2006年VOA标准英语-Military Cadets Train For Insurgent Warfare(在线收听) |
By Kane Farabaugh More than 60 percent of U.S. Army personnel have been deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan. Many of them were trained in the Cold War mentality of conflict with a superpower. But the enemy in today's wars is much different. The insurgent warfare there has led the Army to change the way it teaches its future leaders. VOA's Kane Farabaugh traveled to the U.S. Military Academy at West Point to see firsthand how updated training is preparing cadets for a new kind of battlefield. ---------
If it weren't for all the trees, it could look like Iraq, and sound like Iraq. But just like the bullets in this training exercise, this is not a real Iraqi village or battle. Welcome to West Point -- the U.S. Army's premiere military academy along the Hudson River in New York State. It's an institution of higher learning…and ground zero for training future officers in the new challenges of fighting an insurgency. "We've had to change the focus of our training away from the Cold War era static offense-defense type of fight, to the more non-contiguous asymmetrical fight we see now in Operation Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom," said the captain. Instructors here say almost all current West Point cadets will serve a tour of duty in Iraq or Afghanistan during the course of their initial five-year military service. Most will arrive there less than a year after they graduate. As officers, these cadets will eventually lead soldiers into battle. Or in some cases, into a trap. "When the cadets take action, we try to have a realistic reaction for whatever it is they do, because that is often the case in theater," explains McKinney. Helping the Army create those realistic reactions are translators and actors for whom the Iraq war was not a simulation. "I want them to learn how to deal with the Iraqi people," says Sawa. "How to deal with Iraqi custom. Don't talk to the lady. Don't shake hand with lady. Don't go like that. Don't go and bother the sheik. You have to respect sheik of the tribe or the emir of the village or city. Take care of people. Be nice to them. Always smile to them. They'll respect you." This training is also the time and place for instructors to reinforce battlefield ethics, prompted in part by the recent allegations of rape and murder of Iraqi civilians by U.S. service members. "We require the cadets to go through the full investigation, just like they would with sworn statements and everything, so we treat situations out here in training the same way they would in that theater," Major McKinney tells us. This is all a new kind of training that is evolving as the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan continue. Veterans returning from those battlefields -- where the bullets and bodies are real -- pass on their knowledge to these cadets under the old military mantra: "The more you sweat in practice the less you bleed in battle." |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/7/33657.html |