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U.S. Army got it right with brigade deployment in Afghanistan.
The U.S. Army's security force assistance brigades (SFAB) are specialized units that conduct training, advising, assisting, enabling and accompanying operations with allied and partner nations. Soldiers in SFABs are highly trained and among the top tactical leaders in the Army. Their work strengthens U.S. allies and partners while supporting national security objectives and combatant commanders' warfighting needs. Todd Lopez reports on US DoD’s website.
"As our Afghan partners began to understand the value of 1st SFAB advisors, they asked us for more," Army Brig. Gen. Scott Jackson, 1st SFAB commander, said (Picture source: US Army/Sean Simmons)
The 1st Security Force Assistance Brigade returned from Afghanistan in November, after a nine-month advise-and-assist mission there. It was the first mission of its kind for the new unit. What did the 1st SFAB learn in Afghanistan? "Units with persistent partners made more progress in planning and conducting offensive operations and in integrating organic Afghan enablers like field artillery and the Afghan air force than non-persistent partnered units," said Army Brig. Gen. Scott Jackson, 1st SFAB commander. "As our Afghan partners began to understand the value of 1st SFAB advisors, they asked us for more," Jackson said. "So our teams partnered with more and more Afghan units as the deployment progressed."
In all, Jackson said, during their nine-month deployment to Afghanistan, the 800-person 1st SFAB ran 58 advisory teams and partnered with more than 30 Afghan battalions, 15 brigades, multiple regional training centers, a corps headquarters, and a capital division headquarters.
"I believe we could only accomplish our mission ... and validate the effectiveness of an SFAB because the Army got it right — the Army issued us the right equipment, and provided us the right training to be successful," the general said. "But most importantly, we selected the people for this mission ... the key to our success is the talented, adaptable, and experienced volunteers who served in this brigade."