disorganized
groups, and the reasons for this disorganization can emanate from internal
dynamics and/or external forces; this could happen when:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
The aspirations of one or more members is in opposition to
supra/sub-system goals;
The elements of the system are disrupted or unclear;
The environment exercises a disorganizing influence on the
system (oppression, injustice);
Access to sources is denied from the supra-system
(unemployment, welfare benefits cut off);
External actor supports a group that creates a disadvantage
for the others.
The NATO operator (as mediator) must be aware and has to be conscious
about these topics and must be able to give an answer (if requested) contributing
to the mediation process, or to a possible solution; always keeping in mind his
external role and not putting himself in a factious (perceived or otherwise)
position.
Finally, the NATO operator has to know who is who and who the
individual with whom he has to speak is (see below, paragraph 3).
Main Implications Concerning The Approach To Social Systems and Local
Matters
•
Social systems perspective could provide the best theoretical basis for
the application of the cross-cultural communication.
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•
•
•
•
•
•
The “systemic thinking” approach is useful in seeking to complete an
image of social systems.
Each social system is simultaneously a part and a whole. A social unit
is made up of parts (sub-systems) to which it is the whole (suprasystem).
Social system approach: comprehend the system which will be
approached, identifying the perspective from which the mediator
(NATO operator) observes. Schematically the approach requires:
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
Definition of the social system which is the object of the study;
Definition of the components that constitute the social system;
Definition of the significant environmental systems;
Definition of one’s own position relative to the supra-system.
Cross-cultural communication must be based on the following
mediator’s capabilities:
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
Competence;
Capacity for action;
Action;
Trust;
Power to make decisions.
Keep in mind the reciprocal nature of the transactions and exchanges:
conduct businesses with a sub-system could have consequences to the
equilibrium between sub-systems and supra-system.
The NATO representative has to know who is who and who the
individual with whom he has to speak is.
2. What NATO has to improve?
2.1. Socio-cultural analysis
Socio-cultural analysis is a primary concept based on cross-cultural
competencies/abilities and an adequate intelligence process. Interaction, dialogue
and communication between NATO elements and civilians require a specific set of
cross-cultural knowledge and skills. Understanding how the local population
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
thinks and behaves can help NATO avoid making massive cultural mistakes and
increase the chances of positive communication and operational impact.
Working, interacting and dealing with partners across cultures raises
challenges and demands new attitudes and skills. Direct experience shows that
without the right approach, cultural differences greatly reduce effectiveness in
the early stages of a relationship. Active management of the intercultural
communication process and a conscious effort to acquire new skills will drive to
competitive advantage.
Because of the necessity of an in-depth socio-cultural analysis, it is
necessary to expand cultural communication competencies/abilities and develop
intelligence analysis processes.
2.1.1. Cross cultural communication competencies/abilities
The concept of cross-cultural competence is centered on the capability to
understand and act in a culture different from one’s own: it is a fundamental pillar
for NATO military and civilian personnel who must interact with people from
other cultures. Cross-cultural competence is a set of culture-general knowledge,
and abilities developed through education, training, and experience that provide
the ability to operate with efficacy within a culturally complex environment.
Cross-cultural competence can prove very advantageous, as it equips
individuals with the necessary knowledge, abilities, and personal characteristics
that enable them to operate effectively in culturally different situations.
Furthermore, cross-cultural competence provides a conscious knowledge of a
“culturally appropriate, adaptable mode”, helping to mitigate undesirable
outcomes by supporting critical skills, in particular for conflict resolution and
communication. Recent events demonstrate how a lack of cross-cultural
competence can provoke cultural misunderstanding and security problems (in
particular Insider threats/green-on-blue attacks); these cultural mistakes continue
to place NATO personnel at risk.
In contrast with the high level of technology that maximize the distance
between military members and antagonists on the battlefield, the emergent
nature of the NATO missions has increased the need for adaptive interpersonal
interaction and capabilities. These kinds of employment often require close
interaction between ground personnel and those from other cultural
backgrounds. In these scenarios, the military need to communicate, negotiate,
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and conduct local key-leader engagement is vital: NATO personnel must be able
to proceed and respond appropriately to any situation.
Institutionalizing cross-cultural competence may require an
organizational cultural change using multipronged approaches that comprise a
number of cross-cultural resources, including:
1.
2.
3.
4.
Education and training;
Individual/unit-level assessments;
Information (at local and regional levels);
In progress research (info-collection) activity on the field.
2.1.1.1. 3M approach: three levels of analysis (Macro, Meso, Micro)
The concept level of analysis is a social sciences approach that points to
the location, size, or scale of a research target. The “3M approach” is based on
three levels of analysis: Macro-level, Meso-level, and Micro-level.
•
•
74
Macro-level analysis generally traces the outcome of interactions,
such as economic or other resource transfer interactions over a
large population. Examples of macro-level units of analysis include
the nation, the society in general, international relations and
regional equilibriums. It is based on the systemic level of analysis,
which explains outcomes from a system wide level that includes
the state. It takes into account both the position of states in the
international system and their interrelationships. The position of
states constitutes the systemic structural level of analysis. This
involves the relative distribution of power, such as that of states
or alliances, great, mid-level, or small powers, and geopolitics. The
interaction of states constitutes the systemic process level of
analysis. At this level, we are concerned with which state or
alliance aligns with which other state or alliance and which state
or alliance negotiates with other states or alliances. It is a general
topic that must be clear for all NATO strategic communications
operators.
Meso-level analysis, in general, indicates a population size that
falls between the Micro- and Macro-levels, such as a community,
an organization or a regional group; it may also refer to analyses
that are specifically designed to reveal connections between
Micro- and Macro-levels. Examples of Meso-level units of analysis
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
•
include clan, tribe, community, solidarity organizations, villages,
towns, cities, formal organizations and state institutions. It is
centered on the domestic level of analysis that locates causes in
the character of the domestic system of specific states and
organizations. Thus, conflict is caused by aggressive or warlike
groups, not by evil, inept, or misguided people or the structure of
power in the system. The failure of domestic institutions may also
cause open conflict and war. . Domestic level cases may come
from various characteristics of the domestic system. Stable and
failed institutions are domestic level factors affecting state
behavior; a failed state usually means an institutional breakdown
at domestic level of analysis. Thus, we can explain the ongoing
local/regional conflicts in terms of absence of capabilities and
institutions able to prevent such conflicts; however, system wide
institution does not always mean harmony among groups. It is a
specific level that must be understood by all the NATO strategic
communication operators, in particular the key-leaders,
mediators, subjects involved in business with major local
organizations and governmental institutions.
Micro-level is the smallest unit of analysis in the social sciences; it
is the more important for cross-cultural communication. At the
Micro-level (also Local-level), the subject typically is a small group
of individuals in their social setting, or in a particular social
context. Examples of Micro-levels of analysis include local keyleaders, local relationships, families, local alliances, conflicts and
dynamics. It is based on the analysis of the individual level, which
identifies the influence on events that individual leaders or the
immediate circle of decision-makers within a community or small
group have. It focuses on human actors identifying the
characteristics of human decision-making. For example, the cause
of a local conflict could come from the particular leaders in power;
a leader (or a would-be community leader) might be considered
the source from which the cause originated. It may be that he
seeks power to hide a sense of inferiority, or it may be his inability
to understand the conflict dynamics, or he could have different
interests. All of these possibilities are drawn from an individual
level of analysis. It is the fundamental level that must be clear to
all NATO operators, in particular the key-leaders, mediators,
subjects involved in durable relationships with local
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
representatives and
communication.
business
activities
based
on
direct
From the basis of strategic communication planning, meso- and microlevels are the most important categories upon which NATO should apply the
cross-cultural competencies that will focus on the primary communication
activities.
2.1.1.2. Understanding of local decision processes
The guiding principles of communication at all levels have to be
developed to support local decision-making. This includes decisions made as part
of the development of the Strategic Communication plan.
Local decisions should be made in the context of, and be consistent with,
NATO goals, national policies and local priorities, prioritization processes and
governance frameworks. Cross-cultural communication should create a linkage
between all these elements.
In brief, NATO should:
• Support decision-making groups, with a clearly designated focus
of accountability, which include a locally defined mix of members
with the appropriate range of skills;
• Be aware about criteria for decision-making: demonstrate
understanding and respect for the local decision-making
procedures that allow recommendations to be developed through
collaboration.
Furthermore, decisions should be based on the best available evidence,
take into account the appropriate ethical frameworks and comply with basic
requirements:
• NATO decisions-process in respect of local traditions and
procedures;
• Take reasonable steps to engage with local stakeholders to help
increase understanding of local priority;
• Clear communication with stakeholders;
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
• Communication about NATO policy and actions should include the
processes, decisions and the rationale for decisions, while
maintaining appropriate confidentiality;
• Establish assurance processes to monitor the application and
performance of decision-making arrangements, and to enable
learning to be incorporated into future process improvements.
Moreover, the goal of being aware of the local decision-making
organizations is to provide a simple overview of how local government decisionmaking works. It addresses the key questions about local decision-making
organizations processes, including:
• The unique aspects of collective decision-making – how decisionmakers and the public determine which course of action best
serves the community's interests.
• Who does what – the similarities and differences in the roles that
villages, communities, cities and districts play in enacting policies
and providing public services; the division of authority among
village,
town,
city
traditional
or
governmental
institutions/organizations; the key decision-makers in local
government and the role of the elders.
• How decisions are made – the unique rules that govern public
agency decision-making, when public officials must step aside
from the decision-making process, and the distinction between
central governmental and traditional acts.
2.1.1.3 Understanding of dissent and criticism: read the social causes
and the political consequences
Conflicts and wars are the origin of a variety of social ills, such as poverty,
interethnic conflicts, widespread thievery and crime, among others.
In Afghanistan, for example, blood feuds continuing through generations
are legendary, and revenge is regarded as a necessary redress of wrongs: the civil
war has strengthened these tendencies. The ongoing civil war had continued to
kill, wound, and displace thousands of civilians. Kabul has been largely without
electricity since 1994. Water, phones, and sewage systems have been destroyed.
Years of war have separated and impoverished extended families that
traditionally cared for widows and fatherless children. Lastly the foreign military
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presence, generally read as a military occupation, is characterized as the presence
of soldiers who lack respect for the local culture, norms or traditions.
Dissent, protests and criticism against the foreign military presence
usually have political, social and cultural origins. In line with a strict approach,
some media and newspapers have reported very strict evaluations, as such as:
• “In Afghanistan, the Coalition has violently occupied the
country for more than a decade”; it has, as the former military
commander Gen. Stanley McChrystal himself explained, ‘killed
what he called an “amazing number” of innocent Afghans in
41
checkpoint shootings’”. For example, demonstrators in Kabul
in 2012 protested because the “Americans had violated
cultural and religious traditions”.
Additional examples:
• “’This is not just about dishonoring the Koran, it is about
disrespecting our dead and killing our children,’ said Maruf
Hotak, 60, referring to an episode in Helmand Province when
Coalition soldiers urinated on the dead bodies of men they
described as insurgents and to a recent erroneous airstrike on
42
civilians in Kapisa Province that killed eight young Afghans” .
• “’Foreigners are invaders, and jihad against foreigners is an
obligation’ said Abdul Sattar Khawasi, a member of the
43
Afghan Parliament” .
Absence of communication as well as the media’s influence on public
opinions, both local and global, could support a sort of “fault line conflict” based
on cultural divergence mixed with negative operational events; this result could
drive the local population to receive a more amplified message of conflicts
between the factions. This is, undoubtedly, a situation closed to any opportunity
of dialogue: no prospect of communication between the actors is possible in a
way characterized, on one hand, by a deficiency in strategic policy and, on the
other hand, by shortcomings in cultural competences and assets. Thus, cross41
Gen. StanleyMcChrystal: We've Shot 'An Amazing Number' Of Innocent Afghans, Huffington Post, 2
April
2010,
in
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/04/02/mcchrystal-weve-shot-ana_n_523749.html.
42
Alissa J. Rubin, Afghan Protests Over the Burning of Korans at a U.S. Base Escalate,
New York Times, 27th of February 2012, in http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/23/world/asia/koranburning-in-afghanistan-prompts-second-day-of-protests.html?_r=0
43
Ibidem.
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
cultural communication competence could contribute (in particular if combined
with a strategic socio-political approach) in supporting cross-cultural
communication (see Paragraph 2.2).
2.1.2. Adequate intelligence analysis process
In accordance with NATO ACO Directive (Ad) 95-2 and ACO Strategic
Communications directive, “an assessment of the information environment in
which NATO is to conduct operations/activities is essential to inform effective
Strategic Communication planning and delivery, involving all of the information
disciplines as appropriate, and building upon their existing planning, analysis and
assessment capabilities”.
In particular:
• Analysis of the information infrastructure, the cultural dimension,
the key decision-takers and opinion-formers, and NATO’s own
capabilities are necessary to plan and execute missions and
operations.
• Strategic Communication planners should leverage all available
open-source information, and Knowledge Development
capabilities to develop an understanding of the information
environment, potentially supplemented by contractor support.
• Analyzing potential audiences is important, as NATO/ACO must
communicate to a variety of external audiences with differing
interests and priorities. These range from conventional media,
through IOs/NGOs and academia, to adversaries. External
audience analysis and assessment capabilities are critical to the
44
success of this process.
In order to make this activity successful, the implementation of an
Operational and Cultural Network (OCN), as useful support for Intelligence
purposes is recommended.
2.1.2.1. The Operational and Cultural Network (OCN)
45
The implementation of an Operational and Cultural Network (OCN), a
graphical and digital construction would create the capability to categorize the
44
ACO Directive (Ad) 95-2 and ACO Strategic Communications (StratCom Process & Planning), Supreme
Headquarters Allied Powers Europe.
45
Theoretical approach proposed by the Author of this contribution.
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
elements of a society in primary groups in accordance with their selfrepresentation (supra-systems, systems and sub-systems). The proposed OCN
would operate on the Macro, Meso, and Micro-analytical levels, focusing on each
one in line thorough the process of socio-cultural analysis.
Each level represents a focal point for Strategic Communication.
The capabilities to be developed by the proposed OCN would be:
• Definition of the operational research fields (socio-cultural
approach);
• Description of the subjects (systems and sub-systems) within the
main levels (Macro, Meso, and Micro);
• Definition of the communication targets, both active and passive:
1.
2.
Active: information collection and communication activities
conducted by specialized personnel (specific socio-cultural
approach); other than Intelligence branch activities, but in
strict coordination with them;
Passive: subject targets of the NATO strategic (but also
operational and tactic) communication activity (elders,
leaders, communities, etc.);
• Create an exhaustive database, which would serve to explain local
alliances, conflicts and social dynamics;
• Generate a visual representation of the aforementioned alliances,
conflicts and social dynamics upon which NATO must opportunely
work with in order to achieve results, goals and, finally,
accomplish the mission.
2.1.3. Understanding Local Decision Processes: Communication and
Intelligence
It is necessary to invest in communication systems and capabilities to
ensure that NATO will be informed and engaged in activities, decision making and
local development processes. This participative and facilitative communication
approach respects the capacity and capability to know where to go and how to
get there. Robust local decision-making is all part of this approach and will assist
in developing the cooperation and mutual support based on an appropriate crosscultural communication activity.
NATO Strategic Communication operatives will need to be proactive
rather than reactive to the challenges that effective cross-cultural communication
will entail. These individuals will also have a responsibility to be active participants
80
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
in “local strategic” issues which help develop better approaches to planning,
problem solving and reaching potential.
Concerning the intelligence process, cross-cultural competence offers
knowledge, competencies, and abilities to promote effective comprehension of
culturally complex situations. These include:
• Facilitating effective requirement determination, info-collection
and analysis,
• Building effective interpersonal relationships with local
populations and/or non-traditional/non-state actors and discern
the intent of their leaders,
• Aiding partnership building with an array of GO/NGO to assist in
promoting foreign country national security.
While socio-cultural analysis is a collection of techniques to enhance and
discern the meaning of socio-cultural knowledge, cross-cultural competence
represents a collection of capabilities that are necessary to increase the
effectiveness of thinking/analytical techniques. Cultural sense-making and
perspective-taking will aid in neutralizing cognitive and cultural bias that often
influences the intelligence cycle, outcomes and products. Cultural priming
represents one approach to mitigating bias through sense-making and
perspective-taking. A comprehensive cross-cultural competence learning program
(see next section) should be considered across the Intelligence Community to
46
enhance and better facilitate the mission.
See Table 1, «Understanding Local Decision Processes: Communication
and Intelligence».
•
•
Main Implications Concerning Socio-Cultural Analysis
Communication and intelligence process require cross-cultural
knowledge because of the necessity of an in-depth socio-cultural
analysis.
Institutionalizing cross-cultural competence requires an organizational
46
See the contribution of James Stavridis, To Know the World, in Robert R. Greene Sands and Thomas
J. Haines, «Promoting Cross-Cultural Competence in Intelligence Professionals. A new perspective on
alternative analysis and the intelligence process», Small Wars Journal, April 2013,
http://smallwarsjournal.com/jrnl/art/promoting-cross-cultural-competence-in-intelligenceprofessionals.
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
cultural change using a multipronged approach comprised of:
•
•
•
•
•
82
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
Education and training;
Individual/unit-level assessments;
Information;
In progress research (info-collection) activity on the field.
Implement the “3M approach”, based on the three levels of analysis:
(1) Macro-level
(2) Meso-level
(3) Micro-level.
Dissent and criticism: understand the social causes and the political
consequences.
Adequate intelligence analysis process supported by the Operational
and Cultural Network (OCN):
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
Definition of the socio-cultural, and operational fields;
Description of the subjects within the 3M levels;
Definition of the communication targets;
Creation of a database designed to explain local dynamics;
Visual representation of local dynamics.
Cross-cultural competence:
(1) Offers knowledge to promote comprehension of cultural
situations;
(2) Facilitates requirement determination, info-collection and
analysis,
(3) Builds effective interpersonal relationships,
(4) Aids partnership building.
A comprehensive cross-cultural competence learning program should be
developed across the Intelligence Community to enhance and better
facilitate the mission.
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
Understanding Local Decision Processes: Communication and Intelligence
47
1.1. OUTCOME: Communication through effective understanding of the
social-cultural environment and interaction with counterparts
STRATEGY
1.1.1
Increase NATO operators’
cultural awareness; in
particular be aware of
social and cultural
organization and structure
of the systems/subsystems involved in
cooperation activities.
ACTIONS
1.1.1.1
1.1.1.2
1.1.1.3
1.1.1.4
1.1.1.5
1.1.1.6
1.1.2
47
Prepare well trained and
competent groups of
specialist in cross-cultural
communication
(academics, militaries,
specialists, etc.).
1.1.2.1
1.1.2.2
Define the hierarchical structures,
leaderships, the individuals/elders
influence/role/position within the
group/society drawing an operationalcultural network (OCN) map (“Who is
who, and who is the counterpart”) and
understand individual role,
responsibilities, power, influence
(formal/informal).
Acquire competences on social-politicaltraditional norms and show full respect
for power rules.
Identify the correct interlocutor (in line
with point 0.1.1.1).
Plan the schedule according to local
times (respect of local decision-making
procedures and times).
Participate in collective discussions
concerning cooperation between NATO
and local community expressing and
underlining NATO intents, goals and
mission.
Communicate with respect for social
traditions and roles.
Before deployment basic and advanced
cultural training and ongoing (in theatre)
training on the field.
Interpreter vs. translator: adopt a
cultural mediator as conflict preventer
(well trained, briefed, and extremely
conscientious about his / her mission
and role).
Scheme derived from the “Kingborough Council Strategic Delivery Plan” 2010-2015.
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
2.1. OUTCOME: Engaged and informed community sectors
STRATEGY
2.1.1
Create partnerships and
dialogues with local
communities and support
residents to work for
collective solutions to
community needs (in
agreement with local
norms, traditions and
rules).
ACTIONS
2.1.1.1
2.1.1.2
2.1.1.3
2.1.1.4
2.1.2
2.1.3
Ensure that cooperation
organization services are
accessible and responsive
and information is
available to meet
community needs and
expectations
2.1.2.1
Encourage the community
to be engaged in local
decision-making processes
(according to local
traditional, formal,
religious norms and rules).
2.1.3.1
2.1.2.2
Survey residents, elders and power
groups on their views regarding
community engagement and priorities
for community involvement.
Support the operations and activities of
local (formal and informal) organizations
and institutions.
Investigate options for new approaches
for community partnerships.
Sustain the Community Participation
Strategy, which supports the concept of
local action and external cooperation.
Monitor and evaluate cooperation
organizations service standards
including the management of
community requests in conjunction with
Action 1.2.1.3 Communication approach.
Regularly review cooperation activity
information strategies to ensure those
with special needs are able to access a
reasonable level of support.
In conjunction with the development of
Action 1.2.1.3 Communication Approach
and Action 1.1.1.4 Community
Participation Strategy, implement an
awareness campaign to increase
participation in local discussions and
activities.
2.2. OUTCOME - Effective communication approach and inclusive, balanced
consultation process
STRATEGY
2.2.1
84
Increase community
awareness and
understanding of
cooperation organizations
and ensure locals and
ACTIONS
2.2.1.1
2.2.1.2
Review the effectiveness of current
communication approach and services
including participation to local
community assemblies.
Develop a comprehensive
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
elders are provided with
relevant information in a
range of channels and
formats to meet their
needs.
2.2.1.3
understanding of local communication
needs to reflect the profile and diversity
of the NATO personnel (operators).
Develop and implement a NATO
Communication Strategy, which
addresses principles and protocols for
communication and offers a
multifaceted approach to
communication tools and channels
(traditional and technologic).
2.3. OUTCOME - Local relevance and influence
STRATEGY
2.3.1
Promote NATO interests
and aims through
participation and
cooperation in key local
and regional initiatives.
ACTIONS
2.3.1.1
2.3.1.1
2.3.2
2.3.3
Promote the concept of
resource sharing to deliver
cost effective services to
the community.
Support partnerships and
cooperation with other
institutions of GO/NGO to
ensure the vision of NATO
mission can be achieved.
2.3.2.1
2.3.2.2
2.3.2.3
Actively participate in the local councils,
assembly, and activities and support the
development and implementation of
local strategies, including planning and
development, physical infrastructure,
economic development, environmental
performance and social well being.
Actively support the local leaderships
and the commitment to the partnership
agreements between central
government, local institutions and NATO
forces.
Explore opportunities for resource
sharing with other communities
(groups/sub-systems) and other relevant
organizations on key strategic initiatives.
Actively research and develop
opportunities for initiating joint projects.
Develop and maintain strong networks
and communication channels with other
institutions of government.
2.4. OUTCOME - Strong local decision making and delivery
STRATEGY
2.4.1
Encourage local
representatives to
participate in the activities
ACTIONS
2.4.1.1
Incorporate local engagement in
decision-making opportunities in the
Community Participation Strategy,
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
2.4.2
2.4.3
and decisions involving
(directly or indirectly)
communities their areas.
Increase opportunities for
the participation of local
people in local decisionmaking processes and
community life.
In accordance with security
standards and NATO
policy, ensure decisionmaking processes involving
locals are accessible and
available to the
community.
Action 1.1.1.4.
2.4.2.2
Implement the NATO StratCom Plan.
2.4.2.3
As part of the Community Participation
Strategy Action 1.1.1.4 review the
options for community meetings and
forums (assemblies).
Conduct public
meetings/forums/assemblies in local
areas that focus on local issues of
interest.
2.4.2.4
2.5. OUTCOME - Fair and just statutory compliance administration
STRATEGY
2.5.1
Support best practice
governance standards in
the delivery of statutory
and community
responsibilities.
ACTIONS
2.5.1.1
2.5.1.2
2.5.2.3
2.5.2
Support all legislative
changes which impact on
the local government.
2.5.2.1
2.5.3
Support the promotion of
a sense of a fair and just
statutory compliance
administration with the
community through a
commitment to open and
accountable decisionmaking.
2.5.3.1
Develop systems that facilitate
continuous improvement in NATO
operations and services.
Confirm (or not) that all legal
requirements are being met.
Support the development of associated
procedures for their effective
implementation.
Support review and update governance
and corporate policies and procedures
to encompass changing legislative and
statutory requirements.
Support and maintain policies on
decision-making, corporate ethics and
code of conduct arrangements that
uphold the StratCom Plan core values.
2.6. OUTCOME - Forward planning and leadership
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
STRATEGY
2.6.1
Ensure NATO activities are
in agreement with official
procedures.
ACTIONS
2.6.1.1
2.6.1.2
2.6.2
Ensure NATO’s strategic
and operational
communication planning
process continues to be
well-informed and
reflective of community
needs and aspirations.
2.6.2.1
Develop and maintain an integrated
tactical and operational planning
process.
Develop a long term asset management
plan based on a step-by-step approach.
Develop appropriate strategies for
effective consultation processes through
the Community Participation and
Communication Approach, Actions
1.1.1.4 and 1.2.1.3
3.1. OUTCOME – Adequate intelligence process based on socio-cultural
analysis
STRATEGY
3.1.1
Verify that NATO
operational intelligence
planning process at the
tactical level continue to
be reflective of NATO’s
strategic needs and goals.
ACTIONS
3.1.1.1
3.1.1.2
3.1.1.3
3.1.2
Promoting Cross-Cultural
competences in
Intelligence Professionals
(Strategy 0.1.1).
3.1.2.1
3.1.2.2
3.1.2.3
3.1.3
Distinguish “local conflicts”
3.1.3.1
Create the OCN (Action 0.1.1.1):
Knowledge of the terms and names
(structure/composition) is the way to
understand the socio-political net based
on the concept of social groups (family,
clan, sub-clan, social status, etc..).
Create a OCN database paying attention
to phonetic transposition (one way to
read and spell names and personal data
avoid repeating the same subjects, etc.).
Define the insurgency nature: evolution
(ongoing) of the phenomena and the
role of the supra-tribal ideology and
traditional structures.
Plan training in advanced cultural
activities (Actions 0.1.2.1)
Promote an open information sharing
approach: common know-how and
competences.
Introduce a new perspective on
alternative analysis and the intelligence
process.
Adopt an in-depth social-cultural
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
from “insurgency”.
analysis approach.
3.1.3.2
3.1.3.3
3.1.3.4
3.1.4
3.1.5
Distinguish “local
insurgency” from “external
elements” and local
“reasons from “external
ideologies”.
Adopt the “intelligence of
the name” method.
3.1.4.1
3.1.5.1
3.1.5.2
Change approach to conflicts, from
“tribal” to “local”: understand local
dynamics case by case, step by step,
building the ongoing cultural mosaic.
Define the boundaries of the three
levels of analysis (Macro, Meso, Micro =
Strategic, Operational, Tactical).
Comprehend dissent and criticism: read
social causes and political consequences
from different points o view (political,
military, social, economical, religious,
etc.)
Resolve “local problems” in order to
avoid influences and linkages with
external pressures and manipulation.
Focus on the knowledge of the
individual and social “name
construction” and meaning: it’s the way
to build the map of the socio-political
net.
Define local and regional alliances and
conflicts in accordance with the position
of the “subject” within the OCN.
Table 3.1: Understanding Local decision processes
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
2.2. How to do it? A brief guideline for a cross-cultural communication training
model
2.2.1. Micro-strategy cross-cultural communication approach: Cultural
48
Awareness Program
NATO components deployed in areas of operations need adequate
cultural skills in order to approach to different cultures. A “Micro-strategy cross49
cultural approach” – a mix of bottom-up and top-down processes – is the result
of a conscious commitment to prepare military personnel with specific and
defined cultural criteria required to operate efficaciously. This section (the
starting point for a critical discussion) will focus on a socio-cultural approach
methodology to the contemporary asymmetric battlefield and in support of the
intelligence process.
A “Micro-strategy” approach could achieve long-term objectives through
individual effort; it could also obtain a balance with some limitations on the
classic military approach.
2.2.1.2. Changing approach: from “tribal” to “local”:
Particular attention has been given to changing the erroneous perception
of cultural areas, here defined as “local” instead of “tribal” (see table 1, Actions
2.1.3.2).A change in approach to conflicts is necessary; this entails evaluating local
dynamics case by case, step by step, in order to build an ongoing cultural mosaic.
The “simplified tribal approach” contributes to several counterproductive
results obtained in conflicts resolutions activities: the dynamics of socio-cultural
areas are “local”, and as “local” should be approached because unconscious
ignorance of local cultures is the origin of the lack of ability in communication, or
in key leaders engagement activities.
A Micro-strategy cross-cultural approaches program (Cultural Awareness
Program) is based on a basic cultural training set on complementary study48
This section is derived from a previous article published by the Italian Military Centre for Strategic
Studies (CeMiSS): C. Bertolotti, Counterinsurgency and «micro-strategy» approach. Societies, Cultures
and Conflicts of Contemporary Afghanistan: beyond the “cultural awareness” course, Military Centre
for Strategic Studies, CeMiSS, Rome 2011.
49
Approach introduced by the Author to Italian advisor teams in Afghanistan (Omlt/Mat/Pat). Test
phase applied to contingents Omlt XI, XII and XIII, Mat/Pat/OCCAT from 2009 to 2013 (in progress).
89
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modules of specific theoretical lectures, which is accompanied by Academics
(anthropologists, sociologists, historians, specialists in local languages, etc.) and
the contribution of scientists (MA/PhD) for basic and advanced training; further
step is the learning phase in “theater” (on the field-ongoing learning) followed by
a fully-critical sharing of experiences and, finally, the “experiences-reports
analysis” and the “training standards revision” 50 (See Fig. 2).
Figure 3.2: Cultural training cycle
2.3. Cross-cultural competence training
A change in teaching methodology – top-down process and bottom-up
development – mainly academic supported by role games and simulations, and
availability of “end of mission” experience reports should be a primary focus of
cross-cultural competence training.
At the end of a complete cycle of cultural training, an operator will be
able to understand the cultural area in an historical, social and geopolitical
context; in particular he will be able to:
•
50
Apply an appropriate approach to local cultures;
These preliminary activities took about a year – first phase of planning, study, field research and use
of techniques as focus group and semi-structured interviews – and a second experimental phase
lasting a further year – courses, lessons, discussions, and analysis.
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
•
•
Understand local dynamics, social and operating contexts;
Improve his knowledge through direct interaction (on the fieldongoing learning);
• Recognize the struggle for "local power" from the activity of
insurgents;
• Contribute to the intelligence process;
• Provide immediate feedback to improve the later stages of
cultural training.
In brief, this training method is structured on:
1.
2.
3.
Basic cultural training (all personnel)
Advanced cultural training (key specialists – Cultural
Advisors)
Ongoing (on the field) training (all personnel)
2.3.1. Cultural Awareness Program (CAP) and Cultural advisor
The goal of the CAP program is the individual risk reduction connected with
cultural miscomprehension thanks to the support of Subject Matter Experts (SMEs):
sociologists, anthropologists, ethnologists, psychologists, historians, linguistic
mediators, etc. A key figure useful during the training phase pre-deployment and,
eventually as “on the field” will be a Subject Matter Expert (a Special Cultural
advisor).
2.3.1.1. Essential aims of the project:
The project will produce the following main outcomes:
• Improve adequate and standard cultural skills:
1.
2.
Implement a communication system based on acquired
information, in order to obtain outcomes at strategic level.
Capability to manage the communication plan in order to obtain
general consensus.
• Improve personnel safety through a not-kinetic method;
• Problem solving: conflict understanding, prevention and containment;
• Obtain an adequate staff capacity about socio-cultural
interpretation and understanding, both in planning and
operational phases;
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
1.
2.
3.
4.
•
Improving a safe approach to the operational environment
(through dialogue and correct communication strategy);
Conflictprevention/containment;
Protect and respect traditional aspects and local cultural systems
through correct management of acquired information;
Reduce the level of risk, direct or indirect, deriving from an
inappropriate socio-cultural approach (physical security risks).
51
Adopting the professional figure of the “on the field SME” (Special
Cultural Advisor at Brigade/Battalion level) will make it possible to
obtain the following results:
1.
2.
3.
Optimize the operators cultural capacity;
Define potential political and social developments;
Understand cultural context with immediacy, in order to
prevent risks and assess each situation;
2.3.1.2. Learning methodology
The methodology which the project is based upon includes the
following procedures:
• Training: individual/team including lectures, conferences,
workshops, role-plays and focus-groups;
• Multidisciplinary approach to cultural environment (sociology,
anthropology, psychology, geopolitics, strategy, economy, media
– including Psy-ops).
• Continuous updating and distance learning MCOOS (Massive Open
Online Course).
2.3.1.3. “On the field” SME’s capabilities and requirements
• High professional and cultural background (MA/PhD);
• “Gender” operational capacity (the presence of women specialists
is required);
51
The professional figure of the “on the field SME” is not intended to be a substitute or surrogate of
the Human Terrain System project, but a more flexible support and advisor to decisional processes,
planning phases and commander/operator’s general needs.
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
• Ability to contribute to the intelligence process (analysis) and
operations planning.
2.3.1.4. Cross-cultural training and CAP effects
Training outcomes are articulated in regard to actions that will have
positive effects on the mission and goals over the short, medium and long
term. As a result the CAP will be able to facilitate positive outcomes at all
levels; in brief:
•
•
•
•
At tactical-operational levels: enhancement of a cultural approach
that improves the ability to understand the local dynamics, in
order to reduce the level of risk (including staff physical security);
promotion and use of the "reading of the socio-cultural context"
approach;
At the strategic level: knowledge of local and regional dynamics in
order to better understand and assess wide ranging and long term
developments.
At the political-institutional level: desirable working relationships
between GO and NGO.
At the academic level: the best use and sharing of resources, tools,
available
technology
and
scientific-academic
products
(publications, databases, research and analysis, etc.).
What is being proposed is a process of cultural training standardization
throughe-learning activities (basic and advanced phases) integrated by seminars,
lectures and conferences; in brief, these project activities are intended to:
• Reduce the “cultural gap” and “cultural shock”;
• Limit direct and indirect risks for operatives;
• Accomplish the mission.
The implementation of this project will produce cultural knowledge for
operational purposes. Furthermore, it will be usefulin regard to the establishment
of the OCN (see para. 2.1.2.1).
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
Main Implications Concerning the Cross-Cultural Communication Training
Model
•
•
•
•
•
•
Micro-strategy cross-cultural communication approach:
(1) A mix of bottom-up and top-down processes;
(2) Result of a conscious commitment to prepare military
personnel;
(3) Specific and defined cultural criteria required to operate
efficaciously;
(4) Long-term objectives through individual effort;
(5) A balance with the limits of the classic military approach.
Changing approach: from “tribal” to “local”.
Change the erroneous perception of the cultural areas.
Standardize cultural training and knowledge.
(Cultural Awareness Program) Micro-strategic cross-cultural approach
program is based on the principle of “top-down process and bottomup development”, in brief:
(1) A basic cultural training system based on complementary
study-modules and advanced interactive seminars;
(2) On the field on-going learning;
(3) A fully-critical sharing of experiences;
(4) Analysis of experience reports and “training standards
revision”.
Expected outcomes:
(1) Appropriate approach to local cultures;
(2) Understanding of local dynamics, social and operating
context;
(3) Improve knowledge through direct interaction;
(4) Recognize the struggle for "local power" from activities of
insurgencies;
(5) Contribute to intelligence process;
(6) Immediate feedback to improve the later stages of cultural
training.
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
3. Conclusions and recommendations
3.1. Expand Cross-Cultural communication competences
In order to be able to clearly understand the dynamics characterizing the
contemporary battlefield, the expansion of cultural communication competence/
ability and the development of the intelligence analysis process are necessary.
Thus, it is important to:
•
•
Invest in cross-cultural competence training;
Implement an Operational and Cultural Network (OCN), in support
to Intelligence activity.
Furthermore, the comprehension of systems/sub-systems dynamics and
communication process, and how to communicate across cultures is vital: this is
fundamental to build “cultural intelligence”. In particular:
•
•
Subsystems are the subject NATO needs to communicate with in
order to obtain success in the mission.
Social systems understanding requires analyze it in terms of:
1.
2.
3.
4.
Values,
Norms,
Collectivities,
Roles.
Connections between and within the sub-systems are based on a
bottom-up process and top down dynamics (and vice versa).Consequentially, a
communication process must follow a specific track based on the lines and
connections between the (sub)systems, seeking to avoid the adoption of an
approach based on “modern institutional” lines of communication.
•
The transition from war to peace and the more general conflict
resolution process requires a comprehensive cross-cultural
communication approach supported by NATO because it would
facilitate discussion amongst communities and diverse civil society
sectors about their relationship with the central government as
well as the future relations between diverse groups (meant as
systems and sub-systems). A political settlement without
significant progress on these dimensions is unlikely to produce a
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
consensus supporting conflict resolution and sustainable peace,
52
or, in other words, NATO missions and goals.
A comprehensive cross-cultural communication process in NATO‘s areas
of operations requires a much more deliberate design than currently exists. Some
topics that must be emphasized through an effective communication process are:
•
•
•
Local communities have to be involved in all the decision-making
processes in order to create an ongoing mechanism and forum for
identifying key issues, work and activities with the NATO
counterpart.
Local governments, as well as local civil society, have to be
involved and supported in the design of a comprehensive conflict
solution process based on permanent dialogue.
The local government, civil society and NATO (as well as the
international community) could invest time in training by technical
support teams on principled negotiation and mediation processes
through cross-cultural communication.
Furthermore, cross-cultural communication is the sum of courses of
action which are based on, and utilize, the exchange of ideas, values, traditions
and other aspects of culture of identity, whether to strengthen relationships,
enhance socio-cultural cooperation or promote national interests. The
establishment of a dialogue (resulting from a positive cross-communication effort)
and the conduct of business with a sub-system could have consequences to the
equilibrium between sub-systems and supra-system.
In conclusion, cross-cultural communication:
•
•
•
•
52
Must be based on the principle of the smart-power, soft-power
and cultural approach as part of the conflict solution;
Has to be a tool to change the conflict approach with a cultural
approach; in brief, cross-cultural communication should be a
means (a tool), not the end (aim);
Should bring people together and build a bridge between
different cultures, positions, opinions;
Finally, it could support (but not substitute) the classic approach
to military operations.
See Lisa Schirch, Afghan Civil Society and a Comprehensive Peace Process, Peace Brief n. 99, United
States Institute of Peace, 21 July 2011.
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
3.2. Additional recommendations
The topics presented in this section are intended to illustrate a proposal
with limited costs and able to apply value to available sources (both inside and
outside NATO) while limiting direct and indirect risks to the safety of the
operators in the field while enabling them to accomplish the mission.
•
•
•
•
In regard to cultural training, in addition to the role of the SMEs in
cultural training activities during the pre-deployment phases, it is
recommended that, as needed, the employment of “on the field”
SMEs (as special cultural advisors) should take place. Doing so may
guarantee adequate and continued support to ongoing
operational activities.
The special contribution of SMEs will be the acquisition of
additional information useful for the support and facilitation of
the planning and decisional process as well as responding to
operational developments.
The advisory activity and analytical support of SMEs in the field
will contribute to the assessment and evaluation of the preemployment training activity, in an attempt to avoid deficiencies
in cross-communication skills and competence.
In addition, the analyses and assessments provided by SMEs will
contribute to the intelligence process. Such analyses,
systematically recorded, will then contribute to the creation of the
aforementioned OCN, which will be implemented as the result of
the information sharing policy.
In conclusion, a final consideration is offered. Correct and complete
assessments, adviceand analyses are based on the access to reliable, inclusive and
extended information. For this reason it would be useful to:
•
•
•
Guarantee access to information (unclassified and classified) to
academics, researchers, scholars and to all the SMEs able to
contribute to NATO missions;
Avoid the over-classification of recorded data, information and
reports, in order to make them available to a large number of
SMEs;
Revise the policy regarding the SMEs access to classified
information: possibly declassify data, information and reports
essential for socio-cultural analysis and social research.
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
Recommendations
•
Expand Cross-Cultural communication competences:
(1) Invest in cross-cultural competence training;
(2) Implement an Operational and Cultural Network
(3) Necessary to comprehend systems/sub-systems dynamics
and communication processes
•
Cross-cultural communication:
•
(1) Based on smart-power, soft-power and cultural approach;
(2) A tool to change the conflict approach with a cultural
approach;
(3) Bringing people together;
(4) Support (but not substitute) classic approach to military
operation.
Cultural Awareness Program (CAP) and Cultural advisor:
•
•
(1) Individual risk reduction
(2) “On the field” Subject Matter Expert (a Special Cultural
advisor)
“On the field” SME’s capabilities and requirements:
(1) High professional and cultural background;
(2) “Gender” operational capacity;
(3) Contribute to the intelligence process
Learning methodology:
(1) Basic and advanced Training;
(2) Multidisciplinary approach to cultural environment;
(3) Distance learning MCOOS (Massive Open Online Course).
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
CHAPTER 4
DYNAMICS OF THE LOCAL SITUATION
Dr. Itamara LOCHARD (Panel
leader)
LTC (Ret.) Luděk MICHÁLEK
COL (Ret.) Benjamin CLARK
Mrs. Lesley SIMM
Dr. Haaris AHMAD
Prof. Dean C. ALEXANDER, LLM
MAJ Peter KOVÁCS
Monterey Institute of International
Studies and the Fletcher School of Law &
Diplomacy, USA
Police Academy of the Czech Republic,
CZE
US Army Contractor, USA
Allied Rapid Reaction Corps (ARRC),
NATO
University of Duisburg-Essen, DEU
Western Illinois University, Macomb,
Illinois, USA
NATO HUMINT Centre of Excellence
1. Introduction
The Human Aspect of the Operational Environment (HAOE) encompasses
actors and factors that military forces need to understand and/or influence to
effectively support the host nation. Opponents seek to maximize these same
elements via lethal and non-lethal mechanisms.
Understanding the plethora of contemporary, human local dynamics in
theatre is therefore a critical component of a successful operation and a
stable peace. Despite the salience of this analysis, there is no clear HAOE
doctrine to define and frame dynamics of the local situation.
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This lacuna adversely impacted operations in UNOSOM in the 1990s,
recent efforts in Libya, NATO ISAF COIN missions, as well as others. Although
these lessons highlight the need for planning that embraces a clear understanding
of local dynamics in the HAOE, the slow pace of institutional change endemic to
large political and military entities is also quite problematic. This is particularly
relevant given that other actors in theatre do not share the same encumbrances
and adapt quickly to fluid dynamics.
Macro-level changes in contemporary conflicts and wars also impact the
local situation. The vast majority of twenty-first century conflicts no longer mirror
dynamics of the Westphalian, state-centric wars that have been analyzed by
academics as well as political and military leaders. It took 300 years since the
Peace of Westphalia in 1648 to establish 50 states. Since 1948, however, the
53
amount of countries has quadrupled. Therefore, it is not surprising that the
majority have fragile institutions with little evidence their process will be any
faster or smoother than the previous countries’ development.
In addition, there is now also a preponderance of local, regional, and
global actors at the sub-, national-, and supra-national levels who effectively
impact the conduct and termination of war. Their transnational reach is coupled
with their ability to maximize the ever-changing technological advancements of
this digital age. As a result, it is quite difficult to understand and thwart their
efforts. Adding to this complexity, many of these groups evolve and devolve;
employ different strategies and tactics; take shape in various organizational
structures; hold legitimacy among passive and active supporters alike; provide
para- or proto-state governance when a government cannot or will not; and
effectively use technology to communicate, attack, organize, recruit, retain and
54
influence other actors to include nation states.
Concomitantly, a mushrooming of international and non-governmental
organizations (NGO), corporations, and international organizations (IGOs) in
theatre also contribute to the fog of war. This additional layer of complexity is
apparent in collection activities related to intelligence as well as to the
53
Itamara Lochard, “Understanding Low Governance States: A quantitative and qualitative assessment
of armed groups, governance and intrastate conflict,” Medford, MA: Jebsen Center for CounterTerrorism Studies, The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, 2004; Itamara Lochard, ”Non-State
Armed Groups in Cyber-Conflict: Goals, organization and relationships,” paper presented at the U.S.
Office of the Secretary of Defense Highlands Forum, the Aspen Wye River Plantation, Maryland, April
2008; Itamara Lochard, “Non-State Armed Groups and the Dynamics of the Local Situation”, Working
Paper, Oradea, Romania: Human Aspects of the Operational Environment Project, NATO HUMINT
Center of Excellence, October 2012.
54
Ibid.
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
development of other organizations such as Civilian-Military Cooperation (CIMIC)
bodies. Their impact on the local situation must be factored into any effective
post-conflict, stabilization planning. For instance, the number of NGOs and IGOs
55
has increased by a factor of 300 and 10, respectively, in only a few decades.
Furthermore, the impact of transnational corporations (TNCs) operating in many
fragile states is also a factor. The top 50 TNCs had greater budgets than three56
quarters of existing states in 2006. Yet, despite their relevance, most non-state
actors are not reflected in international laws and are frequently not considered in
traditional intelligence analyses.
An understanding of the challenges faced by multinational forces also
merits consideration. Disturbances posed by short rotation cycles, various levels
of clearances, and the potential to impact the economic and societal fabric of the
host nation cannot be overstated and require extreme vigilance. In addition, there
are complexities due to language and translation/interpretation issues, which are
not only apparent in the multinational nature of the cadre of forces but also can
be seen when dealing with a local population. Finally, there is also friction caused
by various types of military cultures within one nation as well as among multiple
ones operating in theatre.
Other key changes in contemporary crises which impact the local
dynamics are the ‘net-speed’ environment in which operations take place. The
decrease of seasoned reporters to meet the demands of the 24-hour/7-day per
week news cycle as well as the role of social media has changed the definition and
impact of ‘live news’, ‘weapon’, and ‘enemy’. This places a greater onus on
leaders to evaluate and respond to events quickly and appropriately to manage
the contagion effect. In addition, more senior leaders must rely on younger, more
technically adept staff that do understand technological threats but are not
seasoned enough to make appropriate decisions. The increased
interconnectedness of this information era equally helps friendly and enemy nonstate actors who can more easily coordinate operations and finance activities
undetected. Furthermore, this cyber age also affords non-state armed groups a
57
reach that used to be relegated only to states.
55
Ibid.
Ibid.
57
Lochard, 2004, 2008, October 2012; Lesley Simm, “Competing Narratives, Identities and Loyalties”
Working Paper, Oradea, Romania: Human Aspects of the Operational Environment Project, NATO
HUMINT Center of Excellence, October 2012; Haaris Ahmad, “Strategic Factors in the Dynamics of the
Local Situation”, Working Paper, Oradea, Romania: Human Aspects of the Operational Environment
Project, NATO HUMINT Center of Excellence, October 2012.
56
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
This first half of this chapter seeks to provide a blueprint of the crucial
components that comprise the dynamics of the local situation which need to be
incorporated into NATO planning and operations. This requires an analysis of how
narrative and identity in multiple locales has become a salient aspect is
conducted. In addition, the need to assess the nature of conflict in the
information age must be factored to include social media, strategic
communications, as well as both official and unofficial information flows. Third,
the economic footprint of operations on the local environment must be
considered.
The second half of the chapter focuses on mechanisms that can best
assist in analyzing the human elements in emerging local dynamics. For instance,
understanding the organizational structure of non-state armed groups is critical.
Likewise, employing ASCOPE (Area, Structures, Capabilities, Organizations,
People, and Events) to supplement traditional analysis is advocated. Furthermore,
elements of Social Cultural Analysis (SOCINT) and Social Network Analysis (SNA)
are defined and presented as under-utilized tools that can provide an effective
mechanism to understanding the connection between and among apparently
murky structures and changing actors. Recommendations on how and when to
best implement these mechanisms are provided.
Implications:
• The slow pace of institutional change is problematic.
• Since 1948 the number of nation-states has quadrupled; most have
fragile institutions whose development and progress is unlikely to be
smooth
• The preponderance of local, regional and global actors at various levels
may effectively impact the conduct and termination of war. The digital
age has enhanced their transnational reach, while their constant
evolution and devolution in various levels of complexity add to the
difficulty of understanding their strategy and tactics in order to thwart
them.
• Non-state actors also contribute to the fog of war, making their impact
on the local situation a critical component of effective post-stabilization
planning. Because international law rarely reflects the activities of non-
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
state actors, they are not often considered in traditional intelligence
analyses.
• Challenges faced by multinational forces must be taken into
consideration.
• Present day operations take place in a ‘net-speed’ environment, which
requires leaders to evaluate and respond to events swiftly in order to
manage the contagion effect. Both friendly and enemy elements can
benefit from the ability to coordinate operations or finance activities
without detection.
2. Key Components of the Dynamics of the Local Situation
The logical starting point to drafting an effective doctrine is to identify
the components that require assessment. Some generic information can be found
in various aspects of the operational area as such culture, religion, history,
economy, infrastructure, political factors, technology, geography/terrain, as well
as assessments on centre of gravity ecosystems, neighbours, competing
narratives, concepts of identity, loyalty, among other elements. However, the
spectrum of variables is extensive and can vary widely from one locale to another.
In addition, each of these factors is interlaced by a multitude of actors and
elements, creating a highly complex system. Continuous analysis is therefore
warranted. In particular, three components are key to understanding and
predicting major aspects in the dynamics of the local situation that relate to NATO
operations.
In addition to conducting layered assessments prior to an operation,
recognizing that influence from abroad in the form of states, proxies,
Diaspora populations, NGOs, corporations, international organizations, nonstate armed groups, as well as lone actors is key.
Moreover, understanding various actors’ goals, interactions between and
among them, their organizational patterns, and levels of legitimacy within a
population is required. Factoring the impact of regional and transnational trends
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and actors on local actors is also necessary. Another central component is
assessing who does or does not have access to various media, communication,
58
and technology – to include both official and unofficial information flows.
2.1. Competing Narratives, Identities, and Loyalties
59
As NATO has moved towards complex operations beyond members’
territories, there is the recognition that the Alliance must be prepared to respond
across the full spectrum of intervention scenarios “…that not only apply to the
prevention and mediation of conflict but also extends to the stabilization of
environments emerging from, or still in, violent conflict, in order to support
60
recovery and provide a platform for political, economic and social progress.”
According to the Oxford Dictionary definition, a narrative is “a spoken or written
account of connected events in order of happening”. Understanding the nature of
the narratives that cascade from elites to local communities and vary according to
the nature of governance can help guide the management of influence and
message. Furthermore, although ideally civil authorities should take the lead, in
the event of state collapse, or in the absence of a legitimate civil authority, it is
important to recognize that the military takes on the role of enabler.
“The success of both civil and military activities is determined in the
61
cognitive realm and is a function of key target perception”. This requires the
Alliance be able to identify aspects that comprise the local facets of narrative, and
appropriately manage that sense of shared identity, belonging, and loyalty.
In order to be effective, it is thus critical that the Alliance’s narrative be
framed in a manner that the target population understands. According to
multiple surveys, Afghans do not understand why the NATO is there despite
the existence of the Alliance’s detailed efforts to explaining its presence in
Afghanistan. Simply, NATO’s narrative document does not mesh with the
62
target population’s notion of the world.
58
Ibid.
Simm, October 2012.
60
NATO, “Allied Joint Doctrine for Counter Insurgency AJP-3.4.4,” 0012, February 2011, 0107.
61
NATO, “Allied Joint Doctrine, COIN 0111-0112.”
62
William Reeve, a veteran BBC World Service correspondent in Afghanistan, fluent in Dari and Pashto,
friend to Taliban and Afghan government figures, has asserted in multiple venues that Afghans have
said they want security above all else over the last three decades. In general, they are not aware of
59
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
This highlights an inherent dichotomy in the manner in which various
regions developed which should be considered when developing future
narratives. For Alliance countries the idea of ‘the people’ as a unified force
overrode the regional and the local, suppressing diverse languages and cultures in
the interests of a national narrative. This has been the lens through which we
have viewed and measured ‘the other’ across the world. However, this
progression of events is not universal. Elsewhere, oral history, local, communal
memories, family/tribal accounts, and narratives are more deeply embedded,
rooted, and more enduring than any other recent imposition of state boundaries
in the Westphalian or international model. In such locales, these are the
narratives that are most important in understanding people and place in the
event of military interventions. They are also the narratives and loyalties that can
be manipulated to challenge security and stability, or managed to create a
permissive environment for dialogue, co-operation and consent which can be lost
63
as well as won.
The impact of how ‘human rights’ is defined, enforced, and policed by
nations in the international community is also a factor. Even though there are
fundamental shared values, however, in large parts of the world lip service is paid
to human rights. The perceived ‘imposition’ of western values can cause
incomprehension and resentment. For instance, gender roles vary greatly across
nations. In addition, often the solution to a crisis is portrayed as a separation of
religion and politics via the creation a civil, secular, state. However, this is
contradictory to organizational structure of devout Muslim countries. Another
conflating issue is that these concepts of democratic process and the rule of law
are transmitted to the local community level through the very same media that
64
has contributed to radicalization and violent mobilization.
In addition, there are some commonalities to consider such as notions of
patriotism and groups identifying with the nation through a construction of a
communal, collective past. There are recognisable themes and subjects of
dynamics beyond their borders, have not fully registered the impact of 9/11, have a loose attachment
to any idea of centralised authority, and are a largely illiterate tribal society; Simm, October 2012
63
For instance, the impact of operational blunders in the war against the Taliban, high casualty cost to
the Afghan civilian population and the immediate, opportunistic influence exploitation by the Taliban,
drastically undermined consent and support both for the National government and for ISAF. See the
UK PCRU “Hot Stabilisation: Helping Countries Recover from Violent Conflict” May 2007; Simm,
October 2012.
64
Simm, October 2012.
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
national history, with stories of sacrifice, endurance, struggle, pain, and pride
made concrete by the erection of monuments, commemoration on currency, road
names, national days, and remembered events that reach back centuries to
65
reinforce the collective identity. Every nation has them.
A third element to factor is that the shaping of narrative is fluid and
continuous. Increasingly, religious faith and affiliation are transcending notions of
patriotism and either feeding into national narratives or minority groups as a
means of strengthening identity. At local levels these sentiments are being
manipulated by radicalisers to create to create tensions, enhance sense of
grievance, and play on desires for religious purity and exclusivity, sectarianism,
revolutionary mobilisation, or conversely, resistance to change, progress, and
development. Moreover, changes in global society take different turns in different
locales even within the same region, as witnessed recently in variations of the
Arab Spring across the Middle East and North African (MENA) countries. Here, the
evolution of new narratives and loyalties is apparent. The management or mismanagement of this process can be profound in the consequences for subsequent
66
stability and security.
The Venn diagram below (Figure 1) of greed, creed, and grievance is a
framework to illustrate the interlinking regional and local complexities. Here
genuine and perceived injustices and grievances of communities and peoples
along with struggle for recognition, rights or justice overlap with struggles over
resources, monopolies, exploitation, and plunder. In such instances, the
coherence of a religious or political creed can be the catalyst for rebellion or
resistance. Communities perceiving a threat to metaphysical security by the
abstract character of the modern often seek to ‘de-modernise’, returning to an
67
imagined past with an uncomplicated narrative that provides simple answers.
An example of this can be seen with contemporary dynamics of the Tuareg in
68
Mali.
65
Ibid.
Ibid.
67
Nandy, A., Twighlight of Certitude,”Alternatives: Global, Local and Political, Vol. 22, No. 2 (April-June
1997; Simm, October 2012.
68
Simm, October 2012.
66
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
Figure 4.1: Factors Impacting Narratives
There are a few contributing factors to this interaction. People retreating
into a single ethnic or religious identity are vulnerable to having grievances
reinforced by perceived inequality and institutionalised discrimination. Societies
with a shared experience of discrimination and exclusion are also more
susceptible to a single narrative, which binds together multiple sources of
resentment and proposes a simple solution. In addition, the failure of the state to
provide security and justice, made worse by an oppressive and predatory security
69
sector will fuel disloyalty.
Recent events in Syria also demonstrate this process. Here, ineffective or
blocked political participation, widespread corruption of the political process,
elite domination, erosion of tribal authority, suppressed election results, and little
hope of change create frustrations. Coupled with the failure of organized civil and
political groups to achieve change despite attempting to engage with the state by
peaceful means (meetings, marches, and demonstrations), resistance becomes
polarised into ethnic, linguistic, and religious groupings with diminishing common
ground. This produces exclusive political agendas, which in turn, can fuel conflict
and sectarianism. Often in such circumstances, groups that are banned for calling
for political rights or equality typically go underground. For instance, the ANC,
Muslim Brotherhood, and Sinn Fein each continued to work with a clear narrative
to build up strong constituencies of support with appealing solutions and military
70
wings ready to take direct, violent action.
69
70
Simm, October 2012.
Ibid.
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At the individual level, the search for personal and group identities can
lead to conflict with national and communal loyalties. The use of the Internet has
made access beyond state boundaries effortless and outside the control of the
moderating influences of families and communities. Loyalty to international
groups such as the Umma, Global Anti-Capitalist Movement, Greenpeace, or
Animal Rights confers a transcendent solidarity. Moreover, this same
technological advancement has also spread simplistic narratives that generate
grievances and outrage and exclude alternative ideas, explanations or
71
perspectives.
Other facets in a society can also impact narrative. For example, ideals
of masculinity and honour are increasingly difficult to fulfil in some societies and
the loss of self-esteem can be considerable for young men. Living out a dream as
a warrior in societies that have left behind those notions can lead to fantasy
narratives. In addition, centres of education, especially those that operate
learning by rote, can manipulate narratives, especially regarding religious and
doctrinal purity, suspicion, and rejection of ‘otherness’. It can also lead to
alienation from civil authority and hatred of wealth and corruption, in contrast to
72
the poverty and virtue of the religious group.
Implications of Competing Narratives, Identities and Loyalties:
• The components that require assessment must be identified
• However, the spectrum of variables can vary widely from one locale to
another. Additionally, each of these factors is interlaced by a multitude of
actors and elements, creating a highly complex system, which warrants
constant analysis.
• The perceived imposition of western values can cause incomprehension
and resentment.
• Commonalities such as notions of patriotism and groups who identify
with the nation through a construction of a communal, collective past
must be considered.
• The shaping of a narrative is a fluid and continuous process. Religious
faith and affiliation are increasingly transcending notions of patriotism
and are feeding into national narratives or minority groups as a means of
strengthening identity.
71
72
Ibid.
Ibid.
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
• The coherence of a religious or political creed can be the catalyst for
rebellion or resistance. Communities that perceive a threat to
metaphysical security by an abstract character of the ‘modern’ will often
seek to ‘de-modernise’ and return to an imagined past with an
uncomplicated narrative that provides simple answers.
• Societies with a shared experience of discrimination and exclusion are
often more susceptible to a single narrative that brings together multiple
sources of resentment and proposes a simple solution.
• At the individual level, the search for personal and group identities can
conflict with national and communal loyalties.
• Other facets in a society, such as idealizations of masculinity or honour,
can create fantasy narratives that may conflict with national or
communal loyalties.
2.2. NATO Troops and Doctrine as a Facet of the Local Situation
73
Second, it is important to be cognizant of the impact of various doctrines
and policies by NATO, coalition partners, host nations, non-NATO actors, as well
as interagency relationships on the local population. According to the Chinese
warrior philosopher Sun Tzu, “know yourself and you will win all battles”, but too
often NATO operations fail to account its own organizational dynamics in the
study and understanding of the HAOE and dynamics of the local situation.
This requires the need to assess the interaction and synchronization of
political objectives effectively supported by the timely application and the
right mix of military and civilian operations, capabilities, and activities.
There is also no policy to address the reality of interacting with complex
social and tribal relationships and determining whom to support. There is also the
need to create a methodology on how to obtain information on the region in
question to provide dispassionate views on effective interaction, social customs,
73
Benjamin Clark, “NATO Troops in the Dynamic of the Local Situation”, Working Paper, Oradea,
Romania: Human Aspects of the Operational Environment Project, NATO HUMINT Centre of
Excellence, October 2012; Ahmad, October 2012.
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
and how to best approach the HAOE. Finally, the role of historical colonial or
military relationships in an area of operation should inform actions but must be
74
assessed for biases.
Language translation remains a key challenge in many operational areas
for NATO, but it also remains a challenge within NATO. Notwithstanding NATO’s
published guidance and standing requirements for English and French, language
remains a barrier to effective partnership, training, education, and operations
across NATO. If there is an inability to effectively communicate amongst the
Alliance, consider the challenges of understanding local dynamics working
through an interpreter in another language. Civilian–military (civ-mil) dynamics
also remains a vital weakness within NATO and partner nations. Professional
education, exchange schooling and assignments, and routine collaborative civ-mil
planning are the exception, not the rule amongst NATO nations and military
operations. Robust military capability is often inappropriately substituted when
civilian capacity is lacking, which creates problems in terms of expectations as
well as perceived equities. For instance, despite the best of plans, ISAF’s 20092011 troop surge was not accompanied by a similar/parallel surge in civilian
75
capacity.
Standard ISAF troop/unit rotations of 4, 6, or 12 months also run afoul of
the basic human/cultural instincts of most Afghans, which is to seek and maintain
long-term rather than transactional relationships. The well-documented effects of
constant ISAF troop turnover erode continuity and leads to fighting the war six
months at a time, which is not lost on our Afghan partners, who have seen an
endless stream of ISAF partners and mentors over the last 10 years. In addition,
national, service, and branch/community culture amongst NATO nations and
partners also pose a challenge. An example of NATO and national cultural
challenges is apparent when, for instance, posting an Army light infantry officer to
76
work with a naval submarine engineering officer.
The cultural, language, and social challenges and differences are quite
apparent. Success in leading change in an area of operation is often tied to
effectively understanding these complex dynamics and adjusting actions,
responses, and words accordingly. However, there will be disparities among the
strategic, operational, and tactical levels of interpreting these aspects. Hence the
need to harmonize these views and adjust accordingly is needed.
74
Ibid.
Ibid.
76
Ibid.
75
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
Implications of NATO Troops and Doctrine as a Facet of the Local Situation
• The impact of various NATO doctrines and policies, as well as those of
coalition partners, host nations, non-NATO actors and interagency
relationships on the local population must be kept in mind.
• There is a need for a methodology on how to obtain information on the
region in question in order to provide dispassionate views on effective
interaction, social customs and how best to approach the HAOE.
• The role of historical colonial or military relationships in an area of
operation should inform actions but must also be assessed for biases.
• Language translation remains a key challenge for NATO in many
operational areas, and is also a challenge within NATO. Language
remains a barrier to effective partnership, training, education and
operations across NATO. If this is a challenge within NATO, consider the
challenges of understanding local dynamics in another language while
working through an interpreter.
• Standard troop/unit rotations of a few months to a year may run counter
to those societies that seek to develop and maintain long-term
relationships.
2.3. Economic Footprint of NATO Operations on the Local Situation
77
A third critical aspect to consider in assessing the local situation is that
any foreign intervention tends to further complicate an already complex local
situation. Introducing a significant external actor or group of actors (e.g., different
military units, plus diplomatic and development assistance organizations, in
addition to international and non-state actors such as NGOs) understandably
creates misbalance in an already fragile local equilibrium. Moreover, although
foreign intervention will bring money and other resources into the local society, it
will also yield unavoidable economic repercussions (price level, rent, labour
77
Dean C. Alexander, “Facilitating Economic Activity in Conflict Zones”, Working Paper, Oradea,
Romania: Human Aspects of the Operational Environment Project, NATO HUMINT Centre of
Excellence, October 2012; Clark, October 2012; Peter Kovacs, “Economic Aspects of the Local
Situation”, Working Paper, Oradea, Romania: Human Aspects of the Operational Environment Project,
NATO HUMINT Center of Excellence, October 2012; Clark, October 2012, Ahmad, October 2012.
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market, and new patterns of consumption). Likewise new incentive structures
78
may strengthen or weaken sectors of the local economy.
NATO operations have the potential to produce both positive and negative
effects on local economies, and rarely is there no impact whatsoever – there is
almost always a footprint/outcome of NATO operations whether planned or
unplanned, controlled or deliberate, or unintended and emerging.
The amount and type of impacts created by NATO operations on a local
economy is influenced by many factors including size, scale, and duration of
operations; amount, character, and length of combat and kinetic operations; and
the degree and effectiveness of comprehensive/whole of nation/whole of
government planning and coordination. NATO forces own cultural awareness,
preparation, and consideration of the human aspects of the operational
environment vis à vis the local economy is a key determining factor, but the law
of unintended consequences frequently prevails. Hence, the best NATO intentions
and planning may be undone by complex and changing operational realities,
failure to fully understand and interact with human/social/cultural factors, and
79
the realities of coalition politics and warfighting.
For instance, the generally well-intended flow of donor-nation funding,
aid, contractors, and jobs in Afghanistan over many years produced many results
– not all positive and not all intentional. In fact, in the absence of a long-term
multi-national, coherent, and coordinated economic aid strategy for Afghanistan,
many will argue that corruption, criminal patronage networks, and failure of
government institutions are attributable, in part, to ill-conceived and poorly
executed western economic aid. The converse is also true. Afghan
communications, hospitals, schools, roads, electrical, and other infrastructure are
80
incredibly improved since 2002. Both views are accurate.
As NATO operations begin and continue over time in any given Area of
Responsibility (AOR), local economies have potential for explosive growth and
development to provide cash flow for fledging governments, while concurrently
new market forces may be created with unintended and often dire consequences.
78
Ibid.
Clark, October 2012.
80
Ibid.
79
112
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
The introduction of hard currency to the fabric of fragile states’, lethal
competition for lucrative resources and power relationships, the emergence of
new banking practices and industry, flagrant money-laundering, increased
corruption at all levels, black marketing of or related to NATO fuel, supplies, and
equipment, in addition rapid growth of criminal patronage networks seeking to
leverage new opportunities may all be caused directly or develop as a result of
NATO operations, particularly in the absence of effective whole of government/
whole of nation planning. Depending on conditions and economic expertise
available, destructive economic trends may or may not be readily identifiable or
preventable. Fledgling host nation financial, economic, and government
institutions may or may not be able to discern and respond, or they may in fact be
part of the tidal wave of change that sweeps over limited government
institutions. The long historical record of frequent problems and major economic
challenges with black marketing, corruption, and secondary markets is not new to
military operations, yet NATO and ISAF planners were apparently surprised by
these trends in Afghanistan, or at least unable to respond effectively over the
81
course of 10 years of operations.
Following the rapid success of military operations in Iraq in 2003, the
subsequent dismantling of Iraqi armed forces and Baathist party purges left
hundreds of thousands of young Iraqi men without work, disenfranchised, and
hungry. Coalition and U.S. planners failed to prepare for and mitigate a vast array
of destructive economic impact on post-combat operations and military defeat of
the Iraqi Army. The complex new economic situation compounded sectarian
violence, challenged the emergence of new Iraqi government institutions, and
undercut efforts to stabilize the situation. The harsh lessons of failures in planning
and execution of post combat economic and other vital whole of government
efforts in Iraq paint a grim but clear picture of how of economic issues and NATO
82
operations are intertwined.
In addition, the influx of resources can easily lead to or strengthen
corruption, and thus undercut governance or the juridical systems. Relatively
well-paid jobs with foreign or international organizations may unbalance the
labour market or channel more qualified personnel into higher-paid but lowquality jobs, as evidences by professors or engineers who become drivers,
translators, among other dynamics. If foreign intervention includes significant
military forces, these might lead to a different balance of power in the host
nation, or it might produce opposition or resistance towards the outside military
81
82
Ibid.
Ibid.
113
HUMINT Centre of Excellence
presence. In any case, it will necessarily make the foreign forces into a local power
83
centre.
This might unfold as outsiders being in a supporting role to a functioning
and legitimate government. Or it might turn the outside forces into just another
militia amongst many others. In either scenario, a significant foreign armed
presence cannot help but become a key local power player. As a result, local
power dynamics cannot be unchanged by an intervention. Generally, they will
become even more complex. Even if a foreign intervention plainly aims at
stabilizing a local government, is not just a technical operation, but a highly
political enterprise. This too is not avoidable, but also a necessary goal of the
operation, if it is to succeed. According to the Field Manual Counterinsurgency of
the U.S. Army and Marine Corps, “The primary objective of any COIN operation is
to foster development of effective governance by a legitimate government ... A
COIN effort cannot achieve lasting success without the HN (host nation)
84
government achieving legitimacy”.
Moreover, in certain instances, an intervening multinational force can be
the most important economic actor locally. War and post-conflict periods directly
impact production, trade, employment, human resources, and the prevalence of
illicit markets. Limited electricity and transport capacities undermine economic
development, including job growth, while simultaneously raising the costs of
85
For instance, infrastructure needs for “rural farming
doing business.
communities include transport and communication services, energy, water and
86
irrigational facilities and extension services”.
In order to create effective entrepreneurship training in the stabilization phase
of an operation, the Alliance needs to cater training to local requirements as
87
well as partner with entities with a record of success.
83
Ahmad, October 2012; Alexander, October 2012; Clark, October 2012.
US Army/US Marine Corps, Counterinsurgency Field Manual FM 3-24, Chicago 2007, p. 37 (emphasis
added); Ahmad, October 2012.
85
Iyer, L. & I. Santos. (2012, June). Creating jobs in South Asia's conflict zones. Policy research working
papers, 6104, 2, supra note 13. World Bank. Retrieved from
http://econ.worldbank.org/external/default/main?pagePK=64165259&theSitePK=469372&piPK=6416
5421&menuPK=64166093&entityID=000158349_20120625094609 ; Alexander, October 2012.
86
Unlocking the African Moment – Rural Infrastructure in Africa. (2012). DSM paper series,
Development Support Monitor 2012. Retrieved from http://www.africanmonitor.org/am_dsm.html;
Alexander, October 2012.
87
For instance, the “most popular sectors that Liberian women are seeking skills training in are
restaurants, catering, retail, agribusiness, and tailoring…. In Afghanistan, the [10,000 Women program]
84
114
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
In addition, special safe economic zones may need to be created. These
88
offer duty-free imports, solid infrastructure, with a goal of encouraging exports.
“SEZs have been established in several post-conflict countries, helped attract
foreign investors, and spurred job creation. Despite these positive aspects, it is
equally important to recognize that NATO may also interfere with the interests of
local power brokers or illicit markets. This may increase local tensions and/or
violence. Hence, both macro and micro economic factors of troops in the local
89
area must be carefully assessed.
In addition, a multitude of partnerships between and among
government, business, business associations, and nongovernmental institutions
have promoted commerce and assuaged the levels of conflict. Such relationships
have also fostered the development and adherence by many companies to
voluntary codes of conduct connected with their business activities. These
“partnerships have helped businesses understand the role they play in areas like
human rights, equity and violent conflict as well as helped setting standards of
90
behaviour”. Hence, an assessment of the role of such entities on the ground,
how they are perceived by multiple other actors, their impact on the local
dynamic, as well as potential areas of conflict and/or cooperation to affect greater
91
efficiency of effort is warranted.
There are a number of governmental organizations that aid in
contributing economic vitality. For instance, the U.S. Department of Defense’s
Task Force for Business and Stability Operations (TFBSO), seeks “to reduce
violence, enhance stability, and restore economic normalcy in areas where unrest
and insurgency have created a synchronous downward spiral of economic
hardship and violence. TFBSO creates stabilization by developing economic
opportunities through a range of efforts, including encouraging investment by U.S.
and international businesses, developing a country’s natural resources in a way
that is economically sound and environmentally responsible, and assisting
92
industrial development and agricultural revitalization”. “TFBSO had ample
is administered through the Thunderbird School of Global Management and the American University
of Afghanistan (AUAF). The most popular sectors among women entrepreneurs are construction, food
production, and handicrafts (i.e., woodworking and silk). The program aims to train 300 women in 5
years,” Lemmon, G.T. (2012, May). Entrepreneurship in post-conflict zones. Working paper, Council of
Foreign Relations, supra note 16, at 12; Alexander, October 2012.
88
Iyer & Santos, supra note 13, at 20; Alexander, October 2012.
89
Alexander, October 2012.
90
Evers, T. (2010, December 6). Doing business and making peace? Occasional papers, 3, 16.
Utrikepolitiska Institute, supra note 3, at 17; Alexander, October 2012.
91
Alexander, October 2012.
92
http://tfbso.defense.gov/www/index.aspx; Alexander, October 2012.
115
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successes while it operated in Iraq, and, presently provides important economic
development activities in Afghanistan. More specifically, TFBSO have been
primarily concentrated in the minerals, energy, indigenous industries, agriculture,
93
and information technology sectors of the Afghan economy”.
Likewise, there are many non-governmental organizations that assist in
economic development globally. Examples are the World Bank, International
Monetary Fund, International Finance Corporation, regional development banks
(i.e., Asian Development Bank, African Development Bank, Latin American
94
Development Bank), among others. Also, national finance and development
institutions (i.e., Overseas Private Investment Corporation, and U.S. Agency for
International Development) among many others, succours in economic
95
development. There are also various non-profit organizations that undertake
economic development and business accelerator activities in conflict zones and
developing countries including. For instance, Mercy Corps provides “financing,
equipment, training or technical support. These projects help people find jobs,
build their businesses, supply their communities with the goods they need —and
96
improve their lives”. Also, “Mercy Corps-sponsored microfinance institutions,
savings and credit cooperatives, loan-guarantee programs, and technical support
97
reach more than one million people in over a dozen countries”.
Bpeace is “a non-profit coalition of business professionals offering probono access to our expertise, technical assistance, networks and proven
methodologies to help entrepreneurs expand their businesses into sustainable and
profitable enterprises. [They] select motivated entrepreneurs we call Fast Runners
to receive access to our services”. The organization operates in Afghanistan and
98
Rwanda, and plans to initiate activities in Bosnia and El Salvador. Cherie Blair
Foundation “invest[s] in women entrepreneurs so they can build and expand their
businesses - and in doing so benefit not only themselves but also their families and
communities. The Foundation focuses its efforts on Africa, Asia and the Middle
East in countries where women have made strides in education and have the
93
Ibid.
http://www.worldbank.org/; http://www.imf.org/external/index.htm;
http://www1.ifc.org/wps/wcm/connect/corp_ext_content/ifc_external_corporate_site/home ;
www.iadb.org; www.adb.org; www.afdb.org/en/; www.isdb.org; Alexander, October 2012.
95
http://www.usaid.gov/; http://www.opic.gov/;
http://www.deginvest.de/EN_Home/About_DEG/index.jsp ;
http://www.cofides.es/english/Default.aspx ; Alexander, October 2012.
96
http://www.mercycorps.org/topics/economicdevelopment ; Alexander, October 2012.
97
http://www.mercycorps.org/topics/microenterprise; Alexander, October 2012.
98
http://www.bpeace.org/about-us/impact.html; Alexander, October 2012.
94
116
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
99
potential to succeed in business but lack the necessary support”. Other examples
include, the Small Enterprise Impact Investment Fund increases access of capital
100
to small and medium-sized enterprises in developing countries. Business Edge,
part of the International Finance Corporation, offers training seminars and selfstudy books for mangers and business owners of small and medium-size
101
companies in developing countries.
Assessing the current and/or potential role of these actors in a post conflict
phase is critical. Influence (both positive and negative) on powerbrokers, local
and national government institutions, and rule of law must be ascertained.
While NATO has tremendous capability to plan and conduct successful
military operations, it is frequently the non-military functions including rule of
law, governance, development, and economic opportunity that drives the
eventual outcome of NATO operations. Stability operations also require inherent
understanding and consideration of economic issues as instability and economic
opportunity are linked. Local actors are quick to seize new economic
opportunities generated by the influx of tens of thousands of NATO combat and
support soldiers and facilities but far too often the legitimate needs of the local or
102
national government are lost or stolen due to inadequate planning.
Implications of the Economic Footprint of NATO Operations on the Local
Situation
• Any foreign intervention will complicate an already complex local
situation, and will yield unavoidable economic repercussions. Likewise,
new incentive structures may strengthen or weaken sectors of the local
economy.
• Even the best intentions of NATO may be undone by complex and
99
http://www.cherieblairfoundation.org/about-us; Alexander, October 2012.
http://www.symbioticsgroup.com/news/latest-news/seiif-oxfam-and-symbiotics-targetinvestment-industry-with-new-sme-fund; Alexander, October 2012.
101
http://www.businessedge-me.com/cms.php?id=about_be_what_is_business_edge; Alexander,
October 2012.
102
Alexander, October 2012.
100
117
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•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
118
changing operational realities, the failure to fully understand and interact
with human/social/cultural factors and the realities of coalition politics
and warfighting.
NATO operations over time in any AOR may bring about explosive growth
and development that will provide cash flow for fledgling governments,
while concurrently, new market forces may be created that may result in
unintended or dire consequences.
Depending on conditions and available economic expertise, destructive
economic trends may or may not be readily identifiable or preventable.
The influx of resources can easily lead to or strengthen corruption,
thereby undercutting governance or the judicial system.
A significant foreign armed presence cannot help but become a key local
power player. As a result, local power dynamics cannot be unchanged by
an intervention. Even if the objective is to stabilize a local government, a
foreign intervention is not just a technical operation but also a highly
political enterprise.
In certain circumstances, an intervening multinational force can be the
most important economic actor locally.
Special safe economic zones may need to be created. However,
interference by NATO in the interests of local power brokers or illicit
markets may increase local tensions and/or violence.
While a variety of partnerships between public and private entities may
promote commerce and minimize the effects of conflict, the role of these
entities on the ground, how they are perceived by other actors, their
impact on the local dynamic and potential areas of conflict/cooperation
in order to affect a greater efficiency of effort is warranted.
Numerous governmental and non-governmental organizations that can
assist economic development.
NATO has tremendous capability to plan and conduct successful military
operations, but frequently the non-military functions drive the eventual
outcome of NATO operations.
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
3. Tools to Assess Actors in the Local Situation
By definition, understanding the dynamics of the local situation requires
an examination of all actors involved. Two tools are delineated here provide a
micro-analysis of networks. The first defines group dynamics and structures while
the second set focuses on dynamics amongst individuals. Each approach provides
key information re local actors as well as their connection to other local, national,
regional, and/or transnational actors.
3.1. Understanding Non-State Armed Groups on the Local Situation
103
There is very little analysis on the organizational structure of non-state
armed groups. This is due to the plethora of large data sets measuring only
certain types of groups, difficulties in harmonizing definitions which leads to
disparate metrics, and the often exclusion (until recently) of criminal, gang, and
other local groups that have the reach and power of many states. The Lochard
model metric merges these various large datasets, along with individual research
on each group, into one totalling ~1,750 insurgents, terrorists, militias, criminal
organizations, gangs, and malicious cyber actors greater than 1,000 in strength
who have been active at least once from 1996 to the present. It then layers these
data with metrics of governance correlated as well since 1996 to the present,
areas of operation, para-state capabilities, as well as technological reach. New
typologies of groups are presented along with the organizational structures in
which they may appear, evolve, or devolve. By employing this model, a portrait of
104
non-state armed groups’ role in the local situation can be obtained.
The Lochard model categorizes the groups in the dataset according to
function and or goal – international criminal organizations, millenarian or religious
extremist groups, insurgents/ revolutionaries, the New Left, and local actors. By
avoiding the sticky challenges related to defining and measuring terrorism and
103
Itamara Lochard, “Understanding Low Governance States: A quantitative and qualitative
assessment of armed groups, governance and intrastate conflict”, Medford, MA: Jebsen Center for
Counter-Terrorism Studies, The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, 2005; Itamara Lochard, “NonState Armed Groups in Cyber-Conflict: Goals, organization and relationships”, paper presented at the
U.S. Office of the Secretary of Defense Highlands Forum, the Aspen Wye River Plantation, Maryland,
April 2008; Itamara Lochard, “How Non-State Armed Groups and the Dynamics of the Local Situation”,
Working Paper, Oradea, Romania: Human Aspects of the Operational Environment Project, NATO
HUMINT Center of Excellence, October 2012.
104
Ibid.
119
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other typologies that other datasets face, this approach is able to capture a wider
set of actors while concomitantly avoiding smaller groupings that reflect only
minor criminality or protest rather than a effect based activity that aims to impact
a nation state. In addition, the organizational structure of each of the 1,750
groups is assessed, yielding five additional categories related to their
organizational structure – hierarchical, franchise, hub-spoke, core, and
flat/networked. Interestingly, each may appear, evolve or devolve into any of the
structural typologies inherent to each functional grouping, in no particular order.
There is no clear line of progression or dectralization for any of the sets
105
present.
The hierarchical model is where there is a clear head and chain of
command. This was for example typical of the large South American drug cartels
of the 1980s. The next is a franchise model where the exact same structure is
replicated in another AOR or type of commodity, akin to any corporate franchise.
Here, the head of each franchise reports to the main. Third, is a hub and spoke
model, wherein various types of groups of differing organizational structures are
at each end of the spoke. Their uniting force is the commodity(ies) or issue(s) in
which they cooperate (located in the hub). There is clear knowledge of being in a
106
network, but each has its own head, chain of command, structure, and goals.
A fourth depiction is the core model where non-state armed groups are
at various rings often unaware of other groups within their own or other rings. For
instance, the silk route demonstrates the long pattern and variation of
interconnected groups who form an effective chain. Unlike the hub and spoke
model, there is no clear connectivity between these groups, and they may have
various sizes and forms. Finally, there is the flat/networked pattern that has been
dubbed the future of conflict, with the clear example being al-Qaeda. However,
107
not all terrorist groups are flat; actually, most are not.
The same is true for the broader category of millenarian/religious
extremists. In addition, there is no empirical evidence that terrorist or other
groups naturally devolve towards a less hierarchical, loose network. There is no
doubt many groups do have this structure; however there are far greater
numbers in the other organizational typologies. Not realizing the true trajectory
105
Ibid.
Ibid.
107
Ibid
106
120
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
of how groups evolve will result in the inability to garner proper analysis of the
108
local situation and thus prolong conflicts.
In terms of functional categories, international criminal organizations
may appear in all five of these organizational patterns. They are also the most
prolific in terms of the use of technology. Here, however, it is primarily for profit
or the movement of illicit goods. Their business model dictates the economic goal
as well as a high connectivity to informal economies. Their area of operations
109
includes local, national, regional, transnational, as well as transit areas.
Figure 4.2: Lochard 2004 Model of Non-State Armed Groups’ Organizational Structures – Hierarchy,
Franchise, Hub-Spoke, Core, and Networked 110
Another category is millenarian or religious extremist groups that seek to
destroy, not disrupt, another people or state as their main objective. As such,
their targeting tends to be of civilian populations with very long planning times.
108
Ibid
Ibid.
110
Ibid.
109
121
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They are closely linked to international criminal organizations as well as marriages
of convenience with other groups. These tend to appear in the hub and spoke or
111
networked/flat structures.
A third category is the insurgent or revolutionary groups that do not seek
millenarian goals but are trying to change a political, economic, or territorial
aspect of a state. As such, they do not want to destroy the state. These are
primarily structured in hierarchical, franchise, and hub-and-spoke models. Unlike
the first two functional categories, these groups’ AOR is not transnational, but
rather local, national, and regional. Their sense of timing is usually shorter as well.
Moreover, their hubs tend to be in areas where culture and theology can support
112
their message and goals.
New Left structures are a fourth functional category that has emerged in
the past 20 years, seeking to keep the state in check by providing high para- or
proto-state governance capacities. Examples include very large gangs (upwards of
80,000 strong), violent anti-globalization groups, as well as violent single-interest
groups (such as violent variations of animal rights or environmental groups. They
are reactionary, operating mostly at the local and national levels. They are quite
structured appearing with hierarchical, franchise, and hub-and-spoke
113
organizational patterns. They too are not flat/networked either.
Local groups comprise the fifth category and are prolific in post-conflict
settings with very short-term goals. Typologies include militias, warlords, and
pirates. These usually provide no governance features to the populace and are
very loose in structure. A final category is strategic non-violent action as well as
cyber groups who employing cyber/technology as a primary manner in which to
organize or as a weapon. Examples can be gleaned from the orange, rose, tulip,
and cedar revolutions as well as recent uprisings in the Middle East North Africa
114
These have the three loosest organizational structures
(MENA) region.
(flat/networked, core, and wheel-and-spoke).
The key reason for employing such an analysis of non-state armed groups
is that it demonstrates how they are structured, provides patterns of evolution
and de-evolution, portrays linkages to other groups, as well as provides their
sense of timing and goals. All employ technology to cooperate, communicate,
finance, project power, and increase reach. Many also employ it for criminal
111
Ibid.
Ibid.
Ibid.
114
Ibid.
112
113
122
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
purposes, espionage, as well as to debilitate adversaries by launching technical
attacks. The levels of sophistication to do this only need to reside in one arm or
node of the network, and are rarely correlated with the overall typology of the
group. For instance, Afghanistan has one of the lowest levels of internet
penetration, yet non-state armed groups are prolific in the use of technology
there for strategic communications and other purposes. Because these groups
can adapt and morph to existing challenges rather easily, they are at a
considerable advantage as they can quickly adapt to maximize the situation on
the ground to their benefit, unlike the slow process of large militaries and/or
115
multinational forces.
3.2. Socio Cultural Intelligence (SOCINT) and Social Network Analysis (SNA)
116
Tools
Social Cultural Intelligence (SOCINT) is the process of directing and/or
directing data in any social science. This includes geography, anthropology,
psychology, economics, archaeology, religion, demography, criminology, and
political science. Analyzing, producing, and disseminating this data yields greater
situational awareness in any operational environment. Although, SOCINT is not a
recognized intelligence discipline, it is used in intelligence analyses that focus on a
local population’s composition, attitudes, and other human-related aspects. It is
not a new method. It is in line with current effects-based operations approach
that stresses the importance of garnering the local populations’ support and
117
limiting collateral damage.
Understanding of the structure and dynamic of the human operational
environment is one of the key elements of the success in most recent military
118
operations. Enemies are not only hierarchical as existed in the Cold War but
may take many organizational patters, evolve and devolve as well as shift
119
Peace support, counterinsurgency, and antiterrorism
allegiances often.
operations heavily depend on the support of the local population, hence the first
115
Ibid.
Lŭdek Michalek, “Development of Indicators: Essential Elements of Information for HAOE”, Working
Paper, Oradea, Romania: Human Aspects of the Operational Environment Project, NATO HUMINT
Center of Excellence, October 2012a; Lŭdek Michalek, “Social Network Analysis and Socio-Cultural
Intelligence – Basic Concepts and Usage”, Working Paper, Oradea, Romania: Human Aspects of the
Operational Environment Project, NATO HUMINT Center of Excellence, October 2012b.
117
Lŭdek, October 2012a, 2012b.
118
Ibid.
119
Lochard, October 2012a, 2012b.
116
123
HUMINT Centre of Excellence
demand is “to win hearts and minds”. This is impossible without deep knowledge
of local society – its structure, key leaders, group relations, and power
distribution. Any society exists in the form of social network where individual
120
members are connected to each other by specific relations or links.
One of the effective tools for getting such knowledge seems to be Social
Network Analysis (SNA), which allows getting complex insight into any social
network, to understand relationships that form social network, and also to
understand the specific position of the individual elements of interest of such
network. SNA is used in SOCINT to understand groups’ social, ethnic, religious,
121
tribal, sectarian, and religious composition. Examples of groups that can be
analyzed using this approach include political organizations, leaders, public media,
web page linkages, social-networking sites, criminal organizations, and other non122
state armed groups.
SNA is an approach to analyzing organizations that focuses on the
relationships between people and/or groups as the most important aspect. It
provides an avenue for analyzing and comparing formal and informal information
flows in an organization, as well as comparing information flows with officially
defined work processes. This applies equally to both active and passive
information. As such, this type of analysis helps determine position, power and
123
influence of each individual node in the network.
The first goal of SNA is to visualize communication and other
relationships between people and/or groups by means of diagrams. The second
goal is to study the factors that influence relationships and to study the
correlations between relationships. The third goal is to draw out implications of
the relational data, including bottlenecks where multiple information flows funnel
through one person or section (slowing down work processes), and situations
where information flows does not match formal group structures. The fourth and
most important goal of SNA is to make recommendations to improve
124
communication and workflow in an organization.
SNA as a method of studying social structures (networks) comes from
psychology method of sociometry. Most network analysts cite Joseph Moreno’s
120
Lŭdek, October 2012a, 2012b.
Ibid.
122
Ibid.; Lochard, October 2012.
123
Lŭdek, October 2012a, 2012b.
124
Erlich, Kate and Inga Carboni, Inside Social Network Analysis, Accessed 7 March 2012;
http://domino.research.ibm.com/cambridge/research.nsf/0/3f23b2d424be0da6852570a500709975/$
FILE/TR_2005-10.pdf; Lŭdek, October 2012a, 2012b.
121
124
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
introduction of the tools and methods of sociometry, in 1934 as the year in which
the formal analysis of social networks began. SNA became much more popular
with researchers in the early 1970s when advances in computer technology made
it possible to study large groups. Within the last ten years, SNA has risen to
prominence in a number of fields, including organizational behaviour,
125
anthropology, sociology, and medicine.
SNA has also been used in the business world to analyze communication
flows and increase their efficacy. In such instances is equally used to assess the
consumer, their network or an organization. Law enforcement is another area
where SNA has been prevalent to collect, trace, and identify communications of
criminals or other illicit non-state groups. SNA is also employed by social media
networking sites (e.g., Facebook or LinkedIn) to identify, recommend, or rank
potential friends/contacts, based on the analysis of the pattern of existing
contacts of a client. Civil society organizations also employ SNA to uncover
conflicts of interest in hidden connections between government bodies, lobbies,
and businesses. A final example of the use of SNA can be gleaned in the mobile
telephone and cable operators employing SNA-like methods to optimize the
126
structure and capacity of their network.
The main advantage of SNA in comparison with other traditional social
science methods is that a targeted social structure can not only be described but
can also effectively reveal the hidden connections that drive the network.
Obviously such a capability is very desirable for any type of assessment related to
the level of connectivity between or among individuals or groups. In current
stability or counterinsurgency operations, the use of SNA more than doubles the
ability to identify links, relationships, and position of the key individuals as well as
127
uncover hidden or not-obviously visible power or information nodes.
Structural characteristics can be attributed to networks as a whole.
These include the size (the number of persons who participate in it), the density
(proportion of existing social relationships compared to all possible relationships
in a network) and the cohesion of a network. This last characteristic refers to the
number of intensive and affective social relationships within networks. It is
assumed that social networks with many mutually affective relationships are
more permanent and durable than if they were only to consist of instrumental
relationships. Thus, for example, within many ethnically-based criminal groups
125
Ibid.
Lŭdek, October 2012a, 2012b.
127
Ibid.
126
125
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that there are affective and other forms of emotional relationships with family
128
members. These networks have stronger group cohesion as a result.
SNA uses several basic measures for description and analysis of the
129
It can
position, power, and influence of the each single node of the network.
be employed in any military or intelligence setting to better understand the
network. This includes the decision-making process, position and power of the
nodes, and information flows. SNA may also be employed to determine how to
eliminate, fight, and/or disrupt the activity of a targeted network, by determining
which information node is the most influential (see node 10 in Figure 4.3). It can
also identify how/where to best spread information; determine the most effective
area to cut the information in the network; and illuminate where a network can
be split (see green line in Figure 4.3).
Figure 4.3: Example of SOCINT/SNA
The quality and strength of the lines between nodes in a SNA help
examine are which relations are most important locally as well as the strength
and quality of relationships between individual elements of the network. For
example, families are important everywhere however variations in culture,
130
ethnicity, religion, politics, and economic factors can yield different dynamics.
128
Gerben Bruinsma and Wim Bernasco, Criminal groups and transnational illegal markets. A more
detailed examination on the basis of Social Network Theory, in Crime, Law & Social Change 41: 79-94,
2004. Nethelands: Kluwer Academia Publisher; Ludek, October 2012.
129
The following explanations of the basic SNA measures, including graphs are based, adapted and
quoted from Cheliotis, Giorgos. Social Network Analysis (SNA) including a tutorial on concepts and
methods,
National
University
of
Singapore.
[Accessed
5
October
2010];
http://www.slideshare.net/gcheliotis/social-network-analysis-3273045 ; Lŭdek, October 2012a, 2012b.
130
Lŭdek, October 2012a, 2012b.
126
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
Description and analysis of different social networks that are part of the
human operational environment is one of the key elements of successful
131
operational and intelligence planning process in most current conflicts.
Understanding the structure, control, and flow of information and identifying
and analyzing the position, power, and importance of any single element of
network is the basic knowledge for many passive as well as active kinds of
132
operations.
In a passive way such knowledge is important to evaluating of the impact
of one’s own military operations. In offensive kind of operations, knowledge of
the network is essential in determining possible avenues of exploitation for
information collection, psychological operations (PSYOPS), Force Protection,
133
elimination of the network activity, and other uses.
Current sophisticated SNA software tools are a very good and effective
analytical method for obtaining such knowledge. Moreover, many are free or of
little cost. Three of the most common commercial SNA tools are ORA, PAJECK and
IBMi2ANB. They can be used to manage large networks and data while provide
visualization tools to presentations easier, more effective, more flexible, and
easier to transfer. Compared to other network tools, it is quicker; however it is
time consuming to implement correct and complete data points. Mind-mapping
often helps as a first-step. These software tools measure five things: degreecentrality, betweeness centrality, like-betweeness, closeness centrality, and
134
eigenvector centrality.
Degree centrality measures a how many people one node is able to reach
or influence directly. The in/out numbers associated with it demonstrate the links
131
See for example Joint Intelligence Preparation of the Operational Enviroment. Joint Publication JP 201.3.
(June
2009),
p.
II-45
–
II-54
or
Counterinsurgency
FM
3-24/MCWP
3-33.5. (December 2006), p. B-10 – B-17; Lŭdek, October 2012a, 2012b.
132
For example SAGEMAN, Marc. (2004). Understanding Terror Networks deals with the global
terrorist networks and how they work while NANCE, Malcolm W. (2008). Terrorist Recognition
Handbook. A Practiitioner´s Manual for Predictions and Identifying Terrorist Activities provides more
practical instructions how to use the SNA in the fight agyinst terrorist groups and organizations; Lŭdek,
October 2012a, 2012b.
133
Ibid.
134
Lŭdek, October 2012a, 2012b.
127
HUMINT Centre of Excellence
into or out of the network. It measures the degree of connectedness, influence,
or popularity to assess which nodes are central to the spread of information /
influence to others. It demonstrates the immediate ‘neighbourhood’ of reach.
Here, numbers 3 and 5 have the highest degree or number of other nodes that it
135
can reach. Hence, it shows the most active members of the node.
Betweeness centrality measures how likely a node is the direct route between two
people. It identifies the ‘gatekeepers’ in the network as well as the paths running
thought them. It shows which nodes are likely to be in communications paths
between other nodes. As a result, it helps determine where the network will fall
apart if cut, and who will be cut. Here, node 5 has higher betweeness centrality
136
than 3.
Figure 4.4: Degree Centrality
Figure 4.5: Betweeness Centrality
Link-betweeness is related to this. It measures links between nodes and
helps identify critical nodes for communication inside the network. This is
137
identified in the circle below from IBMi2 Analysts’ Notebook program.
135
136
137
Ibid.
Ibid.
Ibid.
128
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
Figure 4.6: Link Betweeness
Closeness centrality measures speed of communication. It determines
how fast any one node can reach everyone in the network. Hence it measures the
shortest path. It is very useful where the dissemination of information is a key
factor. Here, the lower the number of a node, the higher the speed. Nodes 3
138
(1.33) and 5 (1.33) have the lowest values and thus the highest speeds.
Figure 4.7: Closeness Centrality
138
Figure 4.8: Eigenvector Centrality
Ibid.
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Eigenvector centrality measures how well a node is connected to other
well-connected nodes. The higher the eigenvector, the greater will be the
connectivity to other nodes with high eigenvectors. This is similar to how Google
determines page rankings or LinkedIn determines levels of influence by measuring
139
how many other highly connected people to whom one is connected.
As discussed in this section, the use of SNA can be employed in multiple
ways during an operation as well as prior to engaging. However, more training
and teaching of SNA methodology is needed to military, intelligence analysts, as
well as others. Likewise, SOCINT needs to be an established organizational
structure for both intelligence and non-intelligence uses. Inserting it in the
140
existing AJP 2 NATO publication and applied only when necessary (e.g., Peace
Support Operations, Crisis Response Operations and COIN). Likewise, SOCINT
should be included in the Joint Intelligence Centre (JIC) structure. The main use is
to support directional control of collection efforts in SOCINT and HAOE, provide
141
analysis of information, and produce relevant intelligence.
Implications Regarding the Use of Tools for the Assessment of Actors in the
Local Situation
• The primary reason for the analysis of non-state armed groups within the
local situation is that it demonstrates how they are structured, provides
patterns of evolution and de-evolution, portrays linkages to other groups
and provides their sense of timing and goals.
• An understanding of the structure and dynamic of the human
operational environment is one of the key elements of success in the
most recent military operations.
• Winning “hearts and minds” requires a deep knowledge of local society –
its structure, key leaders, group relations and power distribution. Any
society exists in the form of a social network where individual members
are connected to each other by specific reasons or links.
• Social Network Analysis (SNA) focuses on the relationships between
people/groups as the most important aspect. It serves to visualize
139
Ibid.
AJP 2 Allied Joint Intelligence, Counterintelligence and Security Doctrine. NATO HQ, 2003. [online]
[22-08-2012]
Available
from
WWW:
http://www.scribd.com/doc/73422647/4/SECTION-II%E2%80%93-INTELLIGENCE; Lŭdek, October 2012a, 2012b.
141
Lŭdek, October 2012a, 2012b.
140
130
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
communications between people or groups through the use of diagrams,
studies the factors that influence relationships and their correlations,
identifies the implications of the relationship data and makes
recommendations for the improvement of communication and workflow
within the organization.
• The main advantage of SNA is that a targeted social structure can be
described and the hidden connections that drive the network can be
revealed.
• More training in SNA methodology is needed for the military, intelligence
analysts and others. Also, Social Cultural Intelligence (SOCINT) should be
an established organizational structure for both intelligence and nonintelligence uses. SOCINT should be inserted in the existing AJP 2 NATO
publication and applied only when necessary.
4. Conclusion and Recommendations
The twenty-first century security environment faced by NATO includes
complex and constantly evolving asymmetric, unconventional, and irregular
threats posed by transnational actors and states wielding new technologies,
significant financial resources, powerful information, and strategic
communications tools. Often, they work with and through global narco-criminal
networks to threaten peace, stability, and regional security. Moreover, there
remains a continued grave threat posed by proliferation of nuclear, biological, and
chemical weapons and material.
Just as NATO’s security challenges have evolved from a bipolar cold war
setting, so too has NATO’s awareness of the inextricable relationship of
alliance political military objectives with Human Aspects of the Operational
Environment (HAOE). Whether it is expressed in the lexicon of populationcentric counterinsurgency, human terrain and geography, social network
analysis, or “hearts and minds of the people”, all point to the centrality of a
growing understanding of the HAOE and an appreciation of how NATO must
embrace, explore, and move forward to institutionalize it.
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While discussion of HAOE has not coalesced to the point of imminent
NATO doctrinal development, this critical topic routinely informs alliance political
and military leaders and command staff at all levels from whole of nation
planning efforts; to comprehensive operational planning; to planning,
coordinating, and executing tactical operations. Cliché perhaps, but it really is all
about people and relationships; who they are; and how we understand and
interact with them in increasingly complex and dynamic environments. This panel
briefly considers “Dynamics of the Local Situation” as a vibrant example of the
relevance of HAOE and considers the need for NATO to institutionalize HAOE
using a DOTMLPFI approach.
Understanding the Human Aspects of the Operational environment, and
specifically dynamics of the local situation, is not merely a nice supplement to
other analyses. It is a mission-essential component of planning and successful
execution of future NATO operations. Only a COPA/WoG/WoN approach will truly
enable the necessary cultural/organizational changes needed for future NATO
st
operations in the complex security environment of the 21 century. Below are
several recommendations on how to implement this.
Correct diagnosis of the local dynamics problem is essential
NATO will most likely face multiple challenges in future contingencies, so
it is important to get a detailed understanding of the dynamics of the target
political, security, economic and socio-cultural system. NA5CRO planning must
consider the be country-centric model addressing all this systems from the central
to local perspective. In developing this understanding, NATO should keep in mind
at least two views of the problematic situation: an external view and an internal
142
view . The inside view is from the perspective of both local officials and the
population. This view reflects long-standing tensions and struggles between key
local factions. The external view will probably reflect a series of functional
problems along the lines of the various stakeholders and agencies engaged in the
effort; some of them tend to define problems in terms of their own expertise
or/and interest.
142
C. Richard Nelson, How should NATO handle Stabilisation Operations and Reconstruction efforts?,
The Atlantic Council of the United States, Policy paper, 2006
132
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
It is assessed that reconciling these two views is essential for successful
of NATO Stability and Reconstruction operations. Given the goal of achieving a
locally led, sustainable peace, successful Stability and Reconstruction operations
will need to do more than just functional problem-solving. They need to
transform any local conflict into a situation in which key local leaders see it as in
their own self-interest to develop a process of collaborative decision-making—
away from a more typical zero-sum game view. With such requirements in mind,
a comprehensive understanding of the dynamics of the local political and security
systems is crucial. Such an understanding also can reduce the chances that S&R
resources may have the unintended consequences of exacerbating local rivalries.
Employ A Comprehensive Operations Planning Approach
Comprehensive Operations Planning/Whole of Government/Whole of Nation
(COP/WoG/WoN) approach to planning is vital from the first discussions of
potential operations at the most senior level. Leaders must direct and supervise
detailed and continuous collaborative planning and information-sharing
throughout the entire spectrum of NATO operations, with all stakeholders
present, engaged, and transparently communicating. Traditional approaches to
inter-service, interagency, or multi-national planning built on the model of
coordination and de-confliction will not suffice if complex factors are to be
effectively addressed throughout the planning and conduct of NATO operations.
Military planners and non-military planners and experts must come
together early enough, with a clear charter to work collectively, and remain
engaged throughout operations. Economic and political concerns, factors, and
outcomes must be addressed in an approach that will not be efficient or
comfortable for traditional military planners. Yet the failure to consider and
address the whole realm of economic factors in any given NATO operations
augurs badly for eventual success particularly in the realm of stability operations.
Allocate Appropriate Authorities and Resources to Comprehensive Planning
COPG/WoG/WoN as detailed Recommendation 5.1 is not within most
military planner’s comfort zone and it requires generational application of
focused leadership, patience, and new organizational culture. To be truly effective
this requires resources of time, money, human capital, the right facilities, and
support. Despite several years of effort, NATO doctrinal, organizational, as well as
institutional acceptance and support of COPG/WoG/WoN, planning remains
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woefully under-resourced. It is perhaps a generation away from being a routine
and reflexive response to planning. So, too, it is with authorities needed for truly
effective COPD/WoG/WoN planning and execution of future NATO operations.
Within each NATO nation and amongst partners our various national
government branches and departments generally operate on a last-century model
with authorities closely guarded and dispensed cautiously in a slow and deliberate
hierarchical manner. Fights over power, information, and authority are the norm,
not the exception. NATO doctrine for planning and execution using
COPD/WoG/WoN approach will only grow slowly over time if senior leaders
aggressively lead change and organizational reforms (DOTMLPFI) to
institutionalize those authorities, resources, and practices needed. From a military
standpoint, economic considerations for planning are but one of many that
demand new military planning approaches.
Obtain Proper Resources for Expertise and Continuity
Planning efforts must be resourced with the right level of economic and
operational expertise. Few many military planners have the requisite training,
education and functional expertise for planning and integrating the economic
aspects of major NATO operations. These capabilities and economic expertise
exist primarily outside military organizations. Therefore, the need to pursue
interoperability, professional education and training, and routine interagency
collaborative planning to change the outcome of a known/predictable deficit of
planning expertise is necessary.
This will require the pursuit of long-term organizational change and
institutional reform, even while responding to current operational needs with adhoc, limited duration partnerships. Professional schooling, interagency
assignments, directed training and exercises focused on non-military planning
challenges, in addition to other tools must be considered in order to correct the
imbalance. While recent NATO operations in Afghanistan are hardly the only
useful model, our collective experience in the relevance of economic and other
non-military planning factors in successful stability operations points to the need
for a sea change in NATO institutional approaches.
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
Conduct Continuous Assessment and Planning
NATO planners need to consider impacts on the local (as well as the
national and regional) economy before, during, and post operations. This
requires astute military and non-military assessments of the local dynamic to
properly observe, record, and respond to change.
Conduct Pre-deployment Assessments of the Local Situation
Understanding dynamics of the local situation begins with predeployment training for all ranks to understand the regional and national history,
geography, terrain, culture, tribes, language, and operational environment of
Afghanistan. Layer this with historical understandings, economic assessments,
analysis of the dynamics of narrative and identity. Employ assistance from
interpreters to verify preliminary assessments followed by in-country verification.
Include positive and negative non-state actors’ level of legitimacy among various
sectors of society as well as an assessment to which elements of the local
population have access to information, technology, and media. Pre-deployment
training such as this is mission critical, rather than mission enhancing.
Use ASCOPE to Better Understand the Local Situation
Many of the tools used by ISAF to improve training and COIN focus apply
equally well to understanding the dynamics of the local situation. Area,
Structures, Capabilities, Organizations, People, and Events (ASCOPE) is a tool used
to quantify and understand the populace and their environment. It provides a
more quantifiable measure of the populace’s environment and shows how each
part of the ASCOPE makes up and influences the areas (populace) strengths and
vulnerabilities. This requires training at home station and upon arrival in-country
but produces a unifying approach to understanding the dynamics of the local
situation. In the case of Afghanistan, in-country training for ISAF (Phase III
training) personnel upon arrival normally consists of “Induction” training of three
to five days to review key skills and tasks. Additional training is sometimes
provided for key leaders at the COIN Training Center in Kabul, where HAOE, COIN,
and social/cultural topics are taught. As the ANSF assume lead for security, COIN
training focus will shift from ISAF to the ANSF.
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Include SOCINT in NATO AJP2, the Joint Intelligence Centre Structure, and
Training
Socio-cultural Intelligence (SOCINT) should be officially recognized as a
special functional category of intelligence (similarly to Target Intelligence) by
143
and applied only when
inserting it in the existing AJP 2 NATO publication
necessary (e.g., Peace Support Operations, Crisis Response Operations and COIN).
Likewise, SOCINT should be included in the Joint Intelligence Center (JIC)
structure. The main use is to support directional control of collection efforts in
SOCINT and HAOE, provide analysis of information, and produce relevant
intelligence. SOCINT can also be incorporated without the word “intelligence” in
the title, akin to the US Human Terrain efforts. As such it could be called
“Knowledge Management Directorate” working closely with the CJ2. Teaching
and training Social Network Analysis methodology and tools to intelligence
analysts and others will assist in better understanding complex networks,
communication and power vectors, as well as linkages between and among
various groups locally, regionally, and trans-nationally.
Be Aware of the Impact on Pre-Deployment Planning on Local Dynamics
Likewise, the potential impact of NATO pre-deployment assessments on
local power brokers and economic drivers should be factored in terms of how it
may positively or negatively impact dynamics. The example of NATO operations
in Afghanistan and the impact of a torrent of western investment fundamentally
altered the Afghan economy, providing new goods, services, and growth, while
fuelling massive corruption and creating new centres of power and money.
Increase Understanding of Non-State Armed Groups in the AOR during PreDeployment Phase
Knowledge of non-state armed groups in the AOR is equally relevant and
woefully incomplete. Understanding their locale, leadership structure,
organizational patterns, goals, power base, finances, and foreign
fighters/facilitators with whom they cooperate is essential. Working to achieve
that level of understanding begins with intelligence analysis in coordination with
143
AJP 2 Allied Joint Intelligence, Counterintelligence and Security Doctrine. NATO HQ, 2003. [online]
[22-08-2012] Available from www: http://www.scribd.com/doc/73422647/4/SECTION-II-%E2%80%93INTELLIGENCE.
136
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
assessments from subject matter experts. Pre-deployment training, professional
military education, leader training, as well as in-country training complete the
picture.
Be Cognizant of Post-Deployment Variables on Local Dynamics
As NATO operations grow in size and longevity, an assessment of how it
may impact local economic opportunities for fuel, transportation, support, and
other goods and services vital to sustainment is needed. In addition, there is a
need to weigh local economic risks and opportunities weighed with NATO mission
support and future stability. The trade-off between long-term investment
opportunities and security must be considered.
Recommendations
Correct diagnosis of the local dynamics problem is essential;
Employ a Comprehensive Operations Planning Approach;
Allocate Appropriate Authorities and Resources to Comprehensive
Planning;
Obtain Proper Resources for Expertise and Continuity;
Conduct Continuous Assessment and Planning;
Conduct Pre-deployment Assessments of the Local Situation;
Use ASCOPE to Better Understand the Local Situation;
Include SOCINT in NATO AJP-2, the Joint Intelligence Centre Structure
and Training;
Be Aware of the Impact on Pre-Deployment Planning on Local
Dynamics;
Increase Understanding of Non-State Armed Groups in the AOR during
Pre-Deployment Phase;
Be Cognizant of Post-Deployment Variables on Local Dynamics.
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
CHAPTER 5
PERCEPTION AND ACCEPTANCE OF A
NATO OPERATION/MISSION
MAJ (USA F) Antonio J. MORALES
(Panel Leader)
Mr. Zobair-David DEEN
LTC (DEU A) (Ret.) Hubertus
KÖBKE
Mr. Ralf-Joachim MUMM
COL (Ret.) Benjamin CLARK
Combined Air Operations Centre
Torrejon, NATO
International Security Assistance Forces,
NATO
UNHCR Security Management Team
Botswana, UN
The Defence Committee of the Federal
German Parliament, DEU
US Army Contractor, USA
1. Introduction
NATO is expanding its operational focus well beyond its traditional
sphere of influence, as it is the case with on-going or recently concluded
operations in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). This creates a new set of
challenges; the most important of these being the legitimacy of NATO presence in
the area. As such, a proper evaluation about NATO operations perception has to
be based on data acquired from all societal layers and a careful consideration of
the relations among them.
To this end, it is necessary to achieve a balance within communications
transmitted by the appropriate bodies to a target audience. Such messages
should serve as expressions of official policy in a manner that is not insensitive to
local feelings or beliefs so that the legitimacy of the mission does not come under
question. Based on this, the purpose of this chapter is to recommend ways NATO
can influence the perception and acceptance of its mission based on the realities
of 21st century kinetic and non-kinetic military operations.
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2. A Question of Legitimacy
In political science, one of the principles for any claim to power is
legitimacy. If the mission appears to be lacking have legitimacy (legitimacy being
defined as the acceptance of authority and its actions or policies) NATO’s
presence in the operational theatre may be challenged by the local population.
Some of these legitimacy problems can be political, economic or cultural in
nature.
Legitimacy is important because both it emphasizes the role of norms
within international society and it shapes and constraints actual state conducts.
Also “the degree of legitimacy present in any particular international order is
144
directly related to the stability of that order.”
With regard to military intervention, the United Nations Security Council
is the body best suited to authorize military actions. UN Secretary General Kofi
145
Annan has stated that the UN stamp of approval confers “unique legitimacy.”
This is critical in regard to NATO since the UN Charter serves as a fundamental
principle of the alliance because it provides the legal basis for the creation of
NATO and establishes the overall responsibility of the UN Security Council for
international peace and security. It is the framework from which the Alliance
146
operates.
As such, NATO was founded on the basis that the North Atlantic Treaty
upholds the rights and obligations of Allied nations as well as their international
147
Therefore,
obligations in accordance with Articles 7 and 12 of the UN Charter.
NATO works strictly under the confines of international law and mandate.
Consequently, UN Security Council resolutions have provided the mandate for
NATO’s major peace support operations in the Balkans and in Afghanistan.
Recently concluded operations in Libya were executed in accordance with IAW
UN Security Resolutions 1970 and 1973. However, some societies may have other
sources of legitimacy, which will have to be respected before conducting military
operations. Failing to do so can result in a lack of support for a future NATO
mission.
144
Clark, Ian. Legitimacy in International Relations. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2007, 12.
Goldstein, Joshua S. Winning the War on War; The Decline of Armed Conflict Worldwide, New York,
NY: Plume Books, 2012, 131-132.
146
NATO Handbook. Brussels, Belgium: Public Policy Division, 2006, 255.
147
Ibid, 256; http://www.nato.int/cps/en/natolive/official_texts_17120.htm
145
140
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
148
For example, the so-called “War on Terror”
has been viewed and
exploited by some radical elements as a conflict against Islam as a whole, rather
than Islamic fundamentalism, thus undermining the conflict. This is so because
some Islamic societies believe that “God is concerned with politics, and this belief
is confirmed by Shari’a, the Holy Law, which deals extensively with the acquisition
and exercise of power, the nature of legitimacy and authority, the duties of the
149
ruler and subject, among other things.”
In the case of Afghan society, there is a strong conservative tradition of
devotion to Islamic, ethnic and tribal canons and this tradition cannot be changed
overnight. Therefore, if one were perceived as antagonist of Islam, he would
encounter resistance. Consequently, it becomes important to recognize and
respect these beliefs and traditions, as well as to work within them, in order to
achieve legitimacy within the theatre of operations.
•
•
•
A Question of Legitimacy
Legitimacy emphasizes the role of norms within international society
because it shapes and constrains actual state conduct.
With regard to military intervention, the UN Security Council is the
body best suited to authorize military actions.
It becomes important for NATO to recognize and respect locally
established rules of legitimacy (e.g. beliefs, canons and traditions) and
work within them in order to achieve legitimacy within the theatre of
operations from the early stage of planning process.
3. Colonial Legacy
As discussed earlier, at one point or another throughout the history of
the western world, several nations became colonial powers. This European
th
colonial period began with the discovery of the Americas in the late 15 century
th
and reached its apex in the 19 century during the period known as the “scramble
for Africa.” During this period, the Western nations established colonies or
“spheres of influence” in every corner of the world.
148
NOTE: “War on Terror” is not an officially recognized NATO term.
Lewis, Bernard, “The Crisis of Islam: Holy War and Unholy Terror”, New York, NY: Random House,
2004, 8.
149
141
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Since the creation of the United Nations in 1945, 80 colonies have
150
achieved their independence.
However, the colonial legacy has affected the
political, economic, cultural, racial, ethnic and religious composition of numerous
nations throughout the world and arguably has been the root cause of many
conflicts (territorial, ethnic, religious) in these former colonies.
This colonial legacy must be taken into account in the context of modern
military operations, both kinetic and non-kinetic, as this can have a significant
impact, which can be either positive or negative, on the native population. This is
particularly important when NATO undertakes military operations as NATO is
mainly composed of European nations, some of which are former colonial
powers.
If a previous colonial power has had a turbulent relationship with its
former colonies prior to or after independence then this relationship should be
carefully evaluated in regard to its potential implications upon a proposed
operation. The former colony’s history, as well as the relationship (if any)
between this particular nation and its former colonial ruler, must be carefully
evaluated. Has the relationship been turbulent or amicable, for example? This is
particularly true in regard to relations between former colonial powers in NATO
and those nations in Africa and the Middle East that were their colonial
possessions.
There are examples of amicable relations between former colonial
powers and their colonies. For instance, in Latin America there is still a rich
Spanish and Portuguese heritage throughout Central and South America despite
the bloody wars of independence in the past. This heritage has defined the region
in terms of its language, religion and other characteristics. Moreover, there have
been instances in which Latin American nations have asked that their former
colonial power (Spain) arbitrate in territorial disputes, as it was in the case in
1891. In this case, Colombia and Venezuela asked the Spanish Crown to mediate
151
in a maritime delineation disagreement in the Gulf of Venezuela.
The British Army Training Unit Kenya (BATUK) highlights a contemporary
example of excellent military cooperation between a former colonial power and
colony. BATUK is a permanent non-armoured training support unit based north of
Nairobi. By accord with the Kenyan Government, “six infantry battalions per year
150
“United Nations and Decolonization”, http://www.un.org/en/decolonization/ accessed 12
September 2012
151
“El conflicto fronterizo en el Golfo de Venezuela”,
http://www.banrepcultural.org/blaavirtual/geografia/ctemc/ctemc09b.htm accessed 13 September
2012
142
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
carry out six-week exercises in Kenya as well as three Royal Engineer Squadron
exercises which carry out civil engineering projects and two medical company
group deployments which provide primary health care assistance to the civilian
152
community.” The key to the success of this enterprise is that many local people
are employed by the British military, which also uses local providers and
contracting to stimulate the economy. This transparent engagement coupled with
an historic tradition (Kenya is part of the Commonwealth of Nations) translates
into mission acceptance by the local populace with little opposition.
Western nations have a tendency to have short memories; this is not the
case with many other nations, especially those with a colonial past. Therefore, if a
particular NATO nation has had a turbulent relationship with any of its former
colonies prior to or after independence, this should be seriously taken into
account as this could adversely affect any proposed operation before it starts.
This is particularly true in the Middle East. Consequently, consciousness of the
colonial legacy (if applicable) of x or y nation must be carefully considered and
cannot be ignored as this experience has become an intrinsic part of the identity
of these states.
Taking into consideration some countries’ negative experience with
colonization and their positive experience with former communist regime
th
countries in the 20 century (some of which are now members of NATO) offers
another perspective when considering possible operations in these countries.
These post-communist countries gained experience in dealing with former
colonial nations during the so called “communist support program to third (less
developed) world countries” as part of their foreign policy. Most of these postcommunist countries still maintain a good relationship with these emerging
nations - something NATO may have overlooked.
The East European, post communist NATO countries, can offer another
perspective to crisis resolution and/or situation assessment, as a result of their
own experiences and expertise. Due to a variety of factors (e.g. country / army
size, economics, politics, etc) it would be very difficult for any of these countries
to undertake the role of leading a stability or peacekeeping mission. However,
these nations can assist in building a relationship within an operational
environment. Appointing a leader (force commander, similar to how the UN does
it) from these nations can change the perception and acceptance of a NATO
mission by the local population (e.g. to avoid perception of the mission as
152
“The British Army in Africa”, http://www.army.mod.uk/operations-deployments/22724.aspx
accessed 28 October 2012
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“western occupation/neo-colonialism”).
Doing so, however, will require
acceptance by the nation tasked with providing the majority of troops to the
operation.
Self-recognition of the colonial legacy of some NATO members and the
impact of their actions upon other nations is the first step to fully assess the
perception and acceptance to any future NATO military operation.
•
•
•
•
•
Colonial Legacy
The colonial legacy has affected the political, economic, cultural,
racial, ethnic and religious composition of numerous nations.
The colonial legacy must be taken into account in the context of
modern military operations.
If a particular NATO nation has had a turbulent relationship with any
of its former colonies prior to or after independence, this should be
seriously taken into account as this could adversely affect any
proposed operation before it starts.
Post communist NATO countries and their interactions with former
th
colonies in the 20 century can offer another perspective to crisis
resolution and/or situation assessment in former colonial nations as a
result of the experiences and expertise they have acquired.
Self-recognition of the colonial legacy of some NATO members and
the impact of their actions upon other nations is the first step to fully
assess the perception and acceptance to any future NATO military
operation.
4. Kosovo Peace Building Experience
Since June 1999, NATO has been at the forefront of peacekeeping efforts
to prevent further bloodshed and establish stability in Kosovo. To this end, the
United Nations passed Security Resolution 1244 with the intent of widening the
international efforts to build peace and stability in this troubled region.
Resolution 1244 authorized the creation of the United Nations Interim
Administration Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) to begin the long process of building
peace, democracy, stability and self-government in the shattered province.
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When the United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo
(UNMIK) mission first arrived in Kosovo in June of 1999, it found a society in chaos
without any law and order. Into this disordered environment, some 900,000
Kosovo Albanians who had fled Serbian security forces returned with
unprecedented speed. The UNMIK mission was dependent on the NATO Kosovo
Force (KFOR), a joint NATO command that included troops from 37 countries, who
were tasked with maintaining a secure and stable environment. The UNMIK
mission would not have had a chance to do so without the presence of the
153
KFOR.
The UNMIK tasks were divided in three parts:
(1) Administer Kosovo.
(2) Create the institutions and other conditions necessary for Kosovo to
exercise substantial self-government.
(3) Facilitate a political process to determine Kosovo's final status.
However, the key to achieving these tasks was not just the commitment
of generous resources (over three billion Euros in civilian aid) but applying
principles learned in previous peace-building experiences, especially in Bosnia.
154
Nevertheless, in the case of Kosovo the UN and NATO had a lot more to learn.
Therefore, UNMIK organized itself into four pillars:
(1) Pillar one, which created a multi-national UN police force and a
multi-ethnic Kosovo Police Service that would eventually replace the
international police. It also created a judicial system from the ground
up.
(2) Pillar two, which managed all of Kosovo's public services. Since
transferring authority in many areas, the UN is currently scaling
down and playing more of an advisory role.
(3) Pillar Three, managed by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) dealt with democratization and
elections.
153
Steiner, Michael. “For Example, Kosovo. Seven Principles for Peace-Building.” Centre for the Study
of
Global
Governance,
London
School
of
Economics
and
Political
Science,
http://www.lse.ac.uk/Depts/global, January 2003. (Hereafter cited as Steiner, “Kosovo”)
154
ibid.
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(4) The European Union (EU), who as Pillar Four, took responsibility for
rebuilding physical infrastructure and is still helping to create the
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foundation for an EU-compatible economy.
To fill the administrative vacuum after the war, UNMIK first created joint
administrative structures. Later, in 2001, UNMIK and Kosovo representatives
collaborated in drafting a Constitutional Framework as the basis for Provisional
Institutions of Self-Government. Kosovo-wide elections organized by the OSCE
created a multi-ethnic Assembly and Government. The Government has eleven
ministries including finance, education, health, transport and social-welfare. Two
sets of municipal elections also yielded multi-ethnic municipal assemblies across
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Kosovo.
As a result of NATO’s experiences in this region, it would be wise to focus
on seven principles, which may be considered to be essential to the success of
peace-building efforts anywhere. These principles are as follows:
4.1. Begin with a clear mandate
A peace operation has to start with a clear set of objectives. This may
seem obvious. But even in recent missions, this elementary principle has been
ignored. Within the Dayton Peace Agreement, the primary objective was to end
the fighting in Bosnia or, at a minimum, to have a lasting cease-fire agreement.
A mission's objectives also have to be realistic, both in terms of what the
local population wants and what can actually be achieved. In Kosovo the aim was
not nation building but institution building: the UN was fostering institutions and
attitudes that the people of the region would be able to build themselves. This
doesn't mean cloning EU societies but, rather, creating the basis for a stable and
functional society.
In Bosnia, although the High Representative was clearly the most senior
international official, the various international organizations have been quasiautonomous. In the beginning there was no coordinated decision-making process.
This structure made it difficult for the international community to coordinate its
own efforts, much less anyone else's. In Kosovo, UNMIK acted on the lessons
learned in Bosnia and built a new kind of structure. It created the four pillars
previously mentioned, each with a well-defined mandate and all of them
155
156
ibid.
ibid.
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subordinate to the overall authority of the Special Representative of the Secretary
157
General.
4.2. Match the mandate with the means to achieve it
If the mission is given a far-reaching mandate, it must also be given the
capacity to follow through. This applies both to legal powers and authority and to
human and physical resources. First and foremost, it is essential to establish
security and the rule of law - the very basis for all other progress. Courts need the
authority and resources to dispense justice. Police need the authority and
resources to enforce it.
An example of this is the Kosovo Central Fiscal Authority (CFA), UNMIK's
tax service, and its Customs Service. The CFA and Customs together collected 80%
of the money that went into Kosovo's budget. The CFA was merged with Kosovo's
Ministry of Finance.
Additionally, Resolution 1244 made UNMIK the ultimate authority in
Kosovo. That gave the UN and NATO the power to carry out police investigations,
the powers of arrest and the authority to try suspects and imprison criminals.
These were not advisory powers, as the international police in Bosnia had, but
executive powers. Powers such as these are critical to meeting the challenge of a
NATO security mission - achieving fundamental standards that apply to all
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functioning societies.
4.3. Get it right from the beginning
The tone of the entire mission is set in its very first days. The beginning is
no time for trial-and-error. This is necessary first, in order to establish credibility
and second, because it is much more difficult to correct the course later on.
Bosnia lacked the civil mandate and the means to begin strongly; Kosovo had the
mandate but still lacked the means in the beginning.
The international community shied away from making Bosnia a
protectorate. There were two reasons for this: the ideological legacy of
decolonization and a terror of 'mission creep'. Kosovo, by contrast, was frontloaded - or so it seemed.
157
158
ibid.
ibid.
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But even in Kosovo implementation was too slow. The military prepares
in advance for crises and NATO was ready. But the civil mission in Kosovo only had
ten days to prepare. The UN's Department of Peacekeeping Operations must be
given sufficient time and resources to respond quickly and effectively to crises as
they arise. UNMIK was operating with a skeleton staff.
The summer and autumn of 1999 saw the most vicious reprisals, both
among Kosovo Albanians and by the Albanian majority against Kosovo Serbs and
members of other minority communities. Members of rival Albanian groups
kidnapped, tortured and murdered one another. People in Kosovo say there have
been more Kosovo Serbs killed after the war than during it. Local politicians and
former fighters struggled to fill the power vacuum. As a consequence, developing
legitimate democratic institutions was delayed by the need to dismantle the
structures that emerged in the first six months of the mission.
UNMIK did not focus on organized crime at first because it didn't have
the means to do so. Taking advantage of the situation, criminal gangs spread their
tentacles throughout the political and legal vacuum. Starting in 2001, all the
security forces shifted their resources to suppressing organized crime. Both the
police and Justice improved their strategic cooperation with KFOR. Though more
remains to be done, UNMIK's efforts against organized crime demonstrate the
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value of coordination and objective-driven policy.
4.4. Learn as you go
International missions need to be 'learning organizations.' Critical to this
is admitting that mistakes have been made. Learning cannot take place without
recognizing that things have not been done right in the first place. Criticism will be
more effective for the mission and less damaging politically if it comes from
within the mission itself rather than from outsiders.
To be effective, missions must study the environment - its political
rivalries and alliances, how people make a living and the stories they tell one
another. The mission needs to conduct public opinion surveys and consultations
with the public in order to understand how people view their situation.
Essentially, the mission has to recognize what priorities are critical. For
example, because of Kosovo's open status, it was not clear in the beginning
whether UNMIK would or could engage in privatization. But UNMIK came to
159
ibid.
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recognize that privatization was essential to putting Kosovo's economy on its
160
feet.
The key to success in these endeavours is to listen to the local people and
to seek their advice. It might seem trite, but it is important to remember that no
matter how great the effort on the part of mission personnel, the local population
knows its own society better than outsiders do. Lessons Learned' has become a
bit of a buzzword, but that doesn't mean everyone is capable of doing it
161
effectively.
It is also critical to maintain an ongoing learning environment because a
mission also requires standards by which it can measure its achievements. For
example, UNMIK created a list of eight benchmarks as a basis for measuring
Kosovo's progress. These benchmarks were designed to cover the basic
requirements for any functional democratic society and included:
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
Democratic institutions.
The rule of law.
A viable market-based economy.
Property rights.
Multi-ethnicity and returns.
Freedom of movement.
The point of listing and publicizing them was to ensure that all of the
relevant actors - the international community, NATO, UNMIK, Kosovo's
institutions and civil society – clearly understood the mission’s objectives. From
the international perspective, this process made it easier to identify both
achievements and problems. In Kosovo the UN hoped the standards would help
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to concentrate people's minds on Kosovo's key challenges.
4.5. Finish what you start
Once the international community has begun a peace-building mission, it
has to see it through until the society and its institutions have become
sustainable.
Finishing what has been started is critically important for two reasons.
The first is for the credibility of other peace-building missions. Secondly, leaving
160
ibid.
ibid.
162
ibid.
161
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business unfinished can lead to the creation of even worse conditions than the
original intervention was meant to address.
The problem is that peace building, although it must never be open
ended, is a long-term process while political logic in individual governments is
nearly always focuses on the short-term. Concluding a mission before its aims
have been achieved may be the most common mistake of the international
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community has made in the past.
Afghanistan offers an excellent example of this type of error. After nearly
a decade of supporting the mujahedeen, Afghanistan was suddenly abandoned by
the anti-Soviet coalition. Rival warlords and the Taliban competed to fill the
resulting power vacuum, however, that void was only filled after the events that
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followed 9/11. The same can be said about Iraq.
Therefore, one of the reasons that measuring progress is so important is
that the actors need to identify the time when they should make the transition
from peacekeeping to development. The focal point of the development stage
should be consolidating the rule of law and creating the institutions and
regulations of a market economy. What is important about this is that a great deal
of expertise exists in these subjects, but they are never applied to post-conflict
areas because they are kept separate from each other (i.e. peacekeepers are kept
in a box marked “peacekeeping” and developers are locked in a box marked
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“development” with little or no cooperation and coordination between them).
The point of creating a yardstick like UNMIK's standards is to gauge when
to make the transition from one stage to another and to determine when the
166
mission itself is no longer needed.
4.6. It is about the right sequence (the essential sequence)
The focus should be on security and the establishment of rule of law as
these is the element that forms the basis for creating a stable state. A peacebuilding mission must establish order out of chaos. In this phase, the mission is in
control of everything. Order means no discrimination, no violence, no bullying.
This is the essential framework for creating stability.
163
ibid.
ibid.
ibid.
166
ibid.
164
165
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
The mission's first priority must be security and the rule of law. In Bosnia
the UN made a mistake by holding elections before establishing the rule of law.
On the other hand, in Kosovo, UNMIK established consent through
information, dialogue and participation. In this stage, regulations, laws and an
administrative framework were created. An essential part of this process is the
creation of effective institutions that deliver the key benefits of peace. This
process must extend to all elements of the local population. Elections may be vital
but they must wait until the time is right to hold them. Consent for the
established order must be institutionalized so that they will be absorbed into a
society. The processes of peaceful coexistence, democratic decision-making and
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conflict resolution must become habitual.
Ultimately, the peace-building or stability operation’s endgame is to
transfer its responsibilities to a qualified partner. The mission has not succeeded
until it has become unnecessary. Returning to the example of Kosovo, the eight
benchmarks were the standard by which progress was measured in terms of
achieving that goal. The transfer of responsibilities can only be achieved if the
transition is properly carried out. This is the most critical and potentially volatile
mission stage. A gradual transfer of responsibilities is essential in order to be
certain that the society's institutions have the capacity to support them. Pacing
this process correctly can prove to be a serious challenge. The problem is that
once the transfer of responsibilities begins, unrealistic expectations may occur.
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These, in turn, may lead to impatience, which can then produce friction.
The UN worked with other partners in Kosovo to transfer responsibilities
as quickly as they were able to manage them. Thousands of political
representatives and civil servants were under pressure to learn quickly. On the
part of the mission, this required continuous consultation, sensitivity and
consistency throughout the transition process. In this phase, the support of the
international community is especially imperative. In responding to the tensions of
the transfer phase, it is critical for the international community to avoid sending
169
mixed signals and vital to speak with one voice.
167
ibid.
ibid.
169
ibid.
168
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4.7. Encouraging social change
Peace building does not mean creating clones of western European
societies. Clearly, a range of traditions is consistent with sustainable stability. But
not all are. The UN must accept that the process of change from violence to peace
is a struggle in which it will have to take sides. The UN may or may not choose to
work with any one entity from among those who support the process. But UN
authorities will have to support those who are for the peace process and oppose
those who are against it.
The UN also has to try to change general attitudes that may appear to be
'traditional' if in reality they undermine the mission and are keeping it from
achieving its objectives. For example: corruption and cronyism can seriously
hinder a mission in the pursuit of establishing security and stability. “Corruption
may have been practiced since time immemorial, but it retards the development
170
of any society.”
The empowerment of local women has been shown to be perhaps the
most reliable single predictor of overall social and political development. In most
parts of the world women have limited access to education and employment.
Knowing this, international missions should not hesitate to improve conditions for
171
women in these societies wherever they can .
The willingness to challenge some traditionally accepted social norms,
however, does not mean forcing change on a society. Encouraging change in a
society must be the result of a dynamic process of mutual learning. “The
international community brings its experiences to a community that wants to
leave conflict behind and enjoy the fruits of peace. The peace-building mission
must also learn from the local community to understand its values and ways of
doing things. The point here is that building peace doesn't allow avoiding the hard
challenges just because they're deeply rooted. When the UN finishes a mission, a
healthy and self-sustaining society should be left behind. Otherwise weeds will
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grow back and entangle the UN for years to come.”
4.8 The Art of Letting Go
The good news is that the UN has demonstrated that peace building is
not an exercise in futility, as some media, international organizations and both
170
ibid.
ibid; The UN Millennium Project
172
Steiner, “Kosovo”.
171
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Kosovo and Serbian representatives have argued. It is instead a manageable
human enterprise subject to the determined application of certain basic
principles. When looking at a conflict, the international community can
legitimately decide whether or not to intervene. Clearly, the UN can't intervene
everywhere. However, the UN has to be serious about it and follow it through.
173
When it comes to peace-building, this means adhering to tested principles.
First, a mission must go in with a clear mandate. Second, it must have the
authority and resources to do the job. Third, it must get it right from the
beginning. Fourth, it must learn from the host society and from its own mistakes.
Fifth, it must finish what it starts. Sixth, it must first establish security and the rule
of law as the framework for democratization. Seventh, it must try to change the
host society's practices which can hinder the successful achievement of the
mission’s goals - even if they are 'traditional.' In the end, this is about handing
over responsibilities, not clinging to them. As such, the key is to build up the
importance of those to whom we need to hand over. Letting go is not easy but it
174
is the measurement of success.
•
•
•
173
174
Kosovo Peace Building Experience
When the United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo
(UNMIK) mission arrived in Kosovo in June of 1999, it found a society
in chaos without any law and order.
As a result of NATO’s experiences in this region, it would be wise to
focus on seven principles, which may be considered to be essential to
the success of peace-building efforts anywhere.
First, a mission must go in with a clear mandate. Second, it must have
the authority and resources to do the job. Third, it must get it right
from the beginning. Fourth, it must learn from the host society and
from its own mistakes. Fifth, it must finish what it starts. And the two
hard ones: Sixth, it must first establish security and the rule of law as
the framework for democratization. Seventh, it must try to change
the host society's practices which can inhibit the successful
achievement of the mission’s goals - even if they are 'traditional.
ibid.
ibid.
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5. Importance of Maintaining the Moral High Ground
For over a decade, NATO has been involved in complex
counterinsurgency and asymmetric type operations in Afghanistan and elsewhere.
Insurgency is more than combat between armed groups, but rather, a political
struggle with a high level of violence. This is further complicated by language and
cultural differences. Cultural misunderstandings can have devastating effects to
the mission. This is not only a battle against a faceless enemy but much of this
struggle is being carried out in the “marketplace of ideas.” As such, it is imperative
to maintain the moral high ground at all costs.
To this end, NATO must advocate adherence to high moral standards.
This will deny opportunities for the adversary to take advantages of one’s
mistakes. In the end, the object is to win the support of the local population; this
is what is at stake.
Anger is a normal reaction for troops who witness traumatic events, but
mission leaders must encourage and enforce restraint. Strict adherence to Rules
of Engagement (ROE’s) and human rights is critical are crucial if a mission is to
achieve success. For example, according to General David Petraeus, the former
U.S. Commander in Iraq, the Abu-Ghraib incident “tarnished our image in Iraq and
175
worldwide.”
In the aftermath of the Abu-Ghraib incident, detainee operations were
completely overhauled. Health care was improved as well as transparency. For
instance, the International Red Cross inspected the detention centres on
numerous occasions. This is why it is imperative to take immediate corrective
action when violations are identified. If the mission intends to establish the rule of
law, a good way to do that is to start out by observing the law itself.
176
The U.S. Army Counterinsurgency Manual (Field Manual 3-24) ,
developed in the wake of the Unites States military experiences in Iraq and
Afghanistan, warns of the dangers of losing the moral high ground. It specifically
states: “A key part of any insurgent’s strategy is to attack the will of the domestic
and international opposition. One of the insurgents’ most effective ways to
undermine and erode political will is to portray their opposition as untrustworthy
175
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/haditha/interviews/petraeus.html (Interviews Gen.
David Petraeus, Frontline, Rules of Engagement, interview conducted 1 August 2007)
176
U.S. Army Counterinsurgency Manual (Field Manual 3-24).para. 7-25, pg. 161
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or illegitimate. These attacks work especially well when insurgents can portray
their opposition as unethical by the opposition’s own standards.”
To address this, the Field Manual highlights the importance of treating
non-combatants and detainees humanely, according to internationally recognized
values and human rights standards.
•
•
•
Importance of Maintaining the Moral High Ground
Insurgency is more than a combat between armed groups, but rather,
a political struggle with a high level of violence in culturally
complicated environment.
Advocate adherence to high moral standards. This will deny
opportunities for the adversary to take advantages of one’s mistakes.
The price for losing the moral high ground is very high having
implications from tactical up to strategic level.
6. NATO instruments analyzing its perception and acceptance by local
population
Currently within NATO force structures there are existing assets
(branches) with convenient procedural background on analyzing and evaluating
perception and acceptance of NATO mission by local population as Intelligence
(and HUMINT particularly), Psychological operations (PSYOPS), Civil-Military
Cooperation (CIMIC) and Commander Advisory Group (POLAD, LEGAD, Cultural
Advisor). All these branches possess series of documents as doctrines, Standing
Operating Procedures (SOP), etc describing their role and responsibilities, and
unfortunately having delimitative functions which influence coordination and
effective cooperation including knowledge sharing among them. Measurement
and evaluation of local population perception is a subject of Panel 6.
Recent ground operations established two new disciplines, Key leader
engagement and Operational Mentoring and Liaison Teams, and they can be
viewed as the future NATO capabilities.
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6.1 Key Leader Engagement as a Valuable Messaging Tool
Properly transmitting NATO’s message not only is critical to achieve
acceptance of the mission and achieve desired effects. In line with the principles
described in Chapter 1 points 2.1, 2.2 and 3.2 NATO can improve its messaging via
effective Key Leader Engagement (KLE). To this end, Key Leader Engagement (KLE)
“is about building relationships over time with enough strength and depth, so that
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they can then support our interests during times of crisis.”
Key Leader
Engagement includes building and maintaining working relationships with persons
or entities that have influence in the theatre. These relationships are sustained by
face to face, deliberate and focused meetings in order to achieve desired effects.
Before deploying its forces, NATO should initially identify key leaders in
the operational theatre. In an informational operation environment the IO
messages are released to the public. In a KLE environment, the strategic KLE
messages are controlled by the engager and the results from key leaders can be
predicted and expected. KLE is of crucial significance because it holds the power
to convince the population of a country of the legitimacy of NATO's presence in
the theatre and of NATO's genuine support and care for the population. One
example of this is using KLEs to gain local support for deeply unpopular night
operations in Afghanistan.
Key leaders (KLs) include government officials but also student groups,
women’s groups, grass roots leaders, tribal elders and religious leaders, among
others. Such KLs should be identified collectively by NATO nations or by individual
nations stationed in separate parts of the country, sharing the information with
the other NATO nations. Key leaders are individuals who hold significant
influence over a group of people. Methods of contact can vary and differ by
region, but may include approaching the KL via telephone, translators or local
power brokers. Direction regarding identifying KLs would come from each NATO
section's supervisor, and political/cultural advisor. Successful KLEs depend on the
cultural mores of a nation and may include shared meals, official office visits, and
the development of genuine friendships, both in one-on-one situations or group
settings. A situation in which KLE can be very successful is in the case of a NATO
officer befriending a KL and using this influence to communicate NATO messages
to the population in a time of crisis. The crisis could result from a NATO misstep
and the KL might be able to defuse tensions by convincing the population that
177
U.S. Joint Forces Command. Commander's Handbook for Strategic Communication and
Communication Strategy, p.52.
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such a mistake was not NATO's intention in order to eliminate potentially violent
protests.
Of paramount importance in Key Leader Engagement is a NATO officer’s
intimate knowledge of local customs, languages, religion and other defining
factors. A female NATO official who very freely and jovially approaches a deeply
traditional tribal or religious elder in rural Afghanistan is likely to cause him to
take offense at the manner of her approach. By doing so, she will probably fail to
complete her assignment and significantly discredit the mission in that area.
Situations like these can be avoided if NATO officers are fully and extensively
trained in the religious, cultural and linguistic customs of the area. This cannot be
accomplished in a one-day seminar or by reading of a book on local customs. The
local culture must be studied and genuinely interacted with in low-risk situations
before a NATO official can successfully engage key leaders. It is best if
knowledgeable local advisors or other NATO officers who have spent considerable
time in theatre conduct the KLEs. KLE is based on genuine friendships and these
friendships must be developed and maintained over time.
KLE is a cyclical process requiring thoughtful intentionality. The following
steps outline the basic steps of a KLE cycle:
(1)
(2)
Identify key leader/entity (including the potential for long term
influence and evaluation of the KL network). Identifying key
leaders require social network analyses of a particular person of
interest. Analysts involved in this process must be properly
educated and having broad knowledge of the local situation.
Other branches represented at Headquarters, including INTEL,
PSYOPS, CIMIC, and Commander Advisor Cells must support the
whole process and relevant information must be shared. In case
of an erroneous Key Leader identification, a negative effect on
the perception of NATO’s mission by local population may
result.
Develop a negotiation strategy. This includes contingencies and
counters to unfavourable responses and reviews of previous
post-engagement reports. The primary objective and supporting
objectives and the preliminary conditions required to achieve
these objectives must be established. Determine in advance
what the mission will be able to offer in order to achieve the
desired results. Finally, predict the probability of favourable
responses to a request or a desired outcome and develop the
best alternative when efforts to achieve an agreement fail.
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(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
Rehearse KLE. This includes discussing the desired results and
common terms with the cultural advisor, designate a recorder
and photographer, determine which person takes the lead (in
many cases, this is the cultural advisor), practice social nuances
(including greetings and leave-taking), and conduct standard
mission planning (security, logistics, communications,
contingencies, etc.)
Engagement. Be certain to adhere to local meeting etiquette;
focus on the objective while respectfully listening; under
promise and over deliver. Conclude the business portion by
clarifying or repeating agreements made.
Debriefing. Submit a full post-KLE report to appropriate
personnel or departments. Ensure relevant KL information gets
returned to the designated database in order to prepare for
future engagements.
Re-engage. Reengage KLs and sustain relationships.
Why is this necessary? Conducting KLEs validates the mission in the eyes
of the public, allowing the communication of NATO strategic messages to the
public to take place via those individuals or groups who already have influence
and legitimacy in the theatre. This in turn strengthens local leaders, thereby
strengthening the sustainable leadership, while providing opportunities for future
leaders to be legitimized.
Identifying Key Leaders, developing a KLE matrix and providing thorough
assessments of these KLs can greatly assist NATO command groups and all others
engaging key leaders to deliver NATO mission strategic or priority messages
effectively to national key leaders and thereby to the greater public. A recently
concluded JFC Naples NATO Rapid Response Force certification exercise
highlighted the importance of using and exploiting KLE as a strategic
communication tool. As such, KLE must be formally incorporated as part of the
overall NATO doctrine.
6.2 Operational Mentor and Liaison Teams - OMLT
The Operational Mentor and Liaison Team (OMLT) program is an
important part of NATO’s contribution towards the development of local armed
force by providing training and mentoring. They also provide a liaison capability
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between the local armed forces and NATO/Coalition forces, co-coordinating the
planning of operations and ensuring that the local armed forces units receives
necessary enabling support (including close air support, casualty evacuation and
medical evacuation).
Due to the fact that OMLT members daily interact with armed forces
leaders and members, they can play a vital role in the evaluation process of NATO
perception by local populations. They can also transmit massages, which can
strengthen the acceptance of NATO’s presence. Currently, the processes of
evaluation and messaging can be limited or veiled by the processes of
bureaucratic reporting. Therefore, processes related to perceptions and
evaluations of the local situation, as well as the transmission of core messages,
must be formalized (e.g. reporting format, information flow, etc) as an essential
part of NATO doctrine.
•
•
•
NATO instruments for analyzing its perception and acceptance by local
population
NATO forces possess structures and assets (branches) with suitable
procedural backgrounds for analyzing and evaluating perception and
acceptance of NATO mission.
All these branches are doctrinally framed, enabling them to create
conditions for the delimitation of their functions, allowing them to
influence coordination and effective cooperation between them.
Recent ground operations have established two new disciplines, Key
Leader Engagement and Operational Mentoring and Liaison Teams
which can be further developed as future NATO capabilities.
7. Conclusion
Mission legitimacy must be achieved and maintained. To this end, these
five principles must be achieved:
(1)
(2)
(3)
Strict Adherence to the International Rule of Law and its
cohesion with locally accepted rules of law.
Recognizing the importance of historical experience.
Employing the local population as part of the larger process of
engagement.
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(4)
(5)
Preserving non-combatants lives and dignity.
Seeking and exploiting direct communication with critical
members of the local population at all levels.
All of these are essential to help validate NATO’s mission and promote its
acceptance.
Recommendations
•
•
•
•
•
•
160
Mission legitimacy must be achieved and maintained. Clear NATO
definition and policy on the level of legitimacy acceptance must be
established.
NATO must reconsider implementation of the UN seven peacebuilding principles based on best practices developed in Kosovo.
Assess the historical relationship with the country or countries
involved in a potential crisis area.
Establish a force commander, following the example from the UN,
chosen from an acceptable country / region involved in crisis.
Doctrinally formalized Key Leaders Engagement and Operational
Mentor and Liaison Team functions.
Identify Key leaders and approach them before the beginning of an
operation.
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
CHAPTER 6
MEASURABLE INDICATORS OF THE
POPULATIONS’ ATTITUDE TOWARDS
NATO
Dr. Mark DECHESNE (Panel
Leader)
Dr. Brian SPISAK
Dr. Cătălina KOPETZ
COL (Ret.) Benjamin CLARK
Dr. Hari BUCUR-MARCU
Mr. Ralf-Joachim MUMM
Leiden University, Campus The Hague,
NLD
VU University Amsterdam, NLD
The Center for Addictions, Personality,
and Emotion Research at University of
Maryland, College Park, USA
US Army Contractor, USA
Geneva Centre for Democratic Control of
the Armed Forces, CHE
The Defence Committee of the Federal
German Parliament, DEU
1. Introduction
The ability of NATO forces and leaders at all levels to understand the
culture and attitudes of the peoples and nations where we contemplate
operations should inform all aspects of planning, training, campaign design, and
operations. Whatever level of preparation and cultural understanding we may
bring to the effort must be supplemented by effective survey of the attitudes of
the local population toward NATO and key actors in areas of NATO operations.
Properly planned and consistently executed professional surveys of popular
attitudes can provide key information to help NATO understand vital trends and
developments in the location population and their perceptions towards NATO,
the so-called “Human Terrain”.
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The operational effectiveness can be enhanced or diminished by the
effective and timely understanding of attitudes concerning NATO operations. The
art form is “how” to plan, train, prepare for and consistently survey/understand
attitudes in the increasingly complex operational environments of irregular
activity, insurgency, and asymmetric threats NATO faces today.
Despite a large number of NATO doctrinal publications which mention
the importance of attitudes of the local population relative to NATO operations
(PYSOPS, INFO Ops, COIN), they have been rarely considered, analyzed, and
integrated in a systematic manner. A brief look at ISAF operations 2002-2012
reveals a wide variety of efforts to survey attitudes of the local population that
vary by time, nation, regional command, echelon/level of command, military or
civilian organization, etc. Unfortunately, such efforts are characterized by
inconsistent application of survey tools and methods, inconsistent training and
preparation, non-standard execution, and widely inconsistent collection, analysis,
storage, marking, sharing, and reporting of data.
Although there has been, over time, increased NATO awareness of the
challenges to effectively survey attitudes, there is little evidence of a
comprehensive Civilian-military, or even exclusively military (NATO/ISAF) effort to
create and publish basic standards for surveys on popular attitudes. Consider the
complexity required to standardize training, preparation and execution of surveys
amongst the following: an 18 yr old US Marine corporal in Regional Command
South (RC-S), a seasoned German civilian BMZ official in Regional Command North
(RC-N), contracted Afghan workers in Wardak Province (Regional Command East
(RC-E)) or NGO workers in Kabul, and there are dozens more such complex types,
most of which rotate on a 6 month tour. Each has his own background,
experience, education, and operational role: without a forcing function for
standardization and professionalization such as doctrine for Human Aspects of the
Operational Environment) HAOE, surveys of local attitudes carry a huge risk of
providing misleading or inaccurate data, skewed by time and quality of data,
critical analysis, and accurate reporting.
Indeed, one might say that attitudes are a neglected area in military
missions on political/policy, strategic, and operational levels. The present
contribution describes the potential role of attitude research in NATO stabilization
and reconstruction efforts. The research will focus on the nature of attitudes and
their relation to behaviour. The operational, strategic, and policy relevance of
attitudes in military context will also be discussed, as well as relevant
considerations in this context. Attitudes are critically important yet understudied
in military context.
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•
•
Key Points
Operational effectiveness can be enhanced or diminished by the
effective and timely understanding of attitudes concerning NATO
operations.
• Attitudes of the local population relative to NATO operations
(PYSOPS, INFO Ops, COIN) have been rarely considered, analyzed, and
integrated in a systematic manner.
2. What is an attitude?
Attitudes have been one of the most widely researched and used
concepts in psychology. Psychologists have assumed for a long time that attitudes
and other associations in memory are stable structures that underlie behaviour in
a variety of situations (e.g. Allport, 1935; Beck, 1976). The function typically
attributed to attitudes is to provide valenced summaries of one’s environment
that serve as a "predisposition or readiness for response" (Allport, 1935, p. 805).
Attitudes signal people about whether objects in their environment are good or
bad and thus perform an important approach/avoidance function (Fazio, 1986;
Katz, 1960; Smith, Bruner, & White, 1956). Eagly and Chaiken (1993), for example,
defined an attitude as "a psychological tendency that is expressed by evaluating a
particular entity with some degree of favour or disfavour" (p. 1). Consistent with
this approach, people are typically asked to rate the positivity or negativity of
their feelings toward everything from social issues and consumer products to
political candidates and romantic partners, and they have little trouble doing so.
These ratings are further used to make predictions about or to explain
corresponding behaviours (buying behaviour, voting, health-promoting or health
compromising behaviour, etc.).
Attitudes are comprised of three components – affective, cognitive, and
behavioural. The affective component is how one feels about an entity. For
example: “I feel angry about NATO’s presence.” The cognitive component is what
a person believes or knows about an attitude object. For example: “I believe the
presence of NATO is a threat to my safety.” Finally, the behavioural component is
how an attitude towards an object influences our behaviour. For example: “I will
avoid NATO troops and not cooperate with them.”
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The relative prominence of an attitude object in the perceptual field is
known as salience. Attitude strength refers to the extent to which attitudes have
impact on behaviour and information processing and the degree to which they
are stable over time and resistant to change (Krosnick and Petty, 1995). The
positive or negative value of an attitude object is referred to as valence. NATO
troops, for instance, can be quite a salient object in the environment and
consequently elicit strong and persistent positive or negative valence. For
example: “I am very much aware of NATO’s presence” (salience) and “it makes
me very angry” (valence) and “I am not willing to change my opinion” (strength).
Because of widespread use and potential, attitude concepts have
occupied a central place in social research and interventions. The main
assumption of this research was that in order to promote behavioural change,
one must first understand and change individuals’ beliefs/attitudes toward the
targeted behaviour (i.e. Ajzen & Fishbein, 1980). In order to do so, for many years,
the assessment of attitudes relied exclusively on questionnaires and on
individuals’ endorsement of positive or negative statements about the attitudinal
object (i.e. “Drinking alcohol is good------------bad”). In line with this approach, the
typical behavioural change attempts were based on providing individuals with
relevant information (i.e. about negative consequences of drinking) that would
presumably result in attitudinal change and corresponding behavioural change.
However, comprehensive evaluations of the predictive impact of attitudes on
behaviour have been rare, and the case for natural attitude as a strong precursor
to behaviour may not be as strong as some of the basic research would suggest
(i.e. Stacy et al., 1994). To understand and overcome such inconsistencies
regarding the attitude-behaviour relationship, researchers re-evaluated both the
conceptualization as well as the traditional measurement of the attitudes.
Regarding the conceptualization several issues are particularly relevant.
First, attitudes have been traditionally conceptualized as bipolar
(presumably reflecting a natural tendency to classify something as either positive
or negative). However, one of the most important aspects of behaviour in natural
context is individuals’ ambivalence. For instance, people hold both positive and
negative alcohol-related beliefs (e.g. Wiers et al., 2006) with positive attitudes
usually relating to immediate and negative cognitions to later outcomes. These
findings challenged the assumption that attitudes represent stable evaluations or
action tendencies and suggested a different approach whereby attitudes are
constructed in the moment based on information that happens to be currently
accessible. From this point of view attitudes can be conceptualized as the current
state of activation of associations rather than evaluations stored in memory (e.g.
Wilson et al., 2000; Ledgerwood & Chaiken, 2007). A given attitude object likely
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has not just a single attitude associated with it, but rather a network of attitudes.
Regarding drinking, an individual may have positive attitudes toward drinking
when thinking about drinking with friends but negative attitudes when thinking
about the day following the drinking party. Such attitudinal nuances would be lost
with the traditional approach of bipolar stable attitudes that does not take into
account the relevant momentary context. Similarly, attitudes towards NATO may
not come along a positive versus negative dimension, since people may hold both
positive and negative attitudes towards NATO.
Second, the traditional view of attitudes and attitude-behaviour
relationship is a primarily deliberative one, assuming that attitudes are
consciously accessible and serve as deliberative input into intentions and
behaviour. This view has been challenged by the growing evidence suggesting
that although intentionality can be important, the lion’s share of behaviour is
dictated by automatic processes, independent of intention (Bargh, 1994; Fazio,
1990). From this perspective, behaviour is driven less by an individual’s explicit,
deliberative evaluations toward the attitudinal object, but rather by previous
associations between a certain context and certain behaviour. One relevant
example is that of female crack cocaine users’ engagement in sex exchange for
crack cocaine. When assessed explicitly, women may have negative attitudes
toward such behaviour and express intentions to avoid it. However, a drug craving
induced spontaneously by internal (i.e. emotional state) or external cues (i.e. the
view of a crack pipe) may automatically activate and render more positive the
behaviours (sex trade) previously associated with successful alleviation of the
craving. This may increase the likelihood of a person’s involvement in such
behaviour, despite negative attitudes and even in the absence of conscious
intentions to behave accordingly (Kopetz et al., in preparation). This research
speaks to the need of assessing attitudes and corresponding behaviours in specific
contexts and in a manner capable of tapping into potential automatic processes
underlying behaviour. Obviously, these are also topics to take into consideration
when measuring the populations’ attitude towards NATO.
Regarding the measurement of attitudes, the traditional approach was
primarily based on individuals’ endorsement of different statements regarding
the object of the attitudes. However, whether an individual endorses a statement
or not, is not fully determined by the attitude proper. It also depends on the
individual’s awareness of his/her attitude as well as on the willingness to reveal
that attitude, on social desirability, and self-presentation concerns (Snyder &
Swann, 1976). To overcome this problem, researchers have recently developed
more indirect measures of attitudes. Some of these measures are based on the
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assumption that people spontaneously avoid negative stimuli and approach
positive stimuli (approach/avoidance paradigms, i.e. Forster & Strack, 1997;
Brendl, Markman, & Messner, 2005, or eye-tracking paradigms). Other measures,
probably the most widely used, are based on representations in associative
memory (Implicit Association Test (IAT) and affective priming procedures) and
assume that people respond faster when presented with pairs of stimuli that are
strongly rather than weakly associated in the memory. From this perspective a
positive attitude would be evidenced by a faster reaction time to an attitudinal
object when paired with a positive rather than a negative adjective (i.e. Olson &
Fazion, 2003).
•
•
•
•
•
•
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Key Points
An “attitude” has been defined as "a psychological tendency that is
expressed by evaluating a particular entity with some degree of
favour or disfavour".
Attitudes are comprised of three components – affective, cognitive,
and behavioural.
Attitudes have been traditionally conceptualized as bipolar
(presumably reflecting a natural tendency to classify something as
either positive or negative). However, one of the most important
aspects of behaviour in natural context is individuals’ ambivalence.
The traditional view of attitudes and attitude-behaviour relationship
is a primarily deliberative one, assuming that attitudes are consciously
accessible and serve as deliberative input into intentions and
behaviour. This view has been challenged by the growing evidence
suggesting that although intentionality can be important, the lion’s
share of behaviour is dictated by automatic processes, independent of
intention.
Regarding the measurement of attitudes, the traditional approach
was primarily based on individuals’ endorsement of different
statements regarding the object of the attitudes. However, whether
an individual endorses a statement or not, is not fully determined by
the attitude proper. It also depends on the individual’s awareness of
his/her attitude as well as on the willingness to reveal that attitude,
on social desirability, and self-presentation concerns.
Researchers have recently developed more indirect measures of
attitudes.
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
3. Attitudes towards NATO in Afghanistan
Open-source information on measurement of attitudes towards NATO is
hard to come by (cf. Lyall, Blair, and Imai, 2012; Beath, Christia, and Enikolopov,
2012). In order to get a sense of current measurement practices, a literature
search was conducted. We used Google to gain a general sense of the available
reports on attitudes towards NATO, followed by the use of specialized literature
databases in psychology (PsychInfo) and the humanities and social sciences
(Project Muse) to identify relevant scientific literature. In all cases, the initial
focus was specifically on attitudes towards NATO in its most recent security
assistance reconstruction mission in Afghanistan.
In Project Muse, no hits were for the search keys of “attitudes” AND
“NATO” AND “Afghanistan”, while the two hits in the PsychInfo database did not
pertain directly to measurement of the Afghan populations’ attitudes. In
PsychInfo, the search term “attitudes” AND “Afghanistan” did yield a substantial
number of hits (99 to be precise), but most of the identified literature focused on
issues that are less relevant for present purposes. Specifically, the literature
appears to focus on one of three categories: (1) Attitudes towards the war in
Afghanistan among Western Samples; (2) Health-related attitudes among the
Afghan population; and (3) Attitudes among soldiers in Afghanistan and veterans
of the war. None of the published articles focuses specifically on the issue of
measurable indicators of the populations’ attitude. Only an informal Google
search, which using the search term “measuring attitudes in Afghanistan” yielded
a very limited number of hits, did show an unpublished paper by Princeton
political scientists Jason Lyall, Greame Blair, and Kosuke Imai. Their “Explaining
support for combatants during wartime: A survey experiment in Afghanistan”
exactly addresses the issues under investigation. The literature references of that
paper contained another directly relevant unpublished paper by Andrew Beath,
Fotini Christia, and Ruben Enikolopov on “Winning hearts and minds through
development: Evidence from a field experiment in Afghanistan”. These two
publications will be subjected to closer scrutiny below. Next to these papers, firsthand observations were used of the German reception of an extensive survey
study by the Afghan Center for Socio-Economic and Opinion Research to illustrate
the broader political and policy context of attitude research in the context of
stabilization and reconstruction missions.
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3.1. Winning hearts and minds through development: Evidence from a field
experiment
The primary interest of a study by Beath, Christia, and Enikolopov was to
demonstrate the effects of development programs in Afghanistan on perceptions
of well-being, attitudes towards the government, and levels of security in
surrounding areas. The authors identify several hypotheses regarding the possible
effects of developmental aid in Afghanistan, predicting either increases in
violence after aid (a ‘bargaining model’ suggesting that aid is considered a reward
for violence), decreases in unemployment and decreases in violence (an
‘opportunity cost’ model suggesting that violence undermines economic interests
once these become available), no changes (a ‘grievance’ model suggesting that
developmental aid does not affect underlying social and ethnic grievances), and
decreases in violence and increases in support for the government (a ‘hearts and
minds’ model suggesting that aid undermines support for the insurgency and
contributes to stability of the governance structure).
Of greatest interest here are the methods used to assess these
hypotheses. The National Solidarity Programme (NSP), a $1 billion aid program to
improve service and infrastructure of the rural population, is analyzed for its
impact, whereby 250 villages (25 per district with a total of 10 districts) that
received treatment were selected and carefully matched with 250 villages that did
not receive treatment. A total of 13,899 respondents participated in the study.
The study consisted of a varied set of instruments, including a male household
questionnaire administered to ten randomly selected male heads-of household; a
male focus group questionnaire administered to a group of village leaders in each
village; a female focus group questionnaire administered to a group of locally
important women; and, a female individual questionnaire. These questionnaires
were, except for the female focus group, administered before (Aug-Sept 2007)
the start of the National Solidarity Programme and twice during the programme
(in October 2007 and May 2008, and November 2007 and August 2008). The
investigators also tracked changes in security incidents before and during the
implementation of the programme.
The questionnaires relied heavily on self-reporting from the participants.
A confederate would approach villagers and then follow a carefully determined
protocol to reach out to participants. The participants were expected to respond
to items related to general characteristics and social services, economic status,
perception of government and associated parties (including ISAF), and perception
of security. The protocol contained over 150 items, irrespective of the groups
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under investigation. For each item, multiple-choice response options were
provided.
The authors of the study find that the development program led to
increases in economic well-being and to a more positive outlook on the
participants’ security situation. Additionally, the authors find increased positivity
in attitudes towards the Afghan government, as well as towards NATO, as a result
of the aid program. There is also mention of decreased violence as a result of the
program, but only in areas with moderate levels of violence (measured before the
program implementation). In areas of considerable violence, the program is
reported to inhibit increased government trust as a result of the program and deescalation of violence.
3.2. Explaining support for combatants during wartime: A survey experiment in
Afghanistan
Lyall, Blair, and Imai (2012) have recently published on the Internet a
report of their attempts to better understand how ‘wartime victimization’ (i.e.
non-combatants facing direct or indirect exposure to violence) affects civilian
attitudes towards combatants. They conducted their research in five Afghan
provinces in which the Taliban was particularly active at the time of measurement
(Uruzgan, Loghar, Khunar, Khost, and Helmand). The authors argue that attitudes
towards combatant parties among civilians are not merely a function of the
parties’ relative responsibility for the victimization, but rather, depend on social
identity. If a civilian has a prior identification with a particular attacking
combatant party, attacks on the civilian are hypothesized to contribute less to the
civilian’s negative attitude towards that attacking combatant party than if the
civilian has no prior identification or an opposing identification.
To examine this, the authors use “Endorsement experiments” (Bullock,
Imai & Shapiro, 2011) in which participants are asked to indicate on a five-point
scale (with an additional “don’t know” option) their agreement with a policy
proposal that is either endorsed by the Taliban, by ISAF, or no endorsement is
specified. The study referred to four policy topics: prison reform, direct election of
district councils, reform of the Independent Election Committee, and
strengthening of anti-corruption policies. Extra care was spent on the selection of
these topics as to ensure there was: 1) opportunity to combine the cases for
aggregated statistical analysis; 2) sufficient knowledge in the sample to complete
the survey and “don’t know” responses are minimized; 3) realism to the policies
and the endorsements; 4) sufficient variation in views as to avoid ceiling or floor
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effects. The questionnaire was then distributed by an Afghan owned research
centre called ORCA (Opinion Research Centre for Afghanistan) in 204 villages,
each with 20 to 2,509 inhabitants. These villages were chosen on the basis of
random selection, going down from first the provincial level (a random selection
of five out of 13 Pashtun Majority provinces), to the district level (a random
selection of one-third of the districts in a province), to the village level within each
district (a random selection of villages from the districts, with a minimum of 10%
of villages with a district being selected). In total, 2,754 only male villagers
participated in the study.
The key analysis involved a comparison of the effect of victimization by
the Taliban and ISAF on support for these parties (whereby support is measured
on the basis of the endorsement experimental technique described above). Of
interest, and in line with the authors’ argument, the research shows an
asymmetrical effect of victimization. If the Taliban has directly or indirectly caused
harm to the participant, there appears to be little effect on support for the
Taliban nor on support for ISAF. In contrast, if ISAF has directly or indirectly
caused harm, it leads to more negative attitudes towards ISAF and more positive
attitudes towards the Taliban. Thus, the authors demonstrate the importance of
prior social identification in the effects of attacks on support from a population.
The findings also demonstrate the use of indirect measures to uncover significant
aspects of the factors that underlie community support. Finally, the findings
demonstrate the importance of context in attitude formation (i.e. the same
influence measure may produce stronger results in one context than in another
context).
3.3. Reception of attitude research: The German case
Next to written reports on attitude research in Afghanistan, we also
obtained a first-hand report of the reception in Germany of a specific enquiry in
Afghanistan, carried out by The Afghan Center for Socio-Economic and Opinion
Research (ASCOR). ASCOR is advertised as Afghanistan’s only registered
commercial market and opinion research agency. In 2010, they published an
extensive attitude survey in Afghanistan. Among a sample of 1,691 in 34
provinces, the agency held face-to-face interviews. It is this research that allowed
the media throughout the world to report on the apparent progress of NATO in
Afghanistan. For example, ABC News inferred from the results: “Blame on the
United States and NATO for violence has eased – but their overall ratings remain
weak”. Beyond the specific outcomes of the research, however, it is the
perception of the results that is of particular interest. In Germany, soon after the
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publication of the results, discussion erupted among politicians, policy makers,
and the army. Indeed, what had been presented as “scientific” or “evidencebased” was eagerly, and easily, discarded as “unscientific”. These criticisms are of
interest to mention here, because they also pertain to the surveys reviewed
above.
First, the survey research was criticized for containing some very
complicated items that require knowledge of world affairs and politics. This
knowledge, however, may have been lacking among the Afghans under
investigation. Consequently, the participants may have recognized symbols of
NATO, or any other military organization present in Afghanistan. But that doesn’t
mean participants were able to reflect on it, or able to tie the organization to
different aspects of world politics. In the face-to-face interviews, opinions may
thus have been constructed on the spot, and immediately forgotten at the end of
the interview. Those who wanted to dismiss the results of attitude research could
thus easily do so. The research may have not tapped into real attitudes. It may
have created them on the spot.
Second, the survey contained about 150 questions, and was heavily
criticized for that amount. Not all of these 150 questions may have required an
understanding of global affairs. But still, 150 questions is a lot. It is a lot for
undergraduate students that typically participate in attitude studies. But
answering 150 questions certainly is an insurmountable challenge for someone
who has never heard of opinion research; let alone participated in it. Here, it is
simply the ability of the research group that falls short.
Third, motivation in answering the questions was argued to have played
an obscuring role. Questions about education level or financial capabilities are not
easily answered in a culture where answers to these questions communicate
one’s all important social status, and indeed, one’s legitimacy to express an
opinion. Moreover, answering questions with a target audience in mind is very
important in Afghanistan. That is, in a country where decades of war have made
distrust a defining feature of the fabric of society.
Fourth, the total number of 1,691 participants may appear quite
impressive. However, it is quite a small number in comparison to the task at hand.
Afghanistan is hardly a single country; with 17 major ethnic groups and multiple
languages, diverse and challenging terrain and geography, over 70% illiteracy, and
a history of local power brokers and warlords rather than strong centralized
government. And once the diversity of Afghanistan is recognized, it would make
sense to consider sampling more carefully.
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3.4. What the findings indicate
In the studies described above, we see how the neglect of recent insights
in attitude research leads to conceptual and practical, often negative
consequences. The research by Beath and colleagues, and the research by Lyall
and colleagues, appear to have involved considerable monetary and human
resources, but the outcomes of both studies appear to be fairly limited. In both
cases, support for a specific hypothesis in the context of counterinsurgency
theory was obtained (although not necessarily validated). However, both efforts
seem to depend to a great extent on verbal reporting of attitudes that the
researcher assume to be present. But, that may not be the case. Indeed, both
studies seem to ignore what is known on attitude measurement (although the
study by Lyall et al. provides an interesting turn to more implicit measurement by
systematically varying sources that participants are requested to endorse). The
German reception of the outcomes suggests that attitude research in Afghanistan
is, at present, difficult to interpret, to frame it positively. But also, to frame it
more negatively, research outcomes are easily neglected or reframed in strategic
and political context, and generally accompanied by a significant lack of western
researchers’ understanding of the social, cultural, and historical context of
Afghanistan. And this should be considered in the light of the considerable human
and monetary effort that has been spent to obtain the results.
In general, there still considerable amounts of work remains to be done
to increase our understanding of attitudes in Afghanistan, to cut the cost of
measurement, and to find ways in which attitude research outcome can inform
policy making. Specific to NATO operations, there are many complex additional
cultural and organizational challenges related to measuring, understanding, and
effectively responding to attitude research in Afghanistan; existing research
should not be assumed to offer clear answers and accurate insights on attitudes.
•
•
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Key Points
The research by Beath and colleagues, and the research by Lyall and
colleagues, appear to have involved considerable monetary and
human resources, but the outcomes of both studies appear to be fairly
limited.
The German reception of the outcomes suggests that attitude
research in Afghanistan is, at present, difficult to interpret. Also,
research outcomes are easily neglected or reframed in strategic and
political context, and generally accompanied by a significant lack of
western researchers’ understanding of the social, cultural, and
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
historical context of Afghanistan.
4. Conclusion
We may conclude that the potential of attitude research in military
context is considerable. Indeed, in peace support operation, understanding the
attitudes of the local population must be considered a key ingredient to a
successful mission. Attitude research is critical in the context. At the same time,
the way attitude research is currently conducted, and used, opens up so much for
room for interpretation to such an extent that its actual use for military purpose
seems to be quite limited. Also, from the perspective of NATO, there is simply no
comprehensive effort to consider, to analyze, integrate, and to publish a doctrine
on attitudes of the local population. In NATO context, the considerable potential
of attitudes is underutilized at best. But, at worst, it is sometimes painfully
neglected.
What to do? It is suggested that in order to optimally profit from attitude
research for NATO operations, it is of importance to:
(1)
Invest in a broader overview of available measures to assess the
population’s attitudes, and their use for short-term and long-term
planning.
There are many measures of attitudes. Some are obvious, others
less so; some are more effective, others less so. Recently, NATO’s
Research and Technology Organization (Task groups HFM-160 and
HFM-183) published a report on “measuring the effectiveness of
activities that influence attitudes and behaviours”. The report
contains an impressive overview of the strengths and weaknesses
of a considerable number of measures to assess attitudes. While
this seems to be a good start, the report does not contain any
description of the cognitive architecture of attitudes, and
consequently fails to specify the psychology of the local
population before measuring. This makes it difficult to determine
which measure is most suitable. Additionally, the NATO report
discusses measurement techniques in quite general terms (e.g.
the merits of “interviews”), but these techniques come in quite
diverse forms, and one technique to assess, for example, attitudes
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from behaviour, may be quite different than another. Thus, we
should still invest in a broader overview of available measures to
assess the population’s attitudes, while also specifying the
relevant cognitive mechanisms involved in attitude formation, and
how the measures can be tailored specifically for NATO purposes.
(2)
Develop a framework to more effectively interpret the outcome of
attitude research in a NATO context.
Next to attitude measurement techniques and data, it is critical to
specify how the data should be used. And here, interpretative
frameworks are critically important. If there is, for example, an
increase in the number of people who are positive towards NATO,
what does that mean? First of all, what is an increase? And then,
are all increases good? These are all essential questions of the
results of data are to be used effectively. Frameworks should be
developed to effectively interpret the outcome of attitude
research.
(3)
Use advances in technology to improve the quality of attitude data
gathering and analysis.
Things have changed over the years. Attitude research is no longer
a matter of a personal face-to-face conversation, or filling out a
paper questionnaire with a pencil. There are now of many
computerized techniques that can be useful (many of the
techniques have been discussed in the chapter). Clearly, advances
in technology enable more efficient and precise measurement.
What is more, the technology available to NATO (e.g. Satellites, XRay vision, etc.) seems to be much more advanced than that
available to psychologists. Here, NATO could fruitfully collaborate
with science to develop even more sophisticated techniques.
(4)
Soldiers should be trained to identify, interpret, and use these
attitudes.
It should be apparent that whatever technology is available,
observing, measuring, properly interpreting, reporting and
planning, still are, and likely will be, human endeavours. Attitudes
research cannot exist without people, people filling out
questionnaires, but also, people doing the research. Training
people in identifying, properly interpreting, and using attitudes,
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may thus be critical to in improving the efficiency of measurement
to detect the local population’s attitude towards NATO.
(5)
Current doctrine should be revised.
The existing work of NATO’s Research & Technology Organization
(Task groups HFM-160 and HFM-183) should be leveraged as a
starting point. A NATO working group should be established to
consider and pursue institutional change to NATO doctrine for
Human Aspects of the operational environment writ large, and
the use of measuring attitudes of the local populations in
particular.
Recommendations
•
•
•
•
•
Invest in a broader overview of available measures to assess the
population’s attitudes, and their use for short-term and long-term
planning
Develop a framework to more effectively interpret the outcome of
attitude research in a NATO context
Use advances in technology to improve the quality of attitude data
gathering and analysis
Soldiers should be trained to identify, interpret, and use these
attitudes
Current doctrine should be revised
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CHAPTER 7
TRANSFORMING NATO CAPABILITIES TO
ADAPT TO HUMAN ENVIRONMENT(S)
COL (ROU A) Răzvan SURDU
(Panel Leader)
Mr. Vivien PERTUSOT
Dr. Haaris AHMAD
LTC (ROU A) Constantin SÎRMĂ
COL (Ret.) Benjamin CLARK
MAJ (SVK A) Peter KOVÁCS
MAJ (ESP A) Juan Carlos
ANTÚNEZ MORENO
Dr. Nancy HUSTON
LTC (Ret.) Luděk MICHÁLEK
Mrs. Lesley SIMM
MAJ (USA F) Antonio J. MORALES
Ms. Oana POPESCU
HUMINT Centre of Excellence, NATO
The French Institute of International
Relations, Brussels Office, FRA
University of Duisburg-Essen, DEU
HUMINT Centre of Excellence, NATO
US Army contractor, USA
HUMINT Centre of Excellence, NATO
EUFOR HQ, UE
Technology and Human Factors Section/
C4ISR & NNEC Division of Allied
Command Transformation
Police Academy of the Czech Republic,
CZE
Allied Rapid Reaction Corps (ARRC),
NATO
Combined Air Operations Centre
Torrejon, NATO
Centre for Conflict Prevention and Early
Warning, ROU
1. Introduction
The recent NATO operations in Kosovo, Afghanistan and Libya
demonstrated that understanding the human environment in a conflict zone and
comprehending the motivation behind the active or passive support offered by a
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part of local population to NATO opponents is a keynote element implying aspects
covering different NATO capabilities.
It is generally agreed, within both the military and civilian realm, that
culture, or human factors/ aspects/environment is an important factor in military
operations, especially in irregular warfare and stability, support, transition, and
reconstruction operations.
According to some authors, “socio-cultural factors affect every level of
engagement in irregular warfare, from the interpersonal interactions while
negotiating with local leaders, military advisers training their counterparts, to
group and societal engagement during strategic communication and influence
178
operations” .
179
Others argue that gaining a complete and accurate understanding of a
culture requires spending years living in the region, learning the language and
interacting with the local people, things that the military cannot do. These
authors consider that despite their seeming diversity, all cultures are organized
according to a predictable set of categories or dimensions:
•
•
•
•
•
Environment, referring to the unique interdependent relationship
developed by all cultures with their physical environment.
Economy, addressing cultures’ specific systems for obtaining,
producing and distributing the items that people need or want to
survive in their society.
Social Structure dealing with way in which cultures assign people
different roles, status and power within the group.
Political Structure, detailing how cultures systems determines who
leads the group, and how they make decisions.
Belief Systems, covering cultures’ shared set of beliefs and symbols
that unite the group.
The importance of understanding the operational environment is
highlighted as well within different NATO publications, but with limited factual
information or without further development and guidance in respect of human
aspects/factors of the Operational Environment (OE).
178
Abbe, Allison and Halpin, Stanley M., The Cultural Imperative for Professional Military Education
and Leader Development, U.S. Army War College, 2010, p.20.
179
Salmoni, Barak A and Holmes-Eber, Paula, Operational Culture for the Warfighter Principles and
Applications, Marine Corps University Press, 2009.
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
Despite the significant place on understanding the operational
environment, the existing NATO publications do not clearly define this term. The
180
NATO Glossary of terms and definitions AAP-6 defines the environment , but
not the operational environment. The Allied Doctrine for Operations AJP 3(A) also
fails to define either the operational environment, it just simply explaining its
meaning within Section II – Command Factors, as being “generally factors and
conditions that must be understood to successfully apply combat power, protect
the force and complete the mission. This includes the sea, land, air and space
environments, the adversary and friendly forces, facilities, weather, terrain,
electromagnetic spectrum (EMS), and the information environment within the
JOA and areas of interest.”
Many important elements can be considered here as being relevant for
the operational environment, but a key one is missing: the local population, or
the “humans”, as it is mentioned in the definition of the environment provided by
AAP-6. This missing piece is likely the result of an unintentional error, since within
the text of the above mentioned publication there are several references
regarding the importance of the local population within operational environment.
However, whatever may be the term that will be used for the human
aspects/ dynamics/ elements/ factors of the operational environment, it is
surprisingly that despite the overall recognition of the high importance
placed upon it, this element is insufficiently addressed within NATO
publications, especially in regard to transforming NATO capabilities in this
field.
Although it may not be ideal, the following definition for the purpose of
this study is proposed:
Human Aspects of the Operational Environment represents a complex set
of elements, factors, processes, interactions, and perceptions in a society
180
NATO Glossary of terms and definitions AAP-6, 2012 - Environment: The surroundings in which an
organization operates, including air, water, land, natural resources, flora, fauna, humans, and their
interrelation.
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affected by medium or major violence that might either influence the
operations of military forces, or determine the outcome of the conflict.
HAOE refers to psychological, cultural, and sociological factors in
connection with an historical, political, military, and economic context of
crisis situations. They are of the highest relevance in Stability and
Reconstruction Operations, COIN, Peace Keeping/Enforcing, and similar
operations.
Analyzing the extent and manner how this “complex set of elements,
factors, processes, interactions, and perceptions” is addressed within existing
NATO publications, led us to the conclusion that the “human aspect” of the
operational environment has been neglected at all decision making levels, and
that a Concept, a Training Approach and Proper Capabilities, integrated into a
Coherent Operational Framework are needed in this respect.
It is not expected that the findings and proposed solutions within this
chapter will solve all the gaps in understanding the population in a conflict zone,
however the contributors consider that it will be a useful tool for all elements of
the military involved in planning and executing operations and missions, and it
could be the trigger for a further development of the topic of human aspects,
providing a framework for a common perspective that will help NATO forces
prepare to operate in a highly complex, uncertain and changing security
environment.
Transforming NATO capabilities to adapt to the Human Environment
181
requires the consideration of the Comprehensive Approach principles, and the
potential implications for different assets having interaction on regular basis with
181
The Comprehensive Approach is a global concept that, although often associated with civil-military
cooperation (CIMIC), goes beyond the existing NATO doctrine on enhanced civil-military cooperation.
Furthermore, CIMIC is often mentioned in conjunction with counterinsurgency, Provincial
Reconstruction Teams (PRT-Afghanistan), peace operations, stability operations and crisis
management.
NATO’s new Strategic Concept, adopted at the Lisbon Summit in November 2010, underlines that
lessons learned from NATO operations show that effective crisis management calls for a
comprehensive approach involving political, civilian and military instruments. Military means, although
essential, are not enough on their own to meet the many complex challenges to Euro-Atlantic and
international security. Allied leaders agreed at Lisbon to enhance NATO’s contribution to a
comprehensive approach to crisis management as part of the international community’s effort and to
improve NATO’s ability to contribute to stabilization and reconstruction
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
the local population – Civil Military Cooperation (CIMIC), Human Intelligence
(HUMINT), Operational Mentoring and Liaison Team (OMLT), Provincial
Reconstruction Team (PRT), Psychological Operations (PSYOPS), Reconnaissance
(RECCE), Special Operation Forces (SOF).
Considering this broad coverage several key issues having a direct impact
on them have been briefly analysed, before addressing the proposed solutions for
transforming NATO capabilities following the Joint Capabilities Integration
Development System (DOTMPLFI) elements.
2. Security environment
The most important element to be considered when addressing the need
for transformation of the capabilities refers to the main characteristics of the
global security environment in which the respective capabilities have to be
employed.
The Multiple Futures Project (MFP) developed by the Supreme Allied
Command Transformation (SACT) in 2009, highlighted the challenges posed by
the future security environment as well as the need for NATO forces to
understand the human environment in theatre and to be able to efficiently
communicate with the people, authorities and actors.
The MFP study describes 4 multiples futures - Dark Side of Exclusivity,
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Deceptive Stability, Clash of Modernities and New Power Politics - and is based
on the analysis of 19 national studies on the future security environment as well
as the ACT body of work on drivers, futures, and challenges.
Using the results of 21 workshops and based on the highest degree of
commonality, nine drivers of change were identified as most relevant to global
development over the next 20 years:
•
•
•
•
•
182
Friction at international decision making level.
Economic Integration of globalised actors.
Asymmetry of wealth and power.
Changing State Capacity and the distribution and management of
power.
Resource Allocation of raw materials, energy, water and food.
The Multiple Futures Project – Navigating towards 2030, Final report, April 2009, p.13
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•
•
•
•
Competing Ideologies and World Views.
Climate Change impacting international relations and commerce.
Use of Technology and innovation likely to produce breakthrough
events.
Demographics including migration and urbanisation.
The existence of an evolving security environment in the early twentyfirst century, that creates new global challenges have also been noted by different
regional organizations over the past ten years ago. According to the Organization
for the Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) threats to security and stability
in the OSCE region are today more likely to arise as negative, destabilizing
consequences of developments that cut across the politico-military, economic
and environmental and human dimensions, than from any major armed
183
conflict .
The OSCE strategy identifies similar factors posing a challenge to global
st
security and stability in the 21 century:
•
•
•
Lack of openness and transparency in politico-military matter.;
Globalization, liberalization and technological change offering new
opportunities for trade, growth and development, but having not
equally benefited all participating States.
Environmental degradation, unsustainable use of natural
resources, mismanagement of wastes and pollution affecting
ecological systems and having a substantial negative impact on
the health, welfare, stability and security of States.
An EU Commission’s Study identifies six main dimensions of the future
184
shaping the security environment :
•
•
•
•
•
•
Global demographic and societal challenges.
Energy and natural resource security and efficiency, environment
and climate change.
Economy and technology prospects;
Geopolitics and governance: EU frontiers, integration and role on
the global scale;
Territorial and mobility dynamics;
Research, education and innovation.
183
OSCE, OSCE strategy to address threats to security and stability in the twenty-first century,
December 2003, p.1
184
European Commission, Global Europe 2050 Summary Report, October 2011, p.4.
182
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
Another study identifies 4 mega-trends shaping our world up to 2030
•
•
•
•
185
:
Individual empowerment;
Diffusion of power;
Demographic patterns;
Growing food, water and energy nexus.
It can be noticed that since the release of the MFP study these drivers
have continued to be relevant, some of them being highlighted as well within the
New NATO Strategic Concept adopted in 2010 by Heads of State and Government
in Lisbon and are mentioned as referenced within other more recent studies. This
chapter will focus only on those drivers/features common for most of the studies
186
which address future security environment and global trends .
2.1. Competing (Clash of) Ideologies and Worldviews.
This is a permanent issue affecting the security environment, having
been mentioned within different studies beginning with the last decade of the
past century. Huntington´s ‘clash of civilizations’ rests on the claim that broad
187
cultural and/or religious affinities are now supplanting national loyalties .
This key feature of the security environment is mentioned within all four
envisioned multiple futures as well as within other recent studies dedicated to
188
analyzing the future operational environment , and refers to alienation,
disagreement and confrontation based on different cultures, values, religion, and
historic geopolitical perspectives of international actors. The changing global
security situation has seen a shift in emphasis from the certainties of super-power
confrontation towards more complex interactions of state and non-state actors.
Furthermore, the terrorism, along with the spread of weapons of mass
destruction, is likely to remain principal threats. It is assessed that the clash of
ideologies also constitutes a trigger for potential frictions in international decision
making, a feature of the fourth multiple future – New Power Politics. Friction
refers to the ease with which decisions are made at the international level,
ranging from cooperation to confrontation.
185
National Intelligence Council, Global Trends 2030: Alternative Worlds, December 2012, p.ii.
List of literature is contained at the end of the panel report
Walt, Stephen M., International Relations: One World, Many Theories, Foreign Policy, Washington,
Spring 1998, Iss. 110.
188
TRADOC, Operational Environment 2009-2025, August 2009.
186
187
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2.2. Resource Allocation (Conflict on resources and global inequality)
The majority of studies related to this topic, encompass essential
resource issues such as availability, affordability, access to and competition.
Although sufficient resources are likely to be available to sustain the growing
global population and the global economy, the distribution and access to these
resources will be uneven, and shortages will occur at local or regional levels,
increasing the likelihood of societal instability and of disagreement between
189
states, thus providing the triggers that may ignite conflict.
It is envisioned as well that economic, social and political inequality of
opportunity will continue to fuel perceptions of injustice among individuals and
groups unable to have met their expectations, generating tension, unrest and
190
instability, both within and between societies .
Other studies estimate that the competition for resources such as water
and food is unlikely to result in state-on-state conflict, although internal or interregional disputes could possibly break out amongst people trying to secure these
191
resources for their survival .
2.3. Globalization (Economic/Integration)
The globalization issue is present within all of the reference documents,
192
as a major feature influencing the security
including military publications,
environment, being considered an all-encompassing trend. It refers to the extent
to which national and regional economies trade, and their level of functional
integration. Emerging powers will play a key role within economic integration
affecting the balance of power in the world and it is likely to have a shift from
hegemony to national pluralism.
According to the National Intelligence Council’s Global Trends 2030, by
2030 Asia will have surpassed North America and Europe combined in terms of
global power, based upon GDP, population size, military spending, and
technological investment.
189
UK MOD Development, Concepts and Doctrine Centre (DCDC), Global Strategic Trends – Out to
2040, 2010, p.73.
190
Idem, p.22.
191
Canada National Defence, The Future Security Environment 2008-2030 Part 1: Current and Emerging
Trends, January 2009, p.5.
192
AJP-3.10 Allied Joint Doctrine for Information Operations (November 2009) and “The Future
Security Environment (FSE)”, produced by the Intelligence Sub-Division, Headquarters, Supreme Allied
Command Transformation (HQ SACT 2007).
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
Most of the global trends studies foresee that over the next forty years,
the United States is likely to remain a critical player, but will cede at least partial
authority to China while low and middle-income countries in Asia and Latin
America will become an immensely powerful force in the world economy.
Another study estimates that China alone will probably have the largest economy,
193
surpassing that of the United States a few years before 2030 .
Globalization is directly linked with competing worldviews, since it has
shown a tendency to empower some while marginalizing others, and generating
tensions between individual and group identity. Although it contributes to a
steady rise in shared economic interests between and among countries, it is
assessed that globalization provides no sure remedy for international suspicions
194
and rivalry .
Globalization, competition for resources and competing ideologies and
tensions in political and social structures combined with ideological, religious and
cultural distinctions may generate other features of security environment:
complexity, unpredictability and uncertainty.
2.4. Complexity, Unpredictability and Uncertainty
The MFP’s concluding remarks stress that the future security
environment will be dominated by complexity and unpredictability, features
posing real challenges to the solidarity among allies, regarding the strategic unity
of values and ideas, burden-sharing, and commitment to its decisions, as an
alliance’s most powerful tools. As the changing global security situation has seen a
shift in emphasis from the certainties of super-power confrontation towards more
complex interactions of state and non-state actors, this will remain a real
challenge in framing the proper response from international community. The
implications derived from the foreseen multiple futures scenarios reveal that the
security environment will continue to evolve but it will be subject to a variety of
unforeseeable developments on political, social, technological and military
domains.
193
National Intelligence Council, Global Trends 2030, November 2012.
NATO, NATO 2020: Assured Security; Dynamic Engagement - Analysis and Recommendations of the
Group of Experts on a New Strategic Concept for NATO, May 2010.
194
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2.5. Demographics
Demographics reflect domestic and regional population trends related to
birth, death, age, gender, structure, ethnicity, and the other characteristics of a
state’s population. Current social and demographic trends will have a significant
impact on the changing future security environment, increasing the potential
scope and intensity of intrastate conflict and warfare conducted by non-state
195
actors . The world’s population growth, estimated to reach close to 8.3 billion
people by 2030, could have significant social effects such as expanding
urbanization, growing the gaps between social classes, poverty, unemployment
and migration, all of which can be triggers for conflict.
2.6. Use of Technology/ Innovation
Nowadays the use of technology has become more and more a factor
having significant impact on the security environment. It refers to the continuous
evolution and increased access to technology, especially for non-state actors.
Proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and the development of laser
weapons, electronic warfare, nano & bio technologies as well as space related
196
technologies will have the major global effect on the security environment . The
increased dependency of today's critical infrastructure on networked computer
systems in conjunction with the level of access to newest technology cause the
computer hacking to become a serious security threat.
2.7. Key Environmental Constraints
Consideration must be given to climate change as any long-term
significant development that may have an impact on international relations.
Increasing water scarcity and growing energy needs are further shaping the
security environment in areas of concern to NATO. The World Economic Forum
Report 2013 highlights the importance of understanding the implications of the
changes in the energy landscape, as well as that of other natural resources and
warns that this issue must be examined not only from the perspective of the
195
National Intelligence Council, Long Term Strategy Group, 2025 Security Environment: Final Report,
June 2008.
Strategic Concept for the Defense and Security of the Members of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (2010)
196
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
quantity and distribution, but as well within larger ecosystems of societal
197
usage .
Climate change negatively impacts mostly developing countries – which
are already under economic hardship and social stresses – inflating existing
tensions and instabilities.
3. Future operations
As a direct consequence of the foreseen security environment
characteristics the contributors consider that the main features of future
operations will be represented by:
•
•
•
Complex operational environment: Simultaneous engagement of
forces throughout the full operational spectrum – air, land,
maritime, space, and cyber – with a higher pace of operations and
an increasing role of non-kinetic means.
Combined joint expeditionary operations: Because the most
unstable areas with the greatest potential for conflict lie outside of
NATO territories, developing expeditionary capabilities, as directed
by most current NATO doctrine, becomes a must.
198
Increasingly confronted by Hybrid Threats (HT) : Threats will come
through a hybrid form of warfare employing conventional, irregular,
and criminal capabilities, integrated operationally and tactically at
the lowest level possible, mainly in urban environments and in
locations where the Alliance lacks capabilities support.
197
Global Agenda., World Economic Forum Annual Meeting 2013
HT refers to those posed by adversaries, with the ability to simultaneously employ conventional and
non-conventional means adaptively in pursuit of their objectives, according to Bi-SC Input to a New
NATO Capstone Concept for the Military Contribution to Countering Hybrid Threats, 25 August 2010.
The main feature of HT is the employment of a combination of actions, both conventional and nonconventional, against military and civilian objectives in an increasingly unconstrained operational
environment to include non-physical domains (cyber, info/media, financial). The HT activity is difficult
to attribute to a proximate adversary or actor as well as to identify of its originator or sponsor and may
be the result of an ambiguous cooperation between sponsor states, terrorist, and insurgent
organizations, corrupt governments or individual actors.
198
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•
•
•
•
Diffuse Non-conventional Adversaries: This element is directly linked
with the HT challenge. We face an important paradigm shift from
the traditional concept of a super-power confrontation in which the
enemy is identified as state actor (states or rogue states) toward
more complex interactions of state and non-state actors. Because
NATO has demonstrated its ability to quickly and effectively conduct
major combat operations, states countering NATO will increasingly
rely on sponsoring and exploiting surrogates and proxies to
generate asymmetric challenges. Since the use of criminal and
terrorist elements as well as other non-state actors gives nationstates options for effectively opposing NATO interests and
objectives without direct action, their role will likely increase in
future operations.
Urbanization of warfare: Population growth trends, especially in
developing countries, indicate that by 2025 more than 60% of the
world’s population will live in cities. From a military perspective,
urban warfare is extremely challenging due to its specific features
and requirements (increased number of troops, severe limitations
in effective use of fire-power, manoeuvre within a multidimensional
confrontation environment—underground, ground level, and
buildings—and presence of civilians).
Population – centre of gravity: In future operations, operating areas
will increasingly overlap with densely inhabited areas.
Subsequently, the local population will represent a key feature of
the operational environment, and gaining the population’s support
will become a key prerequisite for success.
Comprehensiveness: Recent NATO operations have demonstrated
that the military is not able to effectively deal with the challenges
posed by stability operations on its own. The complexity of such
operations requires a multidisciplinary approach and enhanced
inter-agency cooperation.
4. NATO’s Role & Mission
The modern security environment contains a broad and evolving set of
challenges to the security of NATO’s territory and populations. In order to assure
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
their security, the Alliance must and will continue fulfilling effectively the three
essential core tasks mentioned within the NATO 2010 Strategic Concept and
reiterated in the 2012 Chicago Summit Declaration: Collective Defence, Crisis
Management and Cooperative Security.
Considering the transnational nature of the contemporary threats, the
robust military capabilities needed to address the full spectrum of conflict and
crisis, beyond NATO borders, it is assessed that these three core tasks make the
most sense. Within a future cooperative multipolar world order, NATO would be
viewed as a key element in a globalized collective security and crisis management
system, a forum for allied security debates on the full range of global issues and
199
how best to address transnational shared threats .
Whatever NATO’s missions might be, all are relevant from an HAOE
standpoint. The Alliance will likely have to respond to security challenges caused
mainly by poor governance or a lack of governance. Most of the studies
addressing global trends estimate that these challenges will be generated by a
mix of factors related to the rampant extremist ideologies, uncontrolled and illicit
migration, and frictions caused by competition for and access to resources. All
those triggers are elements of the HAOE, which must be right understood and
considered for a proper response to these challenges.
4.1. Strategic requirements
To be effective across the crisis management spectrum, the following
issues must be considered while adapting NATO capabilities:
•
•
Enhanced Intel Sharing: Intelligence sharing must take place
between NATO Nations, NATO bodies and with other partners to
better estimates when and where crises might occur, and how they
can best be prevented or how NATO might have to respond to
them.
Specific Doctrine: Although some of the approached topics are
200
and the subsequent
covered to a certain extent by AJP-3.4
201
this is insufficient for achieving a sound and common
series
199
Herd, Graeme P., Securing the West in a Post-Western World order: NATO’s Third “Transatlantic
Bargain”?, CCSP Policy Paper, January 2013, p.3
200
NATO, AJP-3.4 Non-Article 5 Crisis Response Operations
201
AJP-3.4.1 Peace Support Operations; AJP-3.4.2 Non-combatant Evacuation Operations; AJP-3.4.3
Military Support to Civil Authorities (under development); AJP-3.4.4 Counter-Insurgency; AJP-3.4.5
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•
•
•
•
•
understanding of the human dimension of the operational
environment.
Tailored Force Structure: A tailored forces structure requires further
development of military capabilities and TTPs for expeditionary
operations, including counterinsurgency, stabilization and
reconstruction operations.
Enhanced Civilian Crisis Management Capability: Enhancing the
202
“appropriate but modest civilian crisis management capability ”
established at NATO HQ and ACO, to interface more effectively with
civilian partners, build on the lessons learned from previous NATOled operations and covering relevant HAOE issues. This capability
may also be used for integrating civilian-military planning
throughout the crisis spectrum as well as employing and
coordinating civilian activities until conditions allow for the transfer
of those responsibilities and tasks to other actors.
Training support for HN: Building local forces in a crisis zone and
develop training capabilities, so that local authorities to be able, in a
reasonable timeframe but as quickly as possible, to maintain
security with minimum international assistance.
Comprehensive Approach to Operations: The establishment and
common understanding of a comprehensive approach strategy on
both sides (military and civilian), including identification and
training of civilian specialists from member states available for rapid
deployment by Allies for selected missions, who will able to work
alongside with military personnel and civilian specialists from
partner countries and institutions.
Enhanced Political Cooperation: Broaden and intensify political
consultations among Allies, as well as with other partners, both on a
regular basis and in dealing with all stages of a crisis – before,
during and after.
Military Support to Stabilisation and Reconstruction (under development); AJP-3.4.9 Civil-Military
Cooperation.
202
NATO, Chicago Summit Declaration, Issued by the Heads of State and Government participating in
the meeting of the North Atlantic Council in Chicago on 20 May 2012, p.5
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
As NATO Secretary General Rassmussen highlighted, as well as expanding
the range of issues where NATO cooperates, the alliance must also expand the
range of nations with whom we engage.
“… we need an alliance that is globally aware, globally connected and
203
globally capable. This is my vision for NATO”
4.2. Factors influencing NATO
4.2.1. A fundamentally human and non-linear environment
NATO’s primary mission is collective defence, yet aside from the
maritime Operation Active Endeavour, all operations have taken place outside of
NATO nations’ boundaries and most have blended elements of conventional and
asymmetric warfare.
Consequently, operating in foreign sometimes far-away countries creates
specific constraints that need to be addressed. Indeed, operating in any country
requires action within an interconnected system with its own rules and actors.
4.2.2. Direct and Indirect Complexity
It is generally understood that when planning a military operation
abroad, complexity and uncertainty are two key parameters to deal with. Yet it is
worth keeping them in mind and especially the potential repercussions at all
levels, as NATO plans activities in such an uncertain environment. Uncertainty
derives from the multi-faceted complexity at hand and two essential levels of
complexity can be distinguished.
The more direct one is to operate on foreign soil against clearly defined
opposing forces. However, military operations today are increasingly “wars
among the people” to paraphrase Rupert Smith, where the opposing forces are
203
NATO, Delivering security in the 21st century, Speech by NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh
Rasmussen, Chatham House, London, 4th July 2012.
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represented by diffuse insurgencies, rather than industrial conventional wars
where two state actors fight against each other
4.2.3. Uncertainty in decisions
Complexity undoubtedly leads to uncertainty. This uncertainty greatly
affects the ways, means, and ends of any military operation. It is indeed very
difficult to anticipate the consequences of a given action. Robert Merton outlined
204
four common factors that increase the potential for unexpected consequences :
•
•
•
•
the impossibility of predicting all possible outcomes,
errors,
“the imperious immediacy of interest”, and
basic values.
Those reasons are not mutually exclusive and can even overlap. While
the first is difficult to rectify, the other three demand more scrutiny.
Errors are often linked to the assumption that past solutions can work
again. The roots of this thinking are often a lack of appreciation between the
specificities of different situations especially when they display seeming
similarities.
The “imperious immediacy of interest” is an ambiguous concept. It does
not preclude actors from acting rationally, that is to say to achieve certain goals or
acting according to their own interests, but they either exclude or fail to take into
account the potential fallout a course of action can generate.
The role of basic values is understood, but often overlooked. Whatever
actions that are taken, whatever decisions that are made, in most cases are based
on values that NATO believes in and acting against them can influence our
actions. This factor does not necessarily imply a conscious choice.
These three examples illustrate that the unexpected consequences of
NATO’s actions could be limited if we are more careful about the choices and
decisions we make.
Interpreting as accurately as possible the local context and the effects
NATO’s actions can cause depends on how much one can differentiate between
the constitutive and constraining aspects of culture. Culture can indeed have a
204
Merton, Robert K., “The Unanticipated Consequences of Purposive Social Action,” American
Sociological Review, Vol. 1, No. 3, December 1936, pp. 894-904.
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constitutive role that shapes our actions and our reactions, but it can also restrain
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us from behaving and acting in certain ways .
Debates in the United States about the campaigns in Iraq and
Afghanistan have rekindled the role of understanding the local context and taking
into consideration the human environment as an element to ensure successes
and victories.
So far, it has been shown that complexity and uncertainty are inherent
aspects of modern conflicts. In addition, it has been determined that focusing on
understanding the local context has become a primary concern for any military
operation among to succeed in gaining the support of the local population. The
chapter will now turn to the implications that it conveys for the political-strategic
level.
4.3. The role of the political-strategic level
Complexity and uncertainty are indeed two central components that the
political-strategic level has to tackle. Arguably, if there is a failure to address those
issues at the highest level, there will invariably be fallout at the strategic,
operational, and tactical levels. The clearer the vision and guidance that NATO’s
political-strategic level can deliver the better for all of the levels below.
4.3.1. Consequences on the political-strategic level
In most non-conventional military operations, like Counterinsurgency,
stability operations, peace enforcement and peace keeping, among others,
military capabilities and military tactics generally are of secondary importance.
Therefore, NATO's military superiority in regard to military capabilities and
technology compared to any potential adversary often is of limited relevance in
dealing with such operations. Afghanistan is a case in point. Instead, the human
factors are of key importance. Often they constitute the centre of gravity in such
operations. Success generally will not be decided by overwhelming firepower or
mobility, but by winning over the population. This goal is of high tactical
importance, because it can cut off insurgents from logistical support, recruitment
and intelligence. But generally it also is strategically decisive, because any nonconventional armed group without political support in society will be reduced to
205
Michael N. Barnett, “Culture,” in Paul D. Williams, Security Studies: An Introduction, 2nd edition,
Oxon: Routledge, 2012, pp. 172-173.
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being just a criminal gang. In this case it could be isolated, separated from the
population and would therefore be much more vulnerable to state repression.
In this sense winning the loyalty and respect of the population is the
main battleground, which has to be won to make military operations effective.
Any effective strategy in non-conventional operations should focus on winning
over the population. Military superiority and tactical efficiency cannot be
substitutes for such a strategy.
Such a strategic focus has to put legitimacy at its centre. Political and
military forces which are not perceived as legitimate (or: more legitimate than the
opposition) by the population, will hardly win the loyalty or the population.
Winning the contest for legitimacy therefore is key for successful
counterinsurgency, stability, peace keeping/enforcement operations. This applies
to the legitimacy of NATO, NATO troops and NATO operations, but even more to
the legitimacy of a host government supported by NATO. If such a government is
perceived as illegitimate or as less legitimate than the opposition by its own
population, the supporting foreign troops will be tainted as well. Even if NATO
troops operate with restraint, culturally sensitive, and efficient, they still will be
seen as illegitimate if their main purpose is to support a discredited and/or
illegitimate host government. Also, working with notorious warlords or other nonstate actors for tactical reasons will undercut the legitimacy of NATO troops and
NATO operations.
This dependency on often dubious host governments is one of the key
vulnerabilities of external strategy development. Without a cooperating host
government external forces would be hardly more than occupation troops - which
would undercut their legitimacy. But if the host government is incompetent,
corrupt, repressive or otherwise illegitimate, being its supporter would have the
same effect. Transforming the host government into an efficient and legitimate
entity in the eyes of the local population therefore is a keystone for successful
military operations. Without this, NATO operations will lack a key precondition for
success. NATO strategy has to offer a working solution to this problem, if it is
expected to achieve the desired goals.
4.3.2. Implications for NATO’s political-strategic pillar
Despite the caveat that the North Atlantic Council (NAC) is an
intergovernmental body, the following recommendations do not require the NAC
to change its procedures. First, the NAC sets the tone for all levels of war below
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and has a role to pave the way adequately. Second, the NAC’s role is to act as “the
paragon of good practices.” Third, it should strike the right balance between a
top-down and bottom-up approach to allow all levels to contribute to the whole
of the operation.
First, the role of the NAC is to set the right tone. We have seen that all
levels of war have both vertical and horizontal dimensions that make them
interdependent. The NAC is the institution that sets the strategic end-states, and
the priorities for the operation. Moreover, it sets the level of fighting
commitments in terms of resources (both human and material)
Second, the NAC needs to act as the “paragon of good practices.”
According to the new Comprehensive Operations Planning Directive (COPD), the
NAC retains the ultimate authority to approve military documents. Throughout
NATO’s Crisis Management Process, the NAC intervenes politically at six junctures.
Before the execution (phase 5), the NAC has played a role five times:
•
•
•
•
•
To decide that a crisis requires assessment and advice on the
developing situation (the Political-Military Estimate).
To task SACEUR to develop a response strategy.
To issue the NAC Initiative Directive (NID).
To approve the CONOPS and the OPLAN.
And to give formal authorization to execute the OPLAN.
This authority gives the NAC tremendous power and it should be used
wisely and effectively. As Paul Van Riper staid, in “a non-linear system, there are
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no right or wrong approach, just better or poorer ones .” It requires an
operational design that is broad and thoughtful.
Third, it is important to strike the right balance between a top-down and
bottom-up approach. Once the execution has begun, all levels of war may be
confronted with situations that require adaptations at one level or more. The new
COPD anchors more responsibilities to the top political-strategic level, i.e.
diplomats and civil servants. In the different phases of the crisis management
process, the role and influence of military officers are diminishing to the point
that the distinction between the political and the strategic is waning. Yet, the
longer an operation lasts, the more the strategic and operational levels are
gaining influence; additionally, this phenomenon holds true when an operation
206
Paul Van Riper, “The Foundation of Strategic Thinking, ”Infinity Journal, Vol. 2, No. 3, Summer 2012.
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mobilizes vast human resources . Indeed, periodic mission reviews gives the
military commanders a platform to interject greater influence. A top-down
approach gives the political-strategic level more responsibilities but it can also
lead the political-strategic level to disregard valuable inputs from levels below. A
heuristic approach offers the opportunity for valuable tactical level assessments
to be incorporated upward because as we have emphasized, actions on the
ground can have political fallout.
4.4. Economy influence
Another aspects restricting military and NATO itself is the economical
factor. Despite globalization and increasing economic integration, the economic
crisis of the past few years demonstrated that the global economy still has
vulnerabilities. This economic crisis influenced most of the NATO nations’
budgets, thus directly impacting through cutbacks and reductions the military
spending and the budgets of their Ministries of Defence.
Moreover, according to the World Economic Forum Global Risks 2013
Report, the global risk thought most likely to manifest itself over the next 10 years
is severe income disparity, while the risk rated as having the highest impact, if it
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were to occur, is major systemic financial failure . The challenge is more obvious
since it will increase the potential for conflicts while the NATO’s need for
resources to mitigate these conflicts will grow.
NATO already realized that it has to do more with less and has presented
its Smart Defence Concept during the NATO Chicago summit (20-21MAY2012).
However, the decision on military budgets and its spending are directly under the
political control of the individual member governments.
NATO is of course the sum of its members’ ambitions. At present there is
a growing gap between aspirations/agreed concepts, and the willingness of
member nations to meet commitments. In other words, to achieve maximum
effect in a large complex space over time and distance with limited resources
would likely require a truly radical reform of the NATO command structure, not to
mention a new set of relationships with key partners vital to mission success.
207
Håkan Edström and Dennis Gyllensporre, “From Strategy to Operations – or the Other Way
Around?”, in Håkan Edström and Dennis Gyllensporre (eds.), Pursuing Strategy: NATO Operations from
Gulf War to Gaddafi, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012, pp. 20-21.
208
The World Economic Forum’s Global Risks 2013 report is developed from an annual survey of over
1,000 experts from industry, government, academia and civil society who were asked to review a
landscape of 50 global risks
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
27.11%
72.89%
Europe
America
Figure 7.1: Budgetary spending FY2012
4.5. Understanding NATO
NATO will be required to effectively operate in increasingly complex
situations within both Article 5 and Non Article 5 Crisis Response Operations. The
complexity derives firstly from the high number and diversity of actors present in
the operational environment, and secondly from the heterogeneous composition
of the Alliance itself.
NATO is the sum of its members’ ambitions and can be described as a
country consisting of 28 tribes, each tribe with its own political system which are,
on one hand, generally very similar, but, on another slightly different as each has
its own unique characteristics. In order to use NATO effectively to accomplish the
things they wish to do, the allies primarily need to have, not identical, but
209
compatible interests .
NATO has a huge structure, combining hierarchical and matrix type’s
connections. Moreover its management consists of political and military parts and
the whole system is closely tied to individual nations. It has different links to other
non-NATO nations and international organizations and with the gradual
implementation of the comprehensive approach strategy the number of
connections will grow.
The complexity of the entire system, which by nature is a bureaucratic
system, is closely connected with the complexity of decision making processes
influenced by different committees, commissions and working groups, framed by
209
Herd, Graeme P. and John Kriendler – Understanding NATO in the Twenty-First Century: Alliance
Strategies, Security and Global Governance, p.27 (2013).
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priorities and standards, and digitally overloaded. All of these create conditions
for a delay in decision making and/or a lack of coordination which supports the
above mentioned uncertainties. Despite this complexity and uncertainty, NATO
was and is still able to reach workable solutions, to assume collective
responsibilities, and to present synergy and coherence.
National
Citizens
TO Local
OSCE
Media
Government
Russia
Executive
branch
International
Legislative
branch
NATO HQ
World
Bank
UN
Nation
Armed
Forces
Civilian
structure
NATO
Committees
ICI
Coalition
partners
Military
structure
NATO
Working
Groups
NATO
ACO
JFCB
JFCN
ISAF HQ
KFOR
MD
PfP
EU
Economic
factors
NTM-A
Partners
HQ SACT
JWC
NRDC
JFTC NMIOTC NURC JALLC
Organizations &
Agencies
IJC
NATO School
COEs
Priorities
RTO
RCs
International
Agreements
NSA
NCSA
NC3A
International
Law
Human Rights
Procedures
Counter Terrorism
NATO TTPs
Concepts
Doctrines
ROEs
Comprehensive
Approach
BICES
SOFA
Cooperative Security
Standards
Crises Management
SOP
Collective Defense
Smart Defense
Cyber Defense
NATO Operations –
ISAF, KFOR
NATO expansion
Ballistic missile
Defense
Partnering – RUS,
UN, EU, OSCE
NATO structure
review
Figure 7.2: Interrelationships within NATO
4.5.1. Decision making
A more agile NATO command and control (C2) construct is needed with
clearly defined roles and responsibilities of different NATO bodies, entities,
agencies, as well as committees and working groups. Subsequently in the
contemporary international security environment the Alliance requires a smaller
but nevertheless effective cluster of headquarters (HQs) that can rotate
seamlessly without any loss of institutional memory or operational momentum.
These headquarters should all conform to a common set of C2 standards,
enabling a plug-and-play structure easily augmentable as and when required.
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
A perspective in dealing with diversity, which exists amongst the
different cultures comprising the Alliance, is presented by the concept of a
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Human Approach to Operations .
The Human Approach to Operations is defined as using the consideration
of human nature to anticipate operational consequences and impacts, and to
improve the effectiveness of crisis management.
5. Remarks on HAOE terminology and strategy
“Human Aspects of the Operational Environment” after the experiences
in Somalia, Afghanistan and other deployments seem to be a key variable of
successful operations. In all these cases Western military forces were never
lacking military superiority. In regard to size, mobility and firepower (and financial
resources) the forces of NATO or NATO member countries have been so
overwhelmingly superior to any and all adversaries that traditional military
thinking would have suggested easy, fast and convincing victories. Those did not
happen, or they only occurred in regard to military forces organized and fielded
by nation-state governments, like Saddam Hussein’s Iraq and, Afghanistan of the
Taliban, as well as Muammar Gaddafi's Libya. On the other hand, the use of
military force against some non-state actors has been less than convincing. For
instance, all of NATO's expensive and impressive military capabilities after more
than a decade of war did not result in victory in Afghanistan when facing an often
illiterate adversary of perhaps 25 or 30,000 fighters without an air force and with
a comparably meagre budget. The main reason obviously is that this and
comparable wars have not been conventional military ones, but of a completely
different character. Counterinsurgency (COIN), as should be well known by now,
basically is not a military confrontation, but a political struggle in which military
force is only one variable amongst others, and not even the most important one.
The Field Manual "Counterinsurgency" of the US Army and the US Marine Corps
(FM 3-24) was not the first military document to describe this clearly:
“In fact, some capabilities required for conventional success—for
example, the ability to execute operational manoeuvre and employ massive
firepower—may be of limited utility or even counterproductive in COIN operations.
210
Denux, Valerie, COL/ACT Medical Branch, Mastering the Human Aspects in Operation – Medical
contribution, Food For Thought Paper, October 2011.
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Nonetheless, conventional forces beginning COIN operations often try to use these
211
capabilities to defeat insurgents; they almost always fail.”
It is very difficult not to agree with this observation. Also the key reasons
are well known, though not often taken into account:
“Political power is the central issue in insurgencies and
counterinsurgencies; each side aims to get the people to accept its governance or
212
authority as legitimate.” Therefore, victory can hardly ever be won only by
military means: “Victory is achieved when the populace consents to the
government's legitimacy and stops actively and passively supporting the
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insurgency.”
This is a political not military achievement. Several analysts and military
officers have accordingly emphasized that the centre of gravity in
counterinsurgencies and similar operations - and therefore the key to success - is
the loyalty of the population, not destroying enemy forces or controlling territory.
If these lessons from the last several decades of counterinsurgency
operations are correct, then the ‘Operational Environment’ does not have some
‘human aspects’. These ‘human aspects’ are not just aspects of something else,
but they are key, the centre of gravity of these specific kinds of war. The human
society is not a factor or aspect in COIN, but the real battlefield, and this
battlefield is a political not military one. Former British General Rupert Smith
appropriately coined the term “war amongst the people” and wrote:
“War amongst the people is different [compared to other, conventional
war: it is the reality in which the people in the streets and houses and fields - all
the people, anywhere - are the battlefield. Military engagements can take place
anywhere: in the presence of civilians, against civilians, in defence of civilians.
214
Civilians are the targets, objectives to be won, as much as an opposing force.”
If the people, the whole population of another country, are the centre of
gravity, the most important resource, the victims and actors, and the battlefield
of the war at the same time, it is obvious that military force has to have a
completely different meaning and relevance than in war against another state.
211
US Army/US Marine Corps, Counterinsurgency Field Manual FM 3-24, Chicago 2007, p. LII
ibid, p. 2.
213
ibid, p. 6
214
Rupert Smith, The Utility of Force - The Art of War in the Modern World, London 2006, p. 3f;
emphasis added J.H.
212
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
Success or failure in COIN or related operations will be decided by
political, social, economic and cultural measures. Military operations may (or may
not, depending on timing and approach) play important supporting roles. They
can buy time for political reforms, and they can be very useful to help create a
secure and stable environment for it. But they will hardly ever be decisive. If no
coherent political-economic-social strategy is in place to resolve the basic
problems of a given society, or if this strategy is not implemented resourcefully
and competently, military operations will only prolong the conflict, but hardly
215
ever decide it.
A ‘comprehensive approach’ should be developed from the centre of
gravity (winning the trust of the population by creating or strengthening
legitimacy of governance). An appropriate civil-military strategy, which places the
loyalty and trust of the population at its centre, has to be developed. Separate
civilian and military sub-strategies have to serve this integrated approach and
216
should not be allowed to undercut it.
The problem for NATO and its member countries is not, that these
considerations would not be known and clear. The opposite is true. But the
problem is that they are very rarely implemented. Winning the loyalty and
support of the population by creating a legitimate and effective government (in
the words of Rupert smith: “capturing the will of the people” in obvious
opposition to capturing territory or enemies) is accepted on paper, but often
ignored in reality:
“Capturing the will of the people is a very clear and basic concept, yet
one that is either misunderstood or ignored by political and military
establishments around the world. The politician keeps applying force to attain a
condition, assuming the military will both create and maintain it. And whilst for
many years the military has understood the need to win the ‘hearts and minds’ of
the local population, this is still seen as a supporting activity to the defeat of the
insurgents rather than the overall objective, and it is often under-resourced and
215
Jochen Hippler, "Counterinsurgency - Theorien unkonventioneller Kriegführung: Callwell,
Thompson, Smith, und das US Army Field Manual 3-24" [Counterinsurgency - Theories of
Unconventional War: Callwell, Thompson, Smith, and the US Army Field Manual 3-24; in German], in:
Thomas Jäger / Rasmus Beckmann (Hrsg.), Handbuch Kriegstheorien, Wiesbaden 2011, pp. 256-283
216
Jochen Hippler, Counterinsurgency and Political Control – US Military Strategies Regarding Regional
Conflict, INEF-Report 81 (Institute for Development and Peace), Duisburg 2006; online:
http://www.jochenhippler.de/US_Counterinsurgency.pdf
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restricted to low-level acts to ameliorate local conditions and the lot of the
217
people.”
When military and civilian deployments take place in a context of violent
conflict, the different actors tend to apply off-the-shelf instruments and off-theshelf strategies they are used to and feel comfortable with. Development officials
implement their standard development programs, soldiers focus on what they
know best and are trained for - but in this process the strategic approach in
regard to the centre of gravity tends to get lost. Winning over the population gets
translated into “hearts-and-minds” talk, and this in turn is often simply seen as
civic action, media operations and PSYOPs. This is not enough. Establishing the
legitimacy of a host government is not achieved by well-drilling or providing other
useful services by foreign troops - it often requires a complete overhaul of state
structures and procedures, even a change in political elites. It often requires a
readjustment of the state-society interface. It is obvious that no military force is in
a position to achieve this basic goal of COIN or comparable operations. This is a
key challenge for NATO. If a civilian strategy and the personnel and financial
resources to implement it are lacking, military forces are placed in an untenable
situation. They are used as a substitute of policy, instead of being an instrument
of policy. This is politically unwise. It also is irresponsible towards the soldiers
serving in violent conflicts, since they are sent in harm's way without the tools of
success.
6. Findings and recommendations
6.1. General considerations
Understanding the human aspects of the operational environment is an
essential factor of planning for success across the full spectrum of military
operations. While the adage that “warfare is political conflict by other means” is
widely recognized, combatants who underestimate the impact of the human
element in military operations do so at their risk. During the Second World War
and the reconstruction that followed, as well as during the Cold War,
understanding human aspects of the operational environment was considered
essential.
217
Rupert Smith, The Utility of Force - The Art of War in the Modern World, London 2006, p. 277f;
emphasis added; J.H.
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
Substantial improvements by NATO are needed in understanding human
aspects today. In particular, NATO must take a longer-term view and build upon
increased capability achieved in recent operations. It must institutionalize the
best of current programs and processes so that this capability is also available
across the full spectrum of military operations, including increased emphasis on
activities, referred to as Phase 0, that seek to mitigate the likelihood of armed
conflict.
To be effective in the long term, NATO must develop more coherence in
the Alliance’s efforts to enhance human aspects awareness. Most importantly, its
capability must be expanded beyond the focus of current armed conflicts so that
both the HQs and military services to have the flexibility to adjust rapidly to
events in other places in the world. Playing “catch-up” will not be an efficient
option.
Establishing a separate military social science structure would probably
not contribute much to fostering cultural awareness in NATO. However, an
interagency coordination structure for preparing teams of International
Organizations (IO), Governmental Organizations (GO), and eventually
Nongovernmental Organizations (NGO) representatives for stability operations,
such as Provincial Reconstruction Teams (PRT), would contribute much to the
preparations for future engagements. Such a structure would provide both sociocultural knowledge and human aspects astuteness. It would also foster
interagency participation and enable the implementation of the Comprehensive
Approach Strategy in combat operations.
Using Subject Matter Experts (SMEs) has often been a challenge due to
some difficulties that have been encountered, such as:
•
•
•
•
Lack of framework, procedures and funding for effectively engaging
and sharing expertise with academia and think tanks.
Insufficient training of military personnel and key advisors in the
area of human aspects, mainly with respect to cultural/social
studies, network analysis, and human dynamic models and
simulations.
Lack of pool of military SMEs and an attractive career path for
military personnel in the human aspects area.
Obstructive security rules and documents classification and
“releaseability”.
Within academia, think tanks and NGOs there is considerable expertise in
human aspects knowledge and a willingness to share and constantly improve this
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expertise, but NATO does not currently efficiently employ these existing
resources, which could enhance military capabilities during operations and
provide a thorough human aspects understanding.
Within different NATO bodies and NATO nations there are considerable
human aspects databases, but they are independent of each other and have been
created for use by specific elements of the NATO and the international
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community . Furthermore, no common formats, metadata, or ontology have
been established. The majority of these databases are not properly maintained,
fully populated, updated, or interoperable. Another issue is the limited access and
interaction with these databases is usually tailored to specific users, making them
of limited utility to others. In addition, some data, such as those related to trends,
attitudes, and beliefs, are difficult to extract from open source documents, are
proprietary and held by corporations that conduct polls, or do not exist in regions
or at levels of granularity necessary for operations.
The operational environment encompasses not only the threat but also
the physical, informational, social, cultural, religious, and economic elements of
the environment. All of these elements are essential for understanding the causes
of conflicts, developing an appropriate approach, and anticipating subsequent
effects. Proper understanding of the OE by NATO in recent operations was
influenced by the prevalence of a conventional approach to operations (i.e.
operations planning, Intel support). Furthermore, a comprehensive understanding
of OE requires adequate capabilities (HUMINT, interpreters, SME support or fused
Intel), that have proved to be insufficient in recent operations.
Recent operations proved as well that winning in combat is not enough
to be successful and that on a local or global scale the strategic objectives can be
achieved without engaging in combat actions. NATO was slow to recognize the
importance of information and the battle for the narrative in achieving objectives
at all levels; it was often ineffective in applying and aligning the narrative to goals
and desired end states.
Belatedly, Coalition forces realized that the key to success lay in the
hearts and minds of the population, but often the campaigns directed to win
hearts and minds have been focused on trying to change opinion or attitudes and
219
not behaviour . In their book, Major General Andrew Mackay and Commander
218
Defense Science Board (DSB), Report of the Defense Science Board Task Force on Understanding
Human Dynamics, March 2009.
219
Mackay, Andrew and Tatham, Steve, with a chapter by Rowland, Lee, Behavioural Conflict: Why
Understanding People And Their Motivations Will Prove Decisive in Future Conflict, 2011.
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Steve Tatham demonstrate that the defining characteristic of resolving armed
disputes will be people’s behaviour, and our ability to understand and modify that
behaviour. Relevant in understanding the importance between beliefs, attitude
and behaviour, the authors mention a field experiment conducted by Harvard
trained psychologist Elisabeth Levy-Paluck, on the Hutu and Tutsi ethnic tensions
in Rwanda. During a yearlong field study she used dedicated crafted radio
programmes in an effort to change beliefs, perception of social norms and
behaviour. Paluck’s conclusion was that while the study did little to change the
personal beliefs of the subjects, it was very effective at instilling social norms,
which drove the observed measurable changes in behaviour.
Before achieving the desired behaviour of the target audience, a clearly
defined mission and achievable desired end-state are essential for an operation’s
success. These primarily derive from proper understanding of both NATO
capabilities and the operational environment.
For example, while all the Alliance members voted for the Unified
Protector Mission in Libya, less than half have effectively participated, and less
than a third have been willing to get involved in strike missions. Some authors
argue that many of those allies stay on the sidelines because they do not have the
necessary military capabilities to participate and not because they don’t want to
220
take part in the mission .
Finding a proper balance between what is wanted, what is possible and
what can be accepted represents a prerequisite for a successful NATO
operation.
Transitions between phases of operations offer opportunities for
advancing NATO’s strategic interests if they are managed well; alternately, they
are opportunities for the enemy or for the failure of the intended objectives if
they are not. NATO management of transitions in recent operations had shown:
•
•
Flaws in preparation, faulty assumptions, and inadequate branches
and sequels.
Disconnects between military and civilian planning efforts.
220
Herd, Graeme P. and Kriendler, John, Understanding NATO in the Twenty-First Century: Alliance
Strategies, Security and Global Governance, 2013, p.29.
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•
•
Insufficient resourcing of key transitions.
Lack of guidance and unity of effort from strategic leadership.
NATO doctrines, training, and equipment were often poorly suited to
operations other than major combat, forcing extensive and costly transformation,
and in the process, affecting the mission. Similarly, forces were trained to win
against another nation’s armed forces, and were not prepared to combat
adaptive insurgencies as, for example, the one in Afghanistan.
In regard to this issue, on March 2010, the Security Defence Agenda
(SDA), the British Council, and NATO organized a conference on the role of
cultural relations in conflict prevention and resolution. According to the
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Conference Report the event demonstrated how “cultural” projects on the
ground can improve dialogue, and hence playing a part in both preventing conflict
and stabilizing post-conflict theatres. Much of the debate dealt with cultural
relations in the field of conflict resolution, which put the spotlight directly on
Afghanistan. The report highlighted that at a previous SDA event, a NATO
representative had stressed that the Alliance’s comprehensive approach
meant all international bodies working together, but 18 months later, NATO’s
Deputy Branch Chief Joint Operations Colonel Per Mikkelsen admitted that
the Alliance was still on a learning curve. During the same event NATO’s
Assistant Secretary General for Operations, Martin Howard, agreed that predeployment training in this area was probably not enough and that civil-military
operations in Afghanistan needed cultural issues and relations to be embedded in
the overall planning.
This will be a challenging issue involving both interagency and internal
coordination and planning, thus a proper integration of different services and
branches could bring synergies in creating a force multiplying effect.
In the recent operations interagency coordination was uneven due to
inconsistent participation in planning, training, and operations; policy gaps;
resources; and differences in organizational culture. Similarly, the military was
challenged in working with NGOs, a type of organization that interacts frequently
with some civilian governmental agencies / bodies but less commonly with the
military. Overall NATO interagency coordination was unable to connect the full
extent of national capabilities in order to meet the operational requirements.
221
Security & Defence Agenda, SDA International Conference Report, Conflict prevention and
Resolution: The Role of Cultural Relations, Bibliothèque Solvay, Brussels, March 2010.
206
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
NATO is now a hub for a global network of security partners which have
222
served alongside NATO forces in Afghanistan, Libya and Kosovo .
Partnering is an inherently interagency activity, but there was an overall
lack of unity in these efforts. Partnering between NATO and host nations is
essential for NATO to achieve its strategic goals and promote a number of key
objectives. Partnering enables the host nation to develop a sustainable capacity
to provide security and counter threats that can provide an exit strategy for NATO
and offer an alternative to sustaining a large NATO footprint on the ground.
Partnering also enhances as well the legitimacy of NATO operations and freedom
of action. Finally, partnering offers NATO a way to advance its objectives through
influence rather than through direct action.
NATO’s new Strategic Concept identifies “cooperative security” as one of
NATO’s three essential core tasks. However, previously establishing and
sustaining coalition unity of effort was a challenge due to competing national
interests, cultures, resources, and policies. Critical challenges when operating
with partners included:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
national caveats,
interoperability,
training,
tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs),
resources,
national interests,
culture,
information sharing, and
inclusion in planning.
6.2. Recommendations
The proposed short to mid-term solutions for transforming NATO
capabilities panel follow the Joint Capabilities Integration Development System
(DOTMPLFI) elements:
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US President Barack Obama and NATO SG Anders Fogh Rasmussen statement before Chicago
Summit (2010)
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
D - Doctrine key recommendation
Development of a NATO umbrella document under Bi-SC coordination
regarding HAOE and subsequent revision of the existing doctrines to
include HAOE in order to provide the framework for oversight and
coordination of activities related to human aspects in NATO HQs as well as
in TOs.
The importance of human aspects for the military operations, or other
similar terms used to address this issue (i.e. human dynamics, human terrain,
operational culture, cultural aspects) is generally recognised by many of the NATO
nations. Some of them are more advanced in developing initiatives and
approaches regarding human aspects but there is no NATO umbrella document in
this respect. Consequently there is no regulatory framework and effective
oversight, planning and coordination of activities related to human aspects.
The importance of the population within an operational environment is
mentioned within AJP 3(A) Allied Doctrine for Operations but it has been
concluded that these references are not being sufficiently emphasized. The
essential points refer to:
•
•
•
•
•
208
The importance of the consent of the population regarding the
presence of a force charged with a Peace Support Operation (PSO)
mission.
The impact of the PSO’s professional conduct in its relations with
the local population as it works to earn its respect.
The partially dependability of the force on the civilian population for
resources and information.
The aim of CIMIC in establishing and maintaining the full
cooperation of the civilian population and institutions in order to
offer the joint force commander the greatest possible moral,
material, environmental and tactical advantages.
The commanders’ moral and legal responsibility towards the civilian
populations.
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
•
•
•
Harmonizing the military commander’s aims and methods with
those of the civilian population and institutions in the area as part
of a collective strategy to meet the conditions for military success.
The role of Public Information Offices (PIO) activities during the
preparatory stage of an operation, with the aim of accurately and
rapidly informing the population within the Joint Operational Area
(JOA) of NATO’s mission, thereby gaining their understanding and
support.
The needs of the indigenous population which are likely to be
inextricably linked to the mission.
The recently introduced and still not institutionalized Comprehensive
Intelligence Preparation of the Operational Environment (CIPOE) incorporates
some elements related to culture but does not reflect properly more relevant
human aspects that can have a significant influence on military operations.
Intelligence provides the commander with a prediction of his adversary’s
likely tactics or an assessment of his capabilities and it is generally admitted that
possession of intelligence is a battle-winning factor. However, considering the
definition of Intelligence, which states that it is “The product resulting from the
processing of information concerning foreign nations, hostile or potentially hostile
223
forces or elements, or areas of actual or potential operations” , it is clear that
the role of Intelligence is not being fully exploited. As presently conducted, there
is an overwhelming approach directed towards intelligence collection about
adversary forces and much less focusing on collecting information regarding local
populations in potential areas of operation.
Crisis Response Operations and the HAOE as a part of them, covers a
much broader spectrum of activities, processes and factors compared with a
relatively simplified intelligence role during high intensity warfare, which focused
mainly on the enemy. Consequently, the intelligence structure and its policies,
procedures and education must be adapted to these new challenges. A more
complex and comprehensive approach from the intelligence staff, including close
coordination and cooperation with other relevant military branches and staff will
be required. Intelligence perspectives on the significance and value of
information, over-classification of information as a protective measure and
reluctance in sharing information are other elements which should be
reconsidered. Intelligence gathering should actively engage departments and
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AAP-6 NATO Glossary of terms and definitions, 2012.
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HUMINT Centre of Excellence
agencies government-wide as well as commercial and NGO resources and
capabilities in the collection and use of data and preparation of products.
Additional considerations and recommendations include:
•
•
•
•
•
Existing national concepts, doctrines and studies (Human Dynamics,
Human Terrain, Operational Culture, and Cultural Aspects) provide a
valuable background in this respect.
Make NATO HQ’s responsible for developing a comprehensive
strategy to provide human aspects awareness for future NATO
operations, to include among others knowledge management and
sharing, directives on education and training, human aspects
cells/advisors and other requirements that may be deemed
necessary.
Develop ways to include the HAOE in the operational planning as
part of CIPOE and eventually reflected as a separate annex of
Operational Plan (OPLAN).
Adapting the role of Intelligence, to better reflect the importance of
Human Aspects for understanding the OE and building the Common
Operational Picture.
Assess the utility and feasibility of developing Sociological
Intelligence (SOCINT) capabilities for NATO.
O - Organization key recommendation
Establish a specialized structure within NATO HQ or subordinate Strategic
Commands (ACT/ACO) to act as a coordinator and centralized body for
human aspects knowledge, as well as dedicated cells within subordinates
commands’ Peace Establishment (PE) and Theatre of Operations (TO’s)
Crisis Establishment (CE).
Additional considerations and recommendations include:
•
210
Human Aspects understanding is more than knowing the wellknown dos and don’ts of a given region which can be easily learned
by all military personnel. What is more difficult is to reach the
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
•
•
•
proper regional expertise combined with postgraduate level
education in social sciences related disciplines. In order to achieve
this NATO has to adapt its organizational structure to
institutionalize human aspects as a formal element of its
operational planning.
Personnel assigned within this body should reflect a variety of
backgrounds: military experts, social sciences professionals
(psychology, anthropology, sociology, history, and linguistics),
security and public safety advisors, medics, and engineers as well as
IO, GO, and NGO representatives. Clear responsibilities would be
required for each position in order to avoid duplication of effort or
conflicting advice.
A body such as this can assist the military and civil
participants with achieving readiness for stability operations
and can also form and train as well multi-disciplinary teams
for the augmentation of any NATO country team.
Include deployable civil-military SME teams to act as a
Comprehensive Advisors Cell for Commanders and/or an Alternative
Analysis Team:
Commander’s Comprehensive Advisory Cell (Civilian Advisory
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Cluster) : Organizational synergy can be improved by
having political and development advisors cooperate closely
with military commanders in the field.
This cell can incorporate existing advisors (e.g. Political
Advisor, Cultural Advisor, etc), however some new advisors
will be needed (e.g. anthropologist, psychologist, sociologist,
linguist etc).
Include a Civilian Planning Element:
High Readiness Forces (HRF) HQs must be able to effectively
‘plug and play’ with a cadre of civilian experts built around a
dedicated Civilian Planning Element (CPE) itself embedded in
civil-military planning and the civil support elements of a
225
headquarters .
224
Allied Rapid Reaction Corps (ARRC), Commanders Initiative Group (CIG) - Programme Paper: ISP PP
2010/01, Operationalizing the Comprehensive Approach, March 2010
225
Ibidem
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•
•
The CPE must be able to pass on knowledge and the knowhow to preserve continuity of the campaign.
Enhancement of Existing Crisis Management Capabilities:
Including HAOE among civilian crisis management
capabilities established at the NATO HQ and ACO.
Incorporation of HAOE (as branch/section) into already
existing NATO Civil – Military Fusion Centre (CFC), extending
the CFC teams / focus areas and number of remote interim
research support organizations; the CFC’s current main focus
is on Afghanistan, the MENA region and anti-piracy but could
be extended to potential conflict areas.
Socio-cultural Intelligence (SOCINT) cell:
A SOCINT cell can be included into the Joint Intelligence
Centre (JIC) structure.
The main role would be the support of direction and control
of the collection effort in the field of the socio-cultural and
human aspects of the operational environment as well as the
analysis of acquired data and information and production of
relevant intelligence products.
Another option would be the establishment of a specific
organizational structure (similar to the US Human Terrain
System [HTS]) focusing on the SOCINT function under a
neutral (not intelligence related) name within the Knowledge
Management Directorate, which would nevertheless closely
coordinate its activity with the Intelligence Staff (CJ2).
T – Training key recommendation
Considering the life-long learning as the key in preparing NATO forces for
the complexities of the future, support the NATO Bi-SC in modifying the
standard curriculum at NATO training organizations, as well as national
curricula, to incorporate various types of units training in human aspects,
tailored to individual units’ missions.
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
Additional considerations and recommendations include:
•
•
•
•
•
Expand the curriculum in this area for professional military
education to provide relevant advanced degree education. Develop
innovative processes for recruiting and rewarding human aspects
expertise.
Join Force Commands (JFCs) should direct the combatant
commanders to develop TTPs for employing enhanced knowledge
of human aspects in anticipation of stability operations with NATO
forces in non-combatant roles, cooperating closely with combatant
commands, NATO agencies, and NGOs, as well as allies and host
nations.
Consider planning and organizing an annual NATO Joint Military and
Civilian Exercise focused on implementation of Comprehensive
Approach Strategy.
Invite participation of interagency and NGO representatives in
mission readiness exercises during planning and in after-action
review.
Establish education and training for Intelligence analysts on the
HAOE domain to complement a more technically oriented military
education with human science education.
M – Material key recommendation
Create a proper Human Aspects architecture allowing user-friendly and
quick access to all dedicated databases, including the facility of sharing
data among multiple users.
Additional considerations and recommendations include:
•
•
Define and implement a more robust research effort to explore the
potential of relevant science and technology efforts in cross-cutting
human aspects research, linking dynamic network analysis to
findings and models with direct military relevance.
Operational commanders should generate general and specific
requirements for data collection to populate the Human Aspects
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•
databases with regional, sub regional and local information, as well
as assuring products preparation and evaluation. They should
provide guidance, direction and support to forces deployed in
respective AO for documentation of relevant human aspects.
One good example of employing the material capability is the US
HTS connectivity to a reach-back centre in the USA, allowing access
via this centre to a Subject Matter Expert Network (SME net).
L – Leadership key recommendation
Educate leaders on the importance of Human Aspects in the Stability
Operations, acquiring awareness and skills to manage Intercultural factors
in Multinational Military Operations.
Additional considerations and recommendations include:
•
•
•
The key abilities necessary for leaders in regard to the HAOE should
address overcoming cultural barriers to effective teamwork,
generating and promoting trust and mutual respect, as well as
dealing with communication, conflict resolution, diplomacy,
mediation and negotiation.
Joint education and training with personnel from different
departments and civilian organizations.
Understanding the importance and role of information
management within current and future operations. Ensure
communication strategy considering all relevant actors’ instruments
of power; cultural, religious, and other demographic factors; and
employing innovative, non-traditional methods and sources.
P – Personnel key recommendation
Identifying what skills, knowledge and competences are needed in HAOE
field and developing the new force capabilities by considering the need of
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Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
qualified people for both peacetime and wartime.
Additional considerations and recommendations include:
•
•
•
st
It seems that emerging security challenges of the 21 century will
require 2 types of armed forces:
first one, quick entry forces to win the battle (Marine, Air
Force, Navy, SOF, Army),
second one stabilization forces (Army, SOF).
The current military machinery of all NATO countries supports the
first category. Most of the NATO (as well as national) doctrines and
procedures are designed to support the first type. Education and
training are mainly focused on combat skills (from the early
beginning of the military career) and take precedence over PSO. In
addition to this the most of the Military Research organizations and
institutions including military industry, are primarily supportive of
quick entry forces.
It may be naive to propose having two different types of armed
forces, especially in context of the recent economic situation, but it
seems that the desired solution for countering emerging security
st
challenges of 21 century requires a shift in the current paradigm.
This transition will influence not only the personnel but also other
DOTPLMFI capabilities. First, they must be identified and specified:
Required capabilities (including new, novel capabilities) –
Personnel and Organizations.
Identification of new TTPs – Doctrines.
Rapid changes within / adaptation of Education & Training
(E&T), as well as development of E&T for newly identified
capabilities – Training, Organizations, People.
Adaptation of Research and Development to new
capabilities, including military research organizations and
military industry - Organizations.
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F – Facilities key recommendation
It is concluded that there is no need for building new facilities to support
the implementation of the HAOE concept. The existing infrastructure
within NATO bodies and HQ in TOs allows fulfilment with a minimum
effort those HAOE requirements related to DOTMPLI elements.
I – Interoperability key recommendation
A broad range of common standards needs to be developed, agreed upon
and implemented between military and civilian actors.
Additional considerations and recommendations:
•
•
•
216
Implementing the HAOE as part of the Comprehensive Approach
Strategy, within a military organization will require improved
interoperability based on the partners’ willingness to cooperate.
Internal institutional prejudices between different military services,
branches and disciplines must be set aside in order to build up a
proper cooperative environment.
It is imperative to avoid confusion based on differences in
understanding regarding terms of reference when the NGO’s and
the military occupy the same space and where missions may
overlap.
The establishment and common understanding of a comprehensive
approach strategy on both sides (military and civilian) is a pre
condition for success. As far as it is practical, an agreement on the
common use of language and standardization of terms should be
encouraged. A key issue in achieving interoperability is describing in
common terms what each participant does.
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
7. Conclusions and Recommendations
Findings and recommendations presented throughout this chapter will
not be addressed again in this closing part. Instead the paragraphs below
summarize the key recommendations grouped according to a possible
implementation horizon.
Short term implementation:
Designating a single NATO body to coordinate different working groups
and panels dealing with human aspects within NATO;
Establishing a designated body/structure responsible for human aspects
knowledge within NATO;
Establishing a pool of subject matter experts in the social science and
humanities that can support and assist NATO in human aspects field;
Defining a suitable framework for partnering with external subject
matter experts, international organizations, non-governmental
organizations, academia, and think-tanks;
Designing a human aspects database architecture;
Assessing the utility of establishing socio-cultural capabilities for NATO;
Assessing the feasibility of assigning and training specially designated
stabilization forces.
Medium term implementation:
Developing a Bi-SC Capstone Concept on Human Aspects of the
Operational Environment;
Revision of draft AJP-3.4.5, Stabilization and Reconstruction Operations,
to address human aspects as key part of the operational environment;
Establishing deployable civil-military advisory teams with extensive
expertise on social sciences and humanities;
Revising the Comprehensive Intelligence Preparation of the Operational
Environment process to properly reflect the human aspects;
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Revising the Comprehensive Operational Planning Directive to reflect
human aspects as a separate Annex or Appendix or other appropriate
manner;
Revising the missions and tasks of Intelligence to include human aspectsrelated responsibilities;
Establishing a SOCINT cell under J2 at Strategic and Joint Forces
Command level;
Developing E&T curricula for training SOCINT analysts;
Developing interdepartmental, inter-agencies & inter-organizations
common E&T programmes;
Adapting the TTPs and training programmes of combat units to include
human aspects awareness;
Considering an annual NATO combined joint military and civilian exercise
focused on implementation of Comprehensive Approach Strategy.
The findings and recommendations presented by this panel will provide
the foundation for enhancing NATO capabilities in respect to Human Aspects of
the Operational Environment. Although all implications presented are of some
significance to NATO, the Alliance will eventually have to decide how it will adapt,
considering that the implementation of decisions taken now might become
effective only in the medium and long term.
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CONCLUSION
History proves that human aspects have always shaped military conflicts.
Although awareness of this realm cannot guarantee success in current and future
conflicts, a lack of awareness can certainly solidify resistance of local actors, result
in unintended repercussions, and generate, if not a self-defeating policy, then a
failing one.
Lessons learned from current operations and the efforts made to address
them must not be overlooked. To capture and make the best use of these lessons
learned, NATO needs an enduring capability, one that extends beyond the focus
of current military operations and institutionalizes human aspects considerations
into conceptual frameworks, doctrine, training and planning.
Realizing that the battle space of the future may be the human mind, this
study considers implementation of human aspects related subjects as a new force
capability requiring a new mindset, new procedures, new decision-making
processes, and revisions to education and training programmes.
The strategic environment has evolved into a highly complex, dynamic
and adaptive system, with multiple and new actors – both state and non-state.
Nowadays, the economic, political and social structures have become as
important for NATO Operations as military capabilities.
Defined as a perceived incompatibility of goals and interests between
two or more parties, conflicts proved to be and will remain an inevitable aspect of
human relations. Culture is a part of every social conflict because conflicts occur
in human relationships.
Recent NATO Operations proved that the lack of detailed knowledge of
military about human aspects, the way culture influence them, and furthermore,
some prejudices and stereotypes, is still an impediment to fulfil their task.
Deployed in areas where culture it is totally different form theirs, military will
tend to oversimplify conceptions, opinions or images which are generalized to a
large population. Furthermore, while neglecting to identify and exploit the
common values of different cultures, some stereotypes, which deny individuality
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as members of a group, are commonly associated with simplistic, false and usually
negative generalization.
The more we know about all aspects of the operational environment, the
better the quality of our decisions, planning and execution. The findings provided
within this paper are meant to be an overall framework for decision makers and
planners, to be aware on what we considered as being relevant human aspects
with a key influence on the Operational Environment and on the success of the
NATO Mission.
Whatever combination of terms we will use for defining it, the
Human/Cultural Aspects/Dynamics/ Environment/Factors remain a key element
of the future military operational environment, especially in counterinsurgency,
irregular warfare, stability, and support, transition, and reconstruction operations.
Although awareness on human aspects of the operational environment
cannot guarantee the success in current and future conflicts, the lack of it
certainly boost resistance of local actors, result in unintended repercussions,
generating, if not a self-defeating policy, then a failing one.
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the Crisis of Contemporary Africa, London, C. Hurst, 2009
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Lessons from the Iraq War, Washington, D.C. Potomac Books, 2012.
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Lewis, Dr. Huw. “Will history repeat itself in Afghanistan?” BBC News. July 15,
2009.
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Chapter 4 – Dynamics of the Local Situation
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2004.
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nd
Predictions and Identifying Terrorist Activities, CRC Press, 2 edition, 2008.
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Concepts and Usage”, Working Paper, Oradea, Romania: Human Aspects of the
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Chapter 6 – Measurable indicators of the populations’ attitude towards NATO
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Chapter 7 – Transforming NATO capabilities to adapt to human environment(s)
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Herd, Graeme P. and Kriendler, John, Understanding NATO in the Twenty-First
Century: Alliance Strategies, Security and Global Governance, Routledge, 2013.
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ABOUT CONTRIBUTORS
Prof. Dean C. ALEXANDER, Western Illinois University, Macomb, Illinois, United States of
America
Dean C. Alexander is Director, Homeland Security Research Program and Associate
Professor, Homeland Security at the School of Law Enforcement and Justice Administration
at Western Illinois University. Prof. Alexander’s teaching, research, and speaking activities
encompass terrorism, security, and legal issues. He has lectured to U.S. and foreign law
enforcement and military officials at North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Organization of
American States, U.S. State Department, and National Intelligence University organized
events. His U.S.-based lectured have included engagements with numerous law
enforcement organizations. Prof. Alexander’s professional experience includes executive,
business development, and legal positions in the United States and abroad. He worked as a
consultant to the World Bank, security firms, and investment companies. Since publishing
on terrorism in 1991, Prof. Alexander has written several books on the subject, including
Business Confronts Terrorism: Risks and Responses and Terrorism and Business: The
Impact of September 11, 2001.
Dr. Haaris AHMAD, Duisburg - Essen University, Germany
Dr. Ahmad is a professor at Duisburg-Essen University in Germany. He is a specialist in
Middle Eastern and Central Asian politics. He is also a consultant working on Inter-cultural
Dialogues and Violent Conflict and War. His main research interests are political violence,
governance and political identities, as well as military conflict.
Mr. Juan Carlos ANTÚNEZ MORENO, EUFOR HQ Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Juan Carlos Antunez is an Officer of the Spanish Army who currently works as an
International Civil Consultant at EUFOR HQ in Sarajevo.
He began his interest in Islamic religion, culture and civilization when in 1998 was selected
by the Spanish Ministry of Defence to attend to a two years full time course on Arabic
language. His last positions in the Balkans and the North of Africa, where different
religions and ethnical communities live together, have increased his interest in the local
culture, religion and history of the different groups. His involvement in security activities,
both at national and international level, has given him the opportunity to specialize in
Religious Extremism and Terrorism.
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He is currently pursuing a PhD (Dissertation period) in “Multiculturality and Studies on the
Arabic and Islamic World” at the University of Seville in Spain.
Dr. Justin BARRETT, Thrive Center for human development in Fuller Theological
Seminary’s School of Psychology, United States of America
Justin L. Barrett is Thrive Professor of Developmental Science and Director of the Thrive
Center for human development in Fuller Theological Seminary’s School of Psychology. An
experimental psychologist (Ph.D., Cornell University), Barrett taught anthropology at
Oxford University, and is best known for his research on religion. At Oxford, Barrett
established and directed the Centre for Anthropology and Mind, and began the Institute
for Cognitive and Evolutionary Anthropology. Previously, Barrett served at Calvin College
and the University of Michigan.
Professor Barrett is regarded as one of the founders of the Cognitive Science of Religion
field. His authored books are Why Would Anyone Believe in God? (2004), Cognitive
Science, Religion, and Theology: From Human Minds to Divine Minds (2011), and Born
Believers: The Science of Childhood Religion (2012). He edited the four-volume collection
Psychology of Religion (2010).
CPT Dr. Claudio Bertolotti, Independent Strategic Analyst, Senior Researcher at Italian
Military Centre for Strategic Studies (CeMiSS), University of Torino.
Dr. Claudio Bertolotti (PhD in Sociology and Political Science) received a B.A. in
Contemporary History and is specialized in Sociology of Islam, his research has focused on
“Suicide attacks” and “motivations of Armed Opposition Groups in Afghanistan and
Pakistan”.
He is a former NATO-ISAF counter-intelligence analyst and section chief and, currently,
military research fellow at Italian Military Centre for Strategic Studies (CeMiSS) and
researcher at the University of Torino. He is a contributor to public and policy debates on
issues related to war in Afghanistan. Since 2008, he has lectured Italian ISAF staff and
military personnel teaching “History, Societies, Cultures and Conflicts of Contemporary
Afghanistan”.
He has authored several articles, researches and books (the latest on suicide terrorism in
Afghanistan); he publishes on insurgency and counterinsurgency, cultural approach to
contemporary small wars, geopolitical and geostrategic policy. He introduced the «triple
way to read» method about insurgency offensive techniques, in particular suicide attacks.
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Dr. Hari BUCUR-MARCU, Saliste Association for Romanian Europeanism (SAFRE),
Romania
Hari Bucur-Marcu Hari Bucur-Marcu is the President of Saliste Association for Romanian
Europeanism (SAFRE), a civil society organisation for local development and
comprehensive studies on security, sustainability and place-branding. Previously, he was
Associate Senior Fellow for Defence Policy, Geneva Centre for Democratic Control of the
Armed Forces, Academic Coordinator of the NATO Studies Center in Bucharest, as well as
Councillor for the Romanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs on the development of a PostConflict Reconstruction Centre.
Before retirement from the Romanian Armed Forces, he was responsible for all military
aspects of NATO integration, international military cooperation and psychological training.
His military assignments included five years in NATO.
For the last ten years, Hari Bucur-Marcu worked in the field of the theory and practice of
international and national development and reform, with a focus on NATO, defence
institutionalisation and security sector reform, in countries from Eastern Europe, Balkans,
and South Caucasus.
COL (US Army, Ret.) Benjamin CLARK, Department of Defense Civilian, United States of
America
Clark served 1979-2009 in Infantry, Special Forces, Rangers, Joint Special Operations, and
interagency duty in Germany, Korea, and Kuwait with travel in the Middle East, Europe,
Pakistan, Afghanistan, Asia, and Africa for numerous operations. He has significant
experience with intelligence and special operations; joint, combined, interagency, and
coalition operations; counter terrorism, ISR, and counterinsurgency operations.
Upon retirement Clark returned to Afghanistan 2009-2011 to support COMISAF
Counterinsurgency Advisory & Assistance Team. He supported counterinsurgency and
irregular warfare requirements at JWC in Norway, JFTC in Poland; NATO Centres of
Excellence in Romania and Turkey, NATO School Oberammergau, and Allied Command
Transformation. Requested by-name as Strategic Advisor to COMISAF, Clark returned April
2013 to ISAF HQ’s in Kabul serving in the Commander’s Action Group. Clark is an avid
traveller, reader, and distance runner living in Virginia with his family.
Dr. Mark DECHESNE, Leiden University, Campus The Hague, The Netherlands
Dr. Mark Dechesne obtained his PhD (cum laude) in 2001 on the effects of fear on social
behaviour. His subsequent research has increasingly focused on the motivation of
terrorists, the workings of terrorist organizations, and reactions to terrorism. From early
2006 until September 2008 he worked at the National Consortium for the Study of
Terrorism Responses to Terrorism (START) of the University of Maryland. Since 2008 he is
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at Leiden University-Campus The Hague, first at the Centre for Terrorism and
Counterterrorism, and since September 2011, at the Centre for Regional Knowledge
Development. He publishes on psychological themes such as knowledge, human
motivation, fear, radicalization and large-scale violence. He is a frequent contributor to
public and policy debates on issues related to terrorism and counterterrorism. He also
served on the editorial board of the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology: Attitudes
and Social Cognition, and Group Processes and Interpersonal Relations.
Mr. Zobair David DEEN, ISAF HQ, Afghanistan
Zobair David Deen, an Afghan-Canadian, has been part of the ISAF-NATO mission in
Afghanistan since 2004 within various capacities, where he focused on conflict resolution,
strategic partnerships and cross cultural and traditional communication. Fluent in the local
languages of Dari and Pashtu, David used his extensive experience in Afghan political, tribal
and traditional communication, in addition to security and governance, to promote key
leader engagements between Afghans and NATO ISAF coalition officials. He created and
spear-headed programs for ISAF such as the Traditional Communication and rejuvenated
the Key Leader Engagement Programs. He is passionate about the potential of traditional
communication for lasting peace and security.
Dr. Nancy HOUSTON - Technology and Human Factors (THF) of the Command & Control,
Deployability, Sustainability (C2DS) Division of Allied Command Transformation (retired),
the United States of America
Dr. Houston served as Cognitive Science Coordinator for THF in the C2DS Division at ACT of
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). She focused on optimizing processes and
computer information systems to maximize human effectiveness. She served on NATO
Science and Technology Organization human factors and Network Enabled Capability (NEC)
panels. Previously she was an Information Processing Engineer with the NATO C3 Agency
in Brussels, Belgium.
Prior to joining NATO, Dr. Houston taught graduate-level information systems courses for
Boston University and University of Maryland Europe and served as Chair of the Computer
Information Systems Department at Grove City College. Dr. Houston holds an Ed.D. in
Computer Education and an M.S.Ed.in Business.
Dr. Alexandru ILIEŞ, University of Oradea, Romania
Alexandru ILIEŞ, professor PhD, is Dean of Faculty of Geography, Tourism and Sport at
University of Oradea (Romania), professor at University of Gdansk (Poland), member of
Romanian Geographical Society and founder and member of Human Geography
Association from Romania, member in the Steering Committee of International
Geographical Union – Commission on Political Geography, also founder/ member of
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various national centres, associations and commissions on human geography, political
geography and sport.
In the publications area, he is Editor in Chief for Romanian Review on Political Geography,
and member of the editorial board/ reviewer for many other specialised journals from
Romania and abroad (Poland, Belgium, France, Hungary).
His research activity focuses on human and political geography, with studies on territorial
planning, borderland cooperation, and regional issues. His area of interest wanders toward
inter-disciplinary studies, covering the relation between human communities and
comprehensive security requirements.
Mr. Matthew JARVINEN, Fuller Theological Seminary, United States of America
Matthew Jarvinen is currently a PhD graduate student in Clinical Psychology at Fuller
Theological Seminary in Pasadena, CA. Along with his responsibilities as a student, he
teaches developmental psychology at Azuza Pacific University, assists on a research project
funded by the John Templeton Foundation involving the study of intellectual humility, and
works as a clinician-in-training, providing mental health services to members of the
community at Fuller Psychological & Family Services.
His current research interests include developmental psychology, virtue development
(particularly humility and self-control), cognition and emotion, and psychology of religion.
Prior to his time at Fuller, he received two master’s degrees, one from San Diego State
University (SDSU) in psychology, and one from Point Loma Nazarene University (PLNU) in
Religion.
Mr. Aemal KHARUKALE, ISAF HQ, Afghanistan
Aemal Kharukale is an ISAF HQ country adviser and liaison officer to Counter-Terrorism
Department of Ministry of Interior of Afghanistan. He has worked for different NonGovernmental Organizations in Afghanistan from 2002 to 2004. He works for ISAF since
2004 to present.
Ms. Christina KEYS, The Fuller Theological Seminary, United States of America
Christina Keys received her B.A. in Psychology from Point Loma Nazarene University,
specializing in Therapeutic and Community Psychology. There she assisted Dr. Holly IrwinChase with several research projects involving the effects of study abroad experiences on
cultural sensitivity and awareness.
She currently lives in Pasadena, California where she is a PhD student in Clinical Psychology
at Fuller Theological Seminary.
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Her current research interests include moral psychology and development, spiritual
psychology, positive youth development and thriving, and well-being. She presently is
studying how afterlife beliefs influence thriving of individuals. She also serves as a clinicianin-training at Fuller Psychological and Family Services providing psychotherapy to members
of the community.
MAJ Alexandru KIŞ, PhD, NATO HUMINT Centre of Excellence, Romania
Alexandru KIŞ, a Romanian Army officer, with operational experience in
UN/coalition/NATO operations in Angola, Kosovo, Iraq, and Afghanistan, is currently
appointed at NATO HUMINT Centre of Excellence (Oradea, Romania).
PhD in Geography with an interdisciplinary research program conducted at University of
Oradea in cooperation with Romanian National Defence University “Carol I”, Bucharest,
paper title:”NATO and Human Security”.
MD graduated on “International relations. Security systems” at Faculty of Political Sciences,
International Relations and European Studies, “Lucian Blaga” University of Sibiu.
He published a series of articles and contributed with chapters to several volumes in
Romania and abroad, with topics related to human security and resilience of the military
systems.
His first book - ”NATO and Human Security” - was published in 2012 under the aegis of
University of Oradea Publishing House, and focuses on the bivalent relation between the
North-Atlantic Alliance theory and practice and multi-dimensional requirements of the
Human Security concept.
LTC (Ret.) Hubertus KÖBKE, United Nations Security in Gaborone, Botswana
LTC Köbke is currently the Safety Adviser for the UN in Botswana and is scheduled to leave
for Pakistan UN office in July 2013. He has a MBA in Science of Education at the University
of the Armed Forces in Hamburg, Germany and he occupied different positions within
German Armed Forces and he was deployed in various NATO missions. Since 1997 Mr.
Köbke had different positions in UN Missions as well as for NGO’s in Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait
and Afghanistan, Kosovo and Macedonia.
In his career, LTC (Ret.) Köbke took part in different exercises and training events, both as
participant as well as instructor in the Armed Forces of Germany, in NATO, in United
Nations and other organizations mostly in Asia, Africa, Europe and South America. He
graduated an impressive number of different courses and published several books and
articles.
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Dr. Catalina KOPETZ, The Center for Addictions, Personality, and Emotion Research at
University of Maryland, College Park, United States of America
Catalina Kopetz holds a B.A. in psychology from “Babeş-Bolyai” University in Romania, a
M.A. in experimental psychology from Université de Savoie, Chambery, France, and a PhD
in social psychology from University of Maryland, College Park.
She is currently a research assistant professor the Center for Addictions, Personality, and
Emotion Research at University of Maryland, College Park.
Her research focuses on self-regulation and self-control phenomena from the perspective
of motivation as cognition. She is particularly interested in identifying and understanding
the mechanisms that underlie goal pursuit and the management of multiple goals and goal
conflict. Her research investigates these basic mechanisms that govern human action in
general, and in particular it attempts to understand their functioning in health-relevant
judgment and behavior.
MAJ Peter KOVÁCS, NATO HUMINT Centre of Excellence, Romania
MAJ Peter KOVÁCS is an officer of the Slovak Army; he graduated the Military
Telecommunication Faculty of Military Academy, Liptovský Mikuláš, Slovakia as diploma
engineer. He has more than 16 years experience within the Armed Forces of The Slovak
Republic, derivable from tactical to strategic level practice from company level up to J2 of
the General Staff, assignment to Multinational Corps North-East, Szczecin, Poland, as well
as deployment experience – Afghanistan. Currently he is a Staff Officer within Concept
Development and Experimentation Section at the NATO HUMINT Centre of Excellence and
the “Human Aspects of the Operational Environment” Project Team member.
Mr. Ross LISMAN, The Fuller Theological Seminary, United States of America
Ross Lisman received his B.A. in Psychology from Pepperdine University in 2011. He
currently resides in Southern California and is recently married. He attends the Fuller
Theological Seminary in Pasadena California and is working towards a Ph.D. in Clinical
Psychology.
He is currently conducting research in Dr. Joseph Currier’s lab on the connections between
traumatic brain injury, meaning making, and posttraumatic stress disorder. He recently
presented a poster at the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies on the
relationship between morally injurious events, suicidality, and parasuicidal behaviours
among veterans of Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom. Additionally
he is researching how theories of the cognitive processing of trauma relate to religious
beliefs and the development of both posttraumatic growth and posttraumatic stress
disorder. In the future, he hopes to join the United States military as an Army psychologist.
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Dr. Itamara LOCHARD, Fletcher School of Law & Diplomacy, Tufts University, United
States of America
Dr. Itamara Lochard is the Senior Researcher of International Security Studies at the
Fletcher School of Law & Diplomacy, a certified mediator and a DoD Information
Operations expert. Her work has been featured at various NATO and UN-sponsored fora as
well as at the Office of the Secretary of Defense Highlands Forum.
She regularly advises U.S. combatant commanders on her dataset of ~1,750 non-state
armed groups, including insurgents, terrorists, militias, criminal organizations, organized
gangs and malicious cyber actors.
She has examined their para-state function since 1988, most notably at the Center for
Strategic and International Studies and Stanford University’s International Institute of
Studies.
Her overlays group activities with governance metrics to provide a mosaic of their locale,
strategies, tactics, and organizational structures, areas of cooperation and use of
technology. For several years, Dr. Lochard was a contributing editor of Princeton
University’s Journal of Public & International Affairs and taught an Advanced Irregular War
module she created for U.S. Special Forces at JSOU.
She has also conducted executive training courses to mid- to senior-level, political-military
officers of Saudi Arabia, Armenia and the Critical National Infrastructure Authority of the
UAE. She participated in all EUCOM-funded, computer network operation familiarization
exercises in Georgia and Estonia. In addition, she commanded arguably the first U.S. civilian
cyber unit at the defence force rank of Colonel, drafting the core proposal upon which the
current unit stands.
In 2011, she was awarded a medal of honour for Special Services from the Estonian
Defense Forces.
Dr. Lochard holds a B.S. in Foreign Service from Georgetown University and four graduate
degrees from the Fletcher School and Stanford University. She has received fellowships and
grants from Earhart, Bradley, George P. Shultz, IIS and the Jebsen Center for CounterTerrorism Studies.
LTC (Ret.) Luděk MICHÁLEK, Police Academy of the Czech Republic, Czech Republic
Luděk Michálek joined the Armed Forces in 1978 while studying at the Military Technical
Air Force High School. Later he graduated from the military technical university - Military
Air Academy. Until 1994 he was serving as an Air Force ground-crew electronic specialist,
when he joined Military Intelligence, where was working mainly in the field of
counterintelligence, including several deployments (Bosnia and Herzegovina, Afghanistan)
and assignment at NATO HQ. He got a bachelor degree in psychology from Palacky
University in Olomouc. In 2010 he retired as a Lieutenant-colonel from the position of the
Chief HUMINT Cell at the General Staff J-2 Division and started to work at Police Academy
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of the Czech Republic, teaching several subjects of intelligence studies. He was the main
author of the Czech military doctrine for operational and tactical HUMINT and wrote two
college textbooks.
Dr. Gregory MOORE, Notre Dame College, Cleveland, Ohio, United States of America
Dr. Gregory Moore is Professor of History, Director of the Center for Intelligence Studies
and the Chairperson of the Department of History and Political Science at Notre Dame
College in Cleveland, Ohio, USA. He holds a doctorate in American Diplomatic History from
Kent State University.
Dr. Moore teaches undergraduate classes in American Foreign Policy, non-Western history,
international relations and terrorism. He also teaches graduate classes in terrorism &
counterterrorism and geopolitics.
Dr. Moore has published The War Came to Me: A Story of Hope and Endurance, numerous
articles and is presently serving as editor-in-chief for the forthcoming Encyclopedia of U.S.
Intelligence, scheduled for publication by Taylor & Francis in 2014.
His professional associations include the American Historical Association, the Society of
Historians of Foreign Relations and Phi Alpha Theta.
MAJ Antonio J. MORALES, NATO Combined Air Operations Centre Torrejon, Spain
Major Antonio J. Morales is a Staff Officer at NATO Combined Air Operations Centre,
Torrejon Air Base, Spain. He is responsible for intelligence planning, production, manning
and training. He is a career intelligence officer who has served in various operational and
staff positions in NATO, U.S. Air Forces Southern, U.S. Pacific Air Forces, U.S. Air Force
Special Operations Command, U.S. Southern Command and Air Education and Training
Command. His diplomatic skills have enabled him to successfully work with Kuwaiti,
Chilean, Colombian, Korean, Uruguayan, Caribbean and NATO partners. He has also
participated in major operations such Operation UNIFIED RESPONSE and Operation
UNIFIED PROTECTOR. His military awards include the Defence Meritorious Service Medal,
Joint Commendation Medal, among others.
He holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Political Science from the University of Puerto Rico and a
Masters Degree in Military Operational Arts and Sciences from Air University.
Mr. Ralf Joachim MUMM, the Defence Committee of the Federal German Parliament,
Germany
Ralf Mumm is Adviser to a member of the Defence Committee of the Federal German
Parliament.
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He studied at University San Martin de Porres, Social Science and Politics, Lima/Peru.
After serving from 1969 to 1977 within German Federal Armed Forces he holds consultant
positions within different organizations and companies: Ministry of Foreign Affairs/Kosovo
Verification Mission (OSCE-KVM), Caritas Germany in Kosovo, German Red Cross, Hamburg,
Malteser Peru, Lima/Peru and Berlin/Germany.
Servicing in the German Navy Reserve he gained a broad experience during his assignments
in IFOR/SFOR Naples/Italy and Sarajevo/Bosnia (1996, 2000, 2002, 2005), HQ KOSOVO
FORCE (KFOR), Pristina/Kosovo (2003), and ISAF, Kabul and Mazar-E-Shariff /Afghanistan
(2004, 2007, 2009).
Since 2007 Mr. Ralf Mumm has assignment within Federal Ministry of Defence, Office of
Staff to the Chief of Defence, Berlin.
Mr. Vivien PERTUSOT, The French Institute of International Relations, Brussels Office,
Belgium
Vivien Pertusot is head of Office of the Institut Francais des Relations Interantionales (IFRI)
- The French Institute of International Relations, in Brussels, Belgium.
He received a B.A. diploma in History and Political Science from the Univesity of Lille 3 in
France and he also studied for a year at South-western University in Georgetown, Texas,
USA.
Vivien Pertusot graduated from King’s College London, MA, Mediterranean and Middle
East Studies, and he holds as well a Master degree, International Relations from IRIS Sup,
the University of the Institut des Relations Internationales et Strategique.
Before holding the current position, Mr. Pertusot previously worked as Research Assistant
at IFRI Security Studies Centre, and then at NATO HQ as consultant in charge of drafting a
policy for the Military Committee on feedback and assessment of NATO partnership
activities.
He was research fellow for Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and he also taught
political science at University Lille 2.
Mr. Pertusot has published numerous articles about foreign policy and Middle East and
North Africa current affairs in various outlets, including Le Monde, Focus Strategique,
Euractiv, Atlantico, Atlantic Community, Royal United Service Institute (RUSI, Carnegie
Europe and The New Atlanticist.
Ms. Oana POPESCU, Centre for Conflict Prevention and Early Warning, Romania
Founder of Global Focus, a think-tank with a focus on Romania’s Euro-Atlantic position in
relation to major strategic issues, regional cooperation and the emerging world. Editor-at-
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large of Foreign Policy magazine Romania. Also Director of the Centre for Conflict
Prevention and Early Warning in Bucharest and Secretary General of Romania Black Sea
Gateway, a business association which promotes Romania as a regional hub for EU-Asia
trade. Formerly a journalist (has interviewed prominent figures like Henry Kissinger,
Madeleine Albright, Bob Woodward or Francis Fukuyama) and Foreign Affairs Adviser to
the Romanian Senate President, she was also Programmes Director for the Aspen Institute
Romania.
Oana is a writer, researcher and consultant in foreign affairs, political strategy,
democratization, transitions and conflict transformation, often invited as a commentator
and analyst on TV and radio shows.
Her work engagements have included research projects for the European Council on
Foreign Relations and the Swedish Crisis Management Research and Training Institute
(Crismart). Her expertise focuses mostly on the Balkans, Middle East and Afghanistan.
Oana Popescu was a Fulbright grantee at Yale University, where she studied
Democratization, Post-Conflict Reconstruction and Emerging Threats. She also served as
Teaching Assistant to former UN Secretary General Advisor Charles Hill and to prominent
historian Paul Kennedy. She holds a Master’s Degree in Conflict Analysis and Resolution
from the National School of Political and Administrative Studies, Bucharest.
Dr. Sorin-Gabriel SEBE, University of Bucharest, Romania
Dr. Sorin-Gabriel Sebe teaches in the Department of Political Science, International
Relations and Security Studies at the University of Bucharest in Romania.
He graduated from the Faculty of Mathematics, University of Bucharest in 1986 (the
graduation thesis: Non-Riemannian Geometries in Dislocation Theory”). From 1990 to 1995
he worked as a Research Associate at GPM2 Laboratory in Grenoble, France, in the realm
of mathematical modelling of irreversible phenomena.
In 1996 he joined the Faculty of Political Science, University of Bucharest (FSPUB) and
currently, beyond teaching, serves as Vice-Dean. He received his PhD in sociology in 2004
(the final thesis: Subjective Quality of Life Modelling”) from the Faculty of Sociology,
University of Bucharest.
He was a general manager at INSOMAR, a national wide opinion polls and market studies
company (2004-2006).
His research as a political science academic has primarily been concerned with the
processes associated to the democratization of former non-democratic regimes, such as
the reform of the intelligence apparatus and the development of a political market. He
favours a trans-disciplinary approach on research, having as current interest the
development of a curriculum for the study of intelligence in academic settings, in a political
science faculty, in a former communist country.
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Mrs. Lesley SIMM, Allied Rapid Reaction Corps (ARRC), NATO, Great Britain
Lesley Simm graduated from Nottingham University in 1975. Following post-graduate work
at London University she worked for the British Council in Iran, then Somalia and Tanzania.
Lesley lectured in history and politics for some years before returning to the Horn of Africa
where she spent years researching in Ethiopia and travelling regionally in East Africa and
the Middle East, focussing on the new security environment following the breakup of the
Soviet Union.
Until very recently, Lesley was Senior Research Fellow at the Defence Academy of the
United Kingdom and Director of a networked research cluster covering theology,
philosophy and ideology in strategic regions, to support operational deployment in current
theatres.
Lesley is now a Senior Fellow of the Institute for Statecraft, a Senior Associate Fellow of the
Defence Academy and supports HQ ARRC as an Associate, briefing on the understanding of
cultural, religious and ideological environment in areas of interest.
Dr. Brian R. SPISAK, VU University Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Brian R. Spisak is from the USA and is Assistant Professor in the Department of
Management and Organization, Faculty of Economics and Business Administration, VU
University Amsterdam.
Dr. Spisak blends the fields of social and organizational psychology with the study of
biological and cultural evolution to investigate how and why we have developed leadership
in large-scale social networks, and how this information can be applied to make groups
more effective in times of conflict and cooperation.
Dr. Spisak’s work utilizes a multidisciplinary approach and diverse techniques such as
agent-based modelling to better understand and forecast behaviour. This human factors
data is then applied to the decision making process at all levels of planning. His worked has
been applied to various objectives including a recent project funded by the United States
Office of Naval Research titled, "Reducing intergroup conflict through leadership selection
and behaviour: Using social network influence to foster peace."
LTC Constantin SÎRMĂ, NATO HUMINT Centre of Excellence, Romania
LTC SÎRMĂ, Romanian Army officer, is member of the HAOE Project Team. He has more
than 24 years experience within Romanian Armed Forces, holding positions within Army
units of Infantry, Long Range Reconnaissance and HUMINT. He has seen operational
service in Afghanistan with Enduring Freedom VII in 2005 and with ISAF X in 2007.
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COL Răzvan SURDU, NATO HUMINT Centre of Excellence, Romania
COL Răzvan SURDU, Romanian Army officer holds a B.A. in economics from “Vasile
Alecsandri” University, Bacau, Romania, and a M.A. in international relations and security
systems from “Lucian Blaga” University, Sibiu, Romania. He holds as well post-graduate
degrees in management of defence resources from Netherlands Defence College, The
Hague, Netherlands, and management of military intelligence activity from National
Defence University, Bucharest, Romania.
He has more than 25 years experience within Romanian Armed Forces, holding
commanding and staff officer positions within Long Range Reconnaissance, Airborne, and
Special Operations units and Land Forces Staff. He has been deployed in Iraq and Kuwait.
Currently COL SURDU is the head of Concept Development and Experimentation Section
within the NATO HUMINT Centre of Excellence and the “Human Aspects of the Operational
Environment” Project Manager.
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LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
ACO
Allied Command Operations
ACT
Allied Command Transformation
AD
Anno Domini
AJP
Allied Joint Publication
AO
Area of operation
AOR
Area of operation responsibility
BC
Before Christ
CIMIC
Civil military cooperation
CP
Collection plan
Doctrine, Organization, Training, Material,
Leadership, Personnel, Facilities, Interoperability
DOTMLPFI
ESCD
Emerging Security Challenge Division
EU
European Union
GO
Governmental organization
HAOE
Human Aspects of the Operational Environment
HQ
Headquarters
HUMINT
Human Intelligence
INTEL
Intelligence
IO
International Organizations
ISAF
International Security Assistance Force
NA5CRO
Non-Article 5 Crisis Response Operations
NATO
North Atlantic Treaty Organization
NATO HUMINT COE
NATO Human Intelligence Centre of Excellence
NGO
Nongovernmental organization
OPCOM
Operational command
OPCON
Operational control
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OPFOR
Opposing forces
OPLAN
Operational plan
OPORD
Operational order
OPSEC
Operational security
ORBAT
Order of battle
Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe
OSCE
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OSINT
Open source intelligence
PSYOP
Psychological operations
RECCE
Reconnaissance
ROE
Rules of engagement
SACEUR
Supreme Allied Commander Europe
SACT
Supreme Allied Commander Transformation
SHAPE
Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe
SME
Subject matter experts
SOF
Special operations forces
SOP
Standing operating procedures
STANAG
Standardization agreement
TACOM
Tactical command
TACON
Tactical control
TF
Task force
TO
Theatre of operation
UN
United Nations
Human Aspects in NATO Military Operations
DISCLAIMER
The views expressed within this paper are entirely and solely those of
the contributors and do not necessarily reflect official thinking and
policy either of the organization they represent or NATO.
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NATO HUMINT CENTRE OF EXCELLENCE
24 A, ARMATEI ROMANE Street,
410087, Oradea, Romania
registry@natohcoe.org
www.natohcoe.org