Human terrain system
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The Human Terrain System (HTS) is a program under the auspices of the United States Army Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC). HTS utilizes experts in from the social science disciplines (anthropology, sociology, and political science) as well as linguistics, regional studies (Afghanistan and Iraq, currently), language, and intelligence. The goal is to provide military commanders and staff with an understanding of how societies make decisions and how resulting attitudes are shaped by the environment. Understanding assists US military forces with an understanding of the local population and provides insight on how the population may react to certain operational strategies. However the program is controversial amongst professional anthropologists, many of whom perceive it as an attempt to "weaponize" anthropology. [1] The American Anthropological Association has published a statement opposing the Human Terrain System Project. [2] HTS is currently fielding personnel to support deployed Brigade Combat Teams (U.S. Army) and, in the near future, Regimental Combat Teams (U.S. Marine Corps) in Afghanistan and Iraq. In the field, groups of five comprised of two civilian anthropologists and three military personnel are known as Human Terrain Teams or HTTs.[3] HTTs are supported by the Research Reachback Center (RRC) performing in-depth, long-term cultural research and analysis.
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[edit] Background
HTS was developed in response to identified gaps in commanders’ and staffs’ understanding of the local population and culture, and its impact on operational decisions; and poor transfer of specific socio-cultural knowledge to follow-on units. The approach is to place the expertise and experience of social scientists and regional experts, coupled with reach-back, open-source research, directly in support of deployed units engaging in full-spectrum operations. HTS informs decision-makers at the tactical, operational and strategic levels. The HTS Project is the first time that social science research and advising has been done systematically, on a large scale, and at the brigade level. The goal of the HTS is to provide relevant cultural knowledge to saves lives and reduce military and civilian conflict.
HTS Design
HTS is much more than the deployed Human Terrain Teams (HTTs). It is a complete system with several interdependent components. Human Terrain Teams (HTTs) at Brigade/Regimental-level and Human Terrain & Analysis Teams (HTATs) at echelon above Brigade-level. Fully integrated into unit staffs, HTTs conduct research on the local population and represent the “human terrain” in planning, preparation, execution and assessment of operations. HTT tours of duty are carefully managed to bridge unit RIP/TOA, ensuring a smooth and complete transfer of local area Human Terrain knowledge and cultural understanding. The CONUS-based Reachback Research Center (RRC) consists of social scientists, uniformed, and civilian analysts, who are regionally focused. Currently located at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas and Oyster Point, Virginia, the RRC supports deployed HTTs/HTATs in Afghanistan and Iraq. Subsequent to redeployment, many members of deployed HTTs return to function on the staff of HTS in various capacities from research and analysis to training.
HTS further employs a network of Subject Matter Expert (SMEs) consisting of on-call, micro-regional focused academic and other civilian sector experts providing specific support to the RRC.
HTS has developed the HTS “Map-HT Toolkit”. The HTS Map-HT is a hardware and software suite that is provided to deployed teams and the RRC enabling open-source research and provides usable products to supported units. The HTS Map-HT provides visualization of temporal, relational, and geospatial environment in a unified user interface.
General Information
HTS conducts primary social science research and analysis while advising commanders at the operational level. HTTs advise brigades on economic development, political systems, tribal structures, etc; provide training to brigade personnel as requested; and conducts research on topics of interest to the brigade staff. HTS provides on-the-ground input to supported brigades in a systematic fashion as opposed to formal or informal advisors, which have been the norm for the military in the past. HTS does not conduct intelligence operations and/or kinetic targeting, manage infrastructure projects, or provide schoolhouse pre-deployment cultural training.
[edit] References
- ^ US army enlists anthropologists BBC News
- ^ AAA Opposes U.S. Military’s Human Terrain System Project American Anthropological Association
- ^ Stars and Stripes: Cultural advisers give U.S. teams an edge
[edit] See also
- Afghanistan
- American Anthropological Association
- Anthropology
- Iraq
- Military Intelligence
- Operation Iraqi Freedom
- Operation Enduring Freedom
[edit] External links
[edit] Articles
- US Army: The Human Terrain System: A CORDS for the 21st Century
- US Army: Why we need ethnographic intelligence
- BBC News: US Army enlists anthropologists
- NY Times: Army Enlists Anthropology in War Zones
- Democracy Now! Anthropologists Up in Arms Over Pentagon’s “Human Terrain System” to Recruit Graduate Students to Serve in Iraq, Afghanistan
- [1] Network of Concerned Anthropologists