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‘Guard Farmers’ Join Counterinsurgency Fight in Afghanistan By Jim Garamone American Forces Press Service
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WASHINGTON, Nov. 21, 2008 – The National Guard is taking a biblical
verse to heart: “They will beat their swords into plowshares and their
spears into pruning hooks.”
Commanders in Afghanistan are looking forward to the deployment of two
agri-business development teams next year. The teams – one from Indiana
and one from Tennessee – are made up of National Guardsmen with farming
backgrounds. They will serve a year in Afghanistan advising local
governments and people on agricultural practices.
An agri-business development team from Texas already is working in Afghanistan’s Ghazni province.
“The
focus of all we do is the Afghan people, and our intent in everything
we do is to separate the people physically and psychologically from the
enemy,” said Army Col. John P. Johnson, commander of Combined Task
Force Currahee. The unit is built around the 4th Brigade Combat Team of
the 101st Airborne Division from Fort Campbell, Ky.
The task
force has responsibility for 2.3 million people in Wardak, Logar,
Paktia, Khowst and Paktika provinces in Regional Command East. The vast
majority of the people in the region are farmers or herders, and
agricultural expertise will help them improve their quality of life.
“We try to connect with the legitimate government and the Afghan security forces with the people,” Johnson said.
About
80 Guard members make up each team. The military has no occupational
specialty for farmers, so the members can be any specialty or branch.
They are included in the unit solely for their civilian expertise,
National Guard Bureau officials said.
The U.S. Department of
Agriculture has some specialists in provincial reconstruction teams,
but not many at other levels of command. The “soft power” these teams
represent can help Afghanistan for the long run, Johnson said.
“We cannot succeed here with military power alone,” he said.
It
is critical to follow military power with rebuilding and construction
funds, Johnson said. “We’re really excited about getting these two
agri-business development teams in our area of operations,” he said.
The
teams bring expertise in hydrology, dairy farming, chicken farming,
soil conservation, pest management and agricultural business practices.
The people in the provinces are subsistence farmers, but there is
potential to build the agricultural capacity, Johnson said.
The
teams will have support from agricultural universities in the United
States. The Indiana team is undergoing refresher training at Purdue
University.
“They will have an entire system that allows them
to increase production and take advantage of all the potential that is
here,” the colonel said.
For example, wheat that farmers grow
in Khowst is delivered to Pakistan for milling. The Pakistanis ship it
back to Afghanistan for sale. With help from the teams, Afghans may be
able to start their own milling plants.
“Teams will assist the
farmers to build entire agricultural systems and allow them to take
full advantage of all the agricultural potential resident here,”
Johnson said. | |