Human Terrain System

Operationally Relevant Social Science Research in Iraq and Afghanistan

Nonfiction, Social & Cultural Studies, Social Science
Cover of the book Human Terrain System by Christopher J. Sims, Declassified Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Christopher J. Sims ISBN: 9783963764356
Publisher: Declassified Press Publication: April 19, 2018
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Christopher J. Sims
ISBN: 9783963764356
Publisher: Declassified Press
Publication: April 19, 2018
Imprint:
Language: English

To avoid the footpaths which may have been mined with improvised explosive devices (IEDs), Ryan Evans, a U.S. federal civilian, was walking across a wheat field in Babaji, Helmand Province, in the spring of 2011. Evans was attached to the Royal Highland Fusiliers (2 Scots), C Company, a heavy infantry patrol tasked with providing security in the vicinity. Begun 2 years earlier, the Helmand Food Zone Program was a form of development intervention which offered subsidies, seed, and fertilizers to farmers who replaced lucrative opium cultivation from poppies with growing and harvesting wheat and vegetable crops. Babaji had been in the control of insurgents until a few months earlier and had not received any assistance from the program during the previous year; consequently, there were tensions between the community and British forces. As Evans and the patrol emerged from the field, an Afghan man sitting nearby, clearly irate, shouted in Pashto that the British soldiers had wanted the farmer to grow wheat instead of poppy, and then the same British soldiers walked through their fields. At the immediate level, the encounter demonstrated the direct link between conflict, food security, and local trade, but conflict has many interrelated and mutual dependencies such that the anecdote is instructive on myriad broader milieus. Where, for example, is the tipping point that makes a civilian value creating an expression of discontent to a heavily armed patrol above his immediate physical security? Do livelihoods and cultures affect military strategies? Are there interdependencies between insurgencies, societies, and economies? Does the language of war require a sociological grammar in order to be understood? Armed conflict is a human enterprise such that, by extension, understanding of the human dimension in a given area of operations should be thought integral to planning successful operations...

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

To avoid the footpaths which may have been mined with improvised explosive devices (IEDs), Ryan Evans, a U.S. federal civilian, was walking across a wheat field in Babaji, Helmand Province, in the spring of 2011. Evans was attached to the Royal Highland Fusiliers (2 Scots), C Company, a heavy infantry patrol tasked with providing security in the vicinity. Begun 2 years earlier, the Helmand Food Zone Program was a form of development intervention which offered subsidies, seed, and fertilizers to farmers who replaced lucrative opium cultivation from poppies with growing and harvesting wheat and vegetable crops. Babaji had been in the control of insurgents until a few months earlier and had not received any assistance from the program during the previous year; consequently, there were tensions between the community and British forces. As Evans and the patrol emerged from the field, an Afghan man sitting nearby, clearly irate, shouted in Pashto that the British soldiers had wanted the farmer to grow wheat instead of poppy, and then the same British soldiers walked through their fields. At the immediate level, the encounter demonstrated the direct link between conflict, food security, and local trade, but conflict has many interrelated and mutual dependencies such that the anecdote is instructive on myriad broader milieus. Where, for example, is the tipping point that makes a civilian value creating an expression of discontent to a heavily armed patrol above his immediate physical security? Do livelihoods and cultures affect military strategies? Are there interdependencies between insurgencies, societies, and economies? Does the language of war require a sociological grammar in order to be understood? Armed conflict is a human enterprise such that, by extension, understanding of the human dimension in a given area of operations should be thought integral to planning successful operations...

More books from Social Science

Cover of the book Handling Societal Complexity by Christopher J. Sims
Cover of the book Clovis Mammoth Butchery by Christopher J. Sims
Cover of the book Die Freiheit, frei zu sein by Christopher J. Sims
Cover of the book Regional Economic Outlook, May 2013: Sub-Saharan Africa - Building Momentum in a Multi-Speed World by Christopher J. Sims
Cover of the book Space, Place, and Violence by Christopher J. Sims
Cover of the book Nuclear Power and Energy Security in Asia by Christopher J. Sims
Cover of the book The Maya End Times by Christopher J. Sims
Cover of the book The Media and The Public by Christopher J. Sims
Cover of the book Mannewar by Christopher J. Sims
Cover of the book John Dewey and American Democracy by Christopher J. Sims
Cover of the book Chomsky esencial by Christopher J. Sims
Cover of the book Political Violence in South Asia by Christopher J. Sims
Cover of the book Kremserfahrt in den Tod by Christopher J. Sims
Cover of the book 国交省官僚へ by Christopher J. Sims
Cover of the book Theorizing Contemporary Anarchism by Christopher J. Sims
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy