One Tribe At A Time #4: The Full Document at last!

Save Major Jim Gant's "One Tribe At A Time" to your computer, or view it right now.Download Major Jim Gant’s “One Tribe At A Time” to your computer, or view it right now.

[Because of the extraordinary response to Maj. Jim Gant's paper, One Tribe At A Time, I've decided to leave it up all week in the "Number One Slot."  My ongoing interview with Chief Ajmal Khan Zazai will pick again next Friday; the Chief has been in Kabul all week, meeting with U.S. and British commanders, and we haven't had time to speak. So all's well that ends well!]

The downloadable and open-able .pdf of One Tribe is here, on the right. On a personal note, let me say again that I consider it a privilege to offer this document in full, not only because of my great respect for Maj. Jim Gant, who has lived and breathed this Tribal Engagement idea for years, but for the piece itself and for the influence it is already having within the U.S. military and policymaking community.

One Tribe At A Time is by no means a super-pro Beltway think tank piece. What it is, in my opinion, is an idea whose time has come, put forward by an officer who has lived it in the field with his Special Forces team members–and proved it can be done. And an officer, by the way, who is ready this instant to climb aboard a helicopter to go back to Afghanistan and do it again.

Questions and comments

At the moment, Maj. Gant is at Fort Polk, Louisiana, getting ready to deploy to Iraq, where he will lead an Iraqi commando battalion. He’ll be available in the meantime, however (depending of course upon time demands), to answer questions or take criticisms. Just respond in the comments section below. And I myself have further thoughts I’d like to offer on this subject in the coming weeks.

Here’s a quick one:

The most common response I anticipate to the Tribal Engagement concept (and it’s a valid criticism, shared by Maj. Gant) will go something like this: “Yeah, this is a great idea–but where are we going to find the men to implement it?”

Men for the job

Tribal Engagement Team members, should this concept be adopted, would be called upon to commit for multiple tours under the loneliest, harshest and most hazardous conditions imaginable. To succeed with the tribe they are assigned to, they would have to demonstrate impeccable combat credentials and, even rarer, possess the “people skills” to establish and maintain rapport across a cultural chasm—Western to Tribal Afghan—that has defeated every outside entity from Alexander the Great to the British and the Soviets. The task would be extraordinarily difficult, dirty and dangerous, and in the end would almost certainly be rewarded neither by career advancement (because the enterprise would be unprecedented and outside the normal channels of military promotion) nor by recognition from the public at large, who in all probability will rarely hear of it and wouldn’t understand or appreciate it if they did.

How can we identify and attract such men?

Do you remember this tiny, three-line ad from the London Times, December 29, 1913?

Men wanted for hazardous journey, small wages, bitter cold, long months of complete darkness, constant danger, safe return doubtful, honour and recognition in case of success.

5000 volunteers queued up in response to this advertisement, posted by Ernest Shackleton seeking crewmen for his Antarctic expedition.

I may be wrong, but I don’t think our young American warriors would respond with any less enthusiasm than their British cousins did a century ago to a similar call. Do you?

Again, many thanks to Maj. Jim Gant for writing One Tribe At A Time, to Printer Bowler for designing and editing the .pdf and to Callie Oettinger for managing the outreach. I’m proud to put this document in circulation with as much reach as this modest blog can offer. We all hope it proves of interest and of use.

  • Facebook
  • Gmail
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • Delicious
  • MySpace
This entry was posted in Afghanistan, One Tribe At A Time and tagged , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Post a comment or leave a trackback: Trackback URL.

87 Comments

  1. Rob Vires
    Posted January 27, 2010 at 9:41 AM | Permalink

    Jim,

    You never cease to impress. I miss you brother be safe!!

    • Jim Gant
      Posted January 27, 2010 at 3:30 PM | Permalink

      Rob,

      Great to hear from you brother.

      You take care. Let me know if you need anything.

      STRENGTH AND HONOR

      Jim

  2. peter38a
    Posted February 5, 2010 at 8:10 PM | Permalink

    I am reading today that we are going to be “turning a page” in Afghanistan. In the last few days there have also been some other “gonnas” and this makes me do some writhing in my seat because it reminds me so much of Vietnam and the light at the end of the tunnel that was snuffed by TET! If a group is willing to take any level of losses than they can assault, chew-up or capture any high profile political icon. Guerrilla warfare is 90% political theater—look what we can do and no one can stop us!

    The Taliban don’t need to know what were going to do to them, let them feel the results, the American military doesn’t have to be told so let’s not get any false hopes up at home. Let’s please not fall in that particular hole again.

  3. W J Green
    Posted February 10, 2010 at 2:45 PM | Permalink

    You build a society the same way you build a pyramid, from the bottom up, not the top down. I’m glad somebody gets that. I hope you will have some influence on policy in DC. Good luck.
    - Bill

  4. Posted February 12, 2010 at 12:39 PM | Permalink

    as a descendent of Shackleton I remember the ad well. The expedition was then forgotten in the hubbub of the First World War. Even in the 1970’s, when I first read his story few people knew of him.

    Shackleton died a page 3 footnote at an early age, but his legacy of duty, honor, country still remains.

    This is what we need more of today. Perhaps we can bring Afghanistan into the 19th Century within 20 years, but the failed state model must be checked for our own security. Thank God we have some of those same men and women willing to remember history and take the long term view. There are not enough of them.

  5. Posted March 4, 2010 at 12:05 AM | Permalink

    ….It’s a tribe indeed!- we’re in Afghanistan dealing with” The Great Game: the old saying : my enemies enemy is my friend not when in their heart they’re still my enemy”. This is a great read if you haven’t read it already: “History of Afghanistan” Steven Pressfield All the best – G-D speed. Elizabeth

19 Trackbacks

  1. [...] part, ces évènements ont poussé l’armée à s’intéresser de plus près à un rapport de 45 pages rédigé par le major Jim Gant, l’ancien chef d’un détachement de forces spéciales [...]

  2. By Middle East trip: Weekend readings on December 6, 2009 at 7:22 PM

    [...] readings Of to a tribe for time [Major Jim Grant] The biggest American Jim Grant reports his experiences in the tribal areas. But the important of [...]

  3. By Voyage au Proche-Orient: Des lectures de week-end on December 6, 2009 at 7:23 PM

    [...] lectures de week-end D’à une tribu dans une fois [Major Jim Grant] Le plus grand Américain Jim Grant raconte ses expériences dans les aires tribales. Mais [...]

  4. By Nahost-Reise: Lesen des Wochenendes on December 6, 2009 at 7:23 PM

    [...] des Wochenendes Von in einem Stamm in Mal [Major Jim Grant] Der größte Amerikaner Jim Grant erzählt seine Erfahrungen in den Stammesgebieten. Aber das [...]

  5. [...] One Tribe At A Time #4: The Full Document at last! [...]

  6. By Tribal strategy for Afghanistan - Techlog on January 17, 2010 at 7:01 PM

    [...] involvement with Afghan tribes — and is being sent back to Afghanistan to do just that. His 45-page paper, “One Tribe at a Time,” published online last fall and circulating widely within the U.S. military, the Pentagon and [...]

  7. By One Tribe at a Time on January 18, 2010 at 1:43 AM

    [...] [...]

  8. [...] team right there with these tribal leaders, and ensure they get what the paid for. Some of that TET that Jim Gant was talking about. Hell, throw in a couple of shotguns as gifts, and lets fire this thing [...]

  9. [...] War and Reality in Afghanistan A paper by Maj. Jim Gant, titled, “One Tribe at a Time”, has been getting all sorts of [...]

Post a Comment

Your email is never published nor shared.

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Steven Pressfield

Steven Pressfield is the author of Gates of Fire and four other historical novels set in the ancient world, including The Afghan Campaign. His most recent book is Killing Rommel, a WWII story. He is also the author of The Legend of Bagger Vance and The War of Art.

Mr. Pressfield is a graduate of Duke University and a former Marine. His books are in the curriculum at West Point, Annapolis and the Naval War College, as well as being on the Commandant's Reading List for the Marine Corps. He lives in Los Angeles.

Writing Wednesdays One Tribe At A Time Tribal Chief Interview Writing Wednesdays