Small Wars Journal

Khastan Tawanestan! -- "We Can, We Will!"

Tue, 09/07/2010 - 10:38am
Khastan Tawanestan! -- "We Can, We Will!"

Shaping the Battlefield in Afghanistan in Dari and Pashto -- not English

by LT Sean "Shoe" Stevens

Download the Full Article: Khastan Tawanestan

How does a nation conduct a successful counterinsurgency (COIN) operation in a country in which it does not speak the local language? Can we facilitate the development of a transparent, corruption-free Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan (GIRoA) without being able to communicate directly with its people? These are questions that I wrestled with time and time again during my deployment to Afghanistan. I witnessed first-hand a remarkable dearth in the ability of Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) forces to communicate with Afghans. This lack of language abilities in both American military and civilian forces impedes our counterinsurgency campaign. As my tour in Afghanistan progressed, this realization motivated me to attempt—in some small way—to remedy this problem. As a result, I personally taught Dari to hundreds of military members and civilians, and created a six-lesson syllabus for future teachers to follow. While I experienced small successes as a result of my efforts, they were insufficient to overcome the dearth of language capability that threatens to undermine OEF.

Download the Full Article: Khastan Tawanestan

LT Sean "Shoe" Stevens is a Naval Aviator currently working on his Masters degree in Homeland Security and Defense at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, CA.

About the Author(s)

Comments

Florentino Santana (not verified)

Wed, 09/08/2010 - 2:19pm

Sean:

I am glad to see the article published. You make very important points. I made sure to get it to the guys still back at USFOR-A.

Great Work

Florentino Santana

spartan16

Wed, 09/08/2010 - 9:02am

"Shoe",

Great article. I can only speak for knowing the Pashto language and using it with rural Pashtun people. Yes, words matter. They have meaning. Real meaning. Being able to communicate in the people's language you are trying to help is absolutely critical.

Words are a weapon.

As the Pashtun's say..."words can be your castle or your catastrophe..."

'de Pakhtu lar be neesu'

STRENGTH AND HONOR

Jim Gant

IntelTrooper (not verified)

Tue, 09/07/2010 - 1:59pm

Where are the vast majority of our kinetic engagements in Afghanistan happening? In Pashto-speaking areas. And the size of our Pashto program at DLI, after 9 years, is pathetic, with the majority of Pashto students being from the Air Force and Marine Corps (the only branches with any appreciation of the situation, apparently). Meanwhile, three Arabic schools continue churning out graduates.