Women in Combat: The Effect of Integration on CI/HUMINT Collection
The Effect of Integration on CI/HUMINT Collection: Women in Combat
Key Words: #Combat # Integration # CI/HUMINT
The success of any counterinsurgency operation depends largely on the effectiveness and appropriateness of intelligence gathered. Human subjects are a crucial source of intelligence for counterinsurgency operations. Recently, the Pentagon announced its plan to open up all ground combat roles that had previously been closed to women by January 1st, 2016. Based on this announcement, this thesis seeks to establish how one specific area of counterinsurgency operations -- CI/HUMINT collection -- stands to benefit from the integration of women into the combat environment.
Women in Combat: The Effect of Integration on CI/HUMINT Collection
Introduction
The success of any counterinsurgency operation depends partly on the effectiveness of the human intelligence function driving the operation. Simply stated, intelligence is foreknowledge that assists military forces in organizing themselves for optimal employment (Giglio, 2013). Having accurate intelligence information increases the chances of combat success at all levels of operations - the strategic level, the tactical level and the operational level. On the tactical front, intelligence can provide forces with crucial insight on the performance envelopes of missiles, thereby aiding them in planning how to refine fighter tactics to out-maneuver the same. At the operational level, intelligence could help forces understand and engage enemy command elements or other operationally significant targets, thereby incapacitating rebel forces (Goh, Hao & Tay, 2008). Moreover, intelligence could assist forces make strategic deployment decisions such as how to hit the enemy's center of gravity, thereby weakening their will to fight back (Goh et al., 2008). Basically, therefore, intelligence is integral to mission success, influencing forces' activities significantly, right from operational planning and daily training to force restructuring (Giglio, 2013).
As the field of warfare has evolved, the human intelligence collection function has also grown to be more and more crucial for effective humanitarian assistance efforts and stable combat operations. That, however, seems to be more theoretical than practical, particularly in the context of the U.S. military -- our assignments are taking longer than usual, and our CI/HUMINT intelligence function seems far from perfect. This manifested clearly during the Iraqi war, when the intelligence community found itself relying on old and outdated information, and thereby landing conclusions that were largely inaccurate and misleading (Kerr, et al., 2008). Moreover, despite the fact that the intelligence community was able to gather accurate and crucial information on a range of issues including how the Iraqi forces would fight, how the war would develop over time, how tribal and ethnic factions in Iraq would react, how the war would impact oil markets, and how Iraq was linked to Al-Qaeda, it lacked the means to explain how these issues were linked, particularly how each issue impacted the rest (Kerr et al., 2008). Towards this end, there was no comprehensive sense of understanding of the Iraqi target among camp members by the time of deployment.
An even greater problem was that once the war had begun, and with a male-saturated force, it was difficult to obtain more accurate intelligence owing to cultural provisions that bar Islamic women from interacting physically with men unrelated to them. This left the Iraqi female population an underdeveloped and underutilized source of human intelligence.
The Iraqi situation was not even the first of its kind -- back in the 1990s, the intelligence community faced a number of tests for intelligence including emerging threats from Iran and North Korea, the Yugoslavia break-up, and the First Gulf War, and still, its collection and analysis performance was far from perfect (Kerr et al., 2008). These instances only imply that there is need to urgently streamline our intelligence function both in the pre-war situation and during the war. We need to improve our intelligence gathering and analysis techniques on the ground to be able to put up effective combat operations and avoid placing an unnecessary burden on the already-overburdened taxpayer. The Pentagon recently announced that the military needed to open up all roles in frontline ground that had previously been closed to women by January 1st, 2016. This announcement has been a subject of massive debate, with some arguing that the integration of women into combat roles would ruin unit cohesion and consequently, military effectiveness. Based on this announcement, this thesis seeks to examine how the field of CI/HUMINT collection is deemed to...
Women in Combat: The Effect of Integration on CI/HUMINT Collection The Effect of Integration on CI/HUMINT Collection: Women in Combat Key Words: #Combat # Integration # CI/HUMINT The success of any counterinsurgency operation depends largely on the effectiveness and appropriateness of intelligence gathered. Human subjects are a crucial source of intelligence for counterinsurgency operations. Recently, the Pentagon announced its plan to open up all ground combat roles that had previously been closed to
Gender Integration in CI/HUMINT and the War against Terrorism Gender Integration in CI/HUMINT on the War against Terrorism in the Middle East and Strategies for Effective Implementation Shea Larson Harry Nimon, Committee Chair Dr. Troy Mitchell, Subject Matter Expert Dr. Amanda Bowers, Committee Member The success of counterinsurgency operations depends on the effectiveness and appropriateness of intelligence gathered. Human subjects are a crucial source of intelligence for counterinsurgency operations. Previously, the U.S. Armed Forces created opportunities
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