Maintenance window scheduled to begin at February 14th 2200 est. until 0400 est. February 15th

(e.g. yourname@email.com)

Forgot Password?

    Defense Visual Information Distribution Service Logo

    Human Terrain Team helps Soldiers in Iraq understand the cultural landscape

    Human Terrain Team helps Soldiers in Iraq understand the cultural landscape

    Photo By Staff Sgt. Michael Pryor | San Francisco, Calif., native Dr. Dave Matsuda, a professor of anthropology working as...... read more read more

    By Sgt. Mike Pryor
    2nd Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division

    BAGHDAD – On a bright afternoon, Dr. Dave Matsuda went with a group of U.S Soldiers to tour a food distribution depot in the Ur neighborhood. The Soldiers were worried about how to keep the warehouse from being infiltrated by Moqtada Al Sadr's Shi'ite militia army, which controls that part of the Iraqi Capital.

    The chief of security at the depot, however, assured them that the warehouse was safe, because his "organization" protected it from Sadr's influence.

    The Soldiers were doubtful. The chief's independence seemed inexplicable given what they knew about the area – it was a puzzling anomaly in a sea of data pointing in the other direction. Matsuda, though, believed he could put the pieces of the puzzle together. He began asking the chief questions about his family, his extended family, his tribe, and the tribe's affiliations with other tribes.

    Later, he was able to chart the relationships on a diagram to show how the chief's tribal hierarchy operated, giving the Soldiers a rare glimpse into the complicated inner workings of Iraqi society.

    It was a valuable insight drawn not from standard military intelligence gathering techniques, but from the science of anthropology.

    "A military person would say 'Let's look at this in political or military terms,'" Matsuda said, "but an anthropologist says, 'Let's look at the tribal relationships that are underneath everything."

    There's a reason Matsuda knows what an anthropologist would look for: he is one. Back in the states, Matsuda, 51, is a professor at California State University – East Bay. He holds a double doctorate in anthropology and developmental psychology. Tall, soft-spoken, and bespectacled, he seems to fit image of the bookish professor perfectly. But these days, Matsuda has traded in his professor's tweeds for combat boots and a bullet-proof vest. In September, he brought his expertise to Iraq as part of a small group of cultural experts called the Human Terrain Team.

    Matsuda's HTT is attached to the 82nd Airborne Division's 2nd Brigade Combat Team, which operates in Northeast Baghdad and Sadr City.

    The HTT's mission is to diagram Iraq's cultural landscape – its "human terrain" – in the same way intelligence analysts map out its cities, roads, and rivers. It's a function that has become increasingly important as the U.S. military has turned its focus to counterinsurgency operations, in which cultural understanding is the key, said the team's leader, Lt. Col. Edward Villacres, of Denver, Colo.

    "In counterinsurgency operations, knowing the human terrain is absolutely essential," Villacres said.

    The Team

    The 2nd BCT's Human Terrain Team uses history and social science to provide cultural awareness that supports the brigade's operations, Villacres said.

    The team consists of the team chief, an area specialist, a social scientist, and a research manager. Matsuda, the social scientist, is a civilian, while the other members are active duty army. All the team members have specialized knowledge, and two – Matsuda and Villacres – are college professors.

    "We've got people who know the culture in and out," said 1st Lt. Sami Tioni, the team's research manager and a native Arabic speaker.

    To accomplish its mission, the team draws on two pools of knowledge: information that has already been collected and information that the team members collect themselves. They then analyze the information and present their conclusions and advice to the brigade commander.

    "It gives him an additional level of insight as he prepares to make decisions," Villacres said.

    Officials with the 2nd BCT said they appreciate the contributions the HTT has made to the brigade's operations so far.

    "It's great having them. They add a critical dimension to the fight, one that has been missing up to now" said Lt. Col. David Oclander, the 2nd BCT's executive officer.

    Outside the military, however, the teams have sparked some controversy. Much of the opposition has come from people in the academic world, who, according to Matsuda, fear that the army will misuse the knowledge offered by social scientists.

    "(Some are) saying anthropology can't be part of the Army without being corrupted," he said.

    Matsuda said some of the concerns are valid, and some are motivated by knee-jerk anti-militarism. Regardless, he said, the stakes are too high in Iraq right now to sit on the sidelines.

    Knowing the Script

    Even though Operation Iraqi Freedom is in its fifth year, Villacres said many in the U.S. military still fail to appreciate the differences between Arab and Western culture.

    "Arab society doesn't have any of the common foundations that we have," he said.

    As a result, it can be difficult for Iraqis and U.S. Soldiers to find common ground, despite good intentions on both sides. Matsuda gave as an example an instance where U.S. Soldiers thought they had settled a dispute with people in a village by making a condolence payment. But when the Soldiers returned a few days after making the payment, they were attacked. The Soldiers thought they had been betrayed, but in the villagers' eyes, the agreement had never been valid because the traditional reconciliation ritual hadn't been conducted, Matsuda explained.

    Anthropologists believe that all societies operate according to a certain "script," Matsuda said. Iraqis have one script, Americans have another. The HTT's mission is to provide an interpretation of the Iraqi cultural script that will help Soldiers make the right decisions.

    The team has carried out that task in ways both small and large. One small way they affected operations came when the brigade was about to put out a wanted poster featuring an image of the scales of justice. Matsuda pointed out that the idea of the scales of justice was a Greek-derived, Western concept that meant nothing to Iraqis. Instead he proposed changing the poster to show two open hands – an image drawn from ideas in the Quran – in order to make it more resonant with Iraqis.

    "We try to find the assumptions and motivations behind what people do," Matsuda said.

    Why it Matters

    Tioni said the value of insights that the HTT offers shouldn't be underestimated.

    "We fight an enemy that is very fluid, and the only way we're going to defeat them is by knowing the culture," he said.

    The team's work isn't simply an academic exercise, team members said. Tioni said he is convinced greater cultural awareness will help protect Soldiers out on the streets.

    "That's what is going to save lives: knowing how to interact with the population," Tioni said.

    In justifying his work in Iraq, Matsuda returned to the example of the Soldiers who were attacked even after making a condolence payment because they didn't understand the importance of cultural traditions.

    "I don't want those guys going into that village thinking they got it all taken care of and they end up getting shot," Matsuda said. "I want everyone to come home."

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 12.09.2007
    Date Posted: 12.10.2007 14:33
    Story ID: 14585
    Location: BAGHDAD, IQ

    Web Views: 436
    Downloads: 325

    PUBLIC DOMAIN