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United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

Report to Congressional Committees: 

May 2011: 

Military Training: 

Actions Needed to Improve Planning and Coordination of Army and Marine 
Corps Language and Culture Training: 

GAO-11-456: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-11-456, a report to congressional committees. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Today, and in the foreseeable future, military operations require U.S. 
personnel, in particular Army and Marine Corps ground forces, to 
communicate and interact with multinational partners and local 
populations. The committee report accompanying a proposed bill for the 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2011 directed GAO 
to review several issues related to language and culture training for 
Army and Marine Corps general purpose forces. For this report, GAO 
evaluated (1) the extent to which the Army and Marine Corps had 
developed strategies with elements such as goals, funding priorities, 
and metrics to guide training approaches and investments that were 
aligned with Department of Defense (DOD) planning efforts and (2) DOD’
s approach for identifying training requirements for Army and Marine 
Corps forces that will deploy to the U.S. Central Command area of 
responsibility. To do so, GAO analyzed Army and Marine Corps 
strategies and training requirements and interviewed cognizant 
officials. 

What GAO Found: 

The Army and Marine Corps developed service-specific language and 
culture strategies, but did not include some key elements to guide 
their training approaches and investments, and DOD-wide efforts to 
establish a planning process that could better align service training 
approaches are incomplete. The Army and Marine Corps developed broad 
goals and objectives within their strategies and identified some 
training programs and activities tied to these goals. However, the 
services did not always identify priorities and the investments needed 
to implement the training or a set of results-oriented performance 
metrics to assess the contributions that training programs have made 
collectively, which GAO and DOD have recognized can help ensure 
training investments are making progress toward achieving program 
goals and objectives. GAO found that the Army and Marine Corps did not 
complete underlying analyses and assign responsibilities for program 
performance prior to designing and implementing their strategies and 
associated training programs. DOD has taken steps to develop a 
strategic planning process to align service training approaches. For 
example, in February 2011, DOD published a strategic plan for language 
skills and cultural capabilities that outlines a broad departmentwide 
planning process. However, DOD has not yet set up internal mechanisms, 
such as procedures and milestones, by which it can reach consensus 
with the military services on priorities and investments. Without a 
clearly defined planning process, DOD does not have the tools it needs 
to set strategic direction for language and culture training efforts, 
fully align departmentwide efforts to develop plans and budget 
requests that reflect its priorities, and measure progress in 
implementing various initiatives. 

DOD components identified varying language and culture training 
requirements for Army and Marine Corps general purpose forces that 
will deploy to the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility, but 
the Command did not use a comprehensive process to synchronize these 
requirements. GAO surveyed 15 documents issued since June 2008 and 
found several variances with respect to the language to be trained and 
the type and duration of training. For example, in July 2010 the Army 
required that all forces deploying to either Afghanistan or Iraq 
complete a 4- to 6-hour online training program for language and 
culture. In September 2010, a senior Marine Corps commander directed 
that ground units preparing for Afghanistan deployments complete a 2-
day culture course. Army and Marine Corps officials noted that 
training requirements changed constantly and this led to some 
confusion in developing training programs as well as considerable time 
and resources that were spent adjusting training. GAO found that 
contrary to DOD guidance, U.S. Central Command had not yet established 
a comprehensive process to approve training requirements and 
coordinate them with key stakeholders to ensure alignment with DOD 
guidance and obtain feedback on service training approaches. Without a 
comprehensive process, U.S. Central Command will not have a mechanism 
to identify and synchronize training for current and future 
operations, which may result in deploying forces that receive training 
that is inconsistent and may not meet operational needs. 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO recommends that the Army and Marine Corps assign responsibilities 
for program performance, and identify training investments and 
metrics; DOD establish a defined planning process with internal 
mechanisms, such as procedures and milestones, to align training 
efforts; and U.S. Central Command establish a process to identify and 
synchronize training requirements. DOD generally agreed with the 
recommendations. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-456] or key 
components. For more information, contact Sharon Pickup at (202) 512-
9619 or pickups@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

Army and Marine Corps Developed Language and Culture Strategies, but 
Did Not Include Some Key Elements and Departmentwide Efforts to 
Establish a Planning Process Are Incomplete: 

U.S. Central Command Did Not Synchronize Varying Language and Culture 
Training Requirements for Army and Marine Corps General Purpose Forces: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of Defense: 

Appendix III: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Table: 

Table 1: Examples of Language and Culture Predeployment Training 
Requirements for General Purpose Forces Deploying to the U.S. Central 
Command Area of Responsibility: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Selected DOD, Army, and Marine Corps Documents that 
Addressed the Need for Improved Language and Culture Skills: 

Figure 2: Soldiers Participating in Training at Fort Carson Language 
Training Site: 

Abbreviation: 

DOD: Department of Defense: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

May 26, 2011: 

Congressional Committees: 

Today, and in the foreseeable future, military operations require U.S. 
personnel to communicate and interact with multinational partners and 
local populations. Referring both to the long-term efforts to prepare 
military forces for future conflicts and the near-term needs of 
current operations, the Department of Defense (DOD) emphasized in the 
2010 Quadrennial Defense Review the importance of developing the 
language and culture skills of the military and civilian workforce. 
DOD concluded that U.S. forces would be able to perform their missions 
more effectively with more and better key enabling capabilities, 
including language expertise. On the basis of their operational 
experiences in Afghanistan and Iraq, ground commanders have expressed 
the importance of language and culture skills for general purpose 
forces in counterinsurgency and stability operations, stressing, for 
example, that language training is as important as marksmanship and 
other key training. Reinforcing the importance of language and culture 
skills, the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and 
Readiness issued guidance in December 2010 setting out DOD policy that 
training and personnel processes and programs should be aligned to 
prepare deploying units, leaders, and staffs with the language and 
cultural knowledge and skills, commensurate with their duties, needed 
for the successful conduct of counterinsurgency operations.[Footnote 
1] The Army and Marine Corps have taken a variety of steps to develop 
language and culture skills for general purpose forces, including the 
issuance of servicewide strategies, and implementing predeployment 
training programs to address the needs of current operations. 

Since 2009, we have made recommendations to address a number of 
challenges the department faces in developing language and culture 
skills in the military. For example, in June 2009, we recommended that 
DOD develop a strategic plan that includes measurable performance 
goals and objectives and investment priorities and a validated 
methodology for identifying language and regional proficiency 
requirements, which includes cultural awareness.[Footnote 2]In June 
2010, we testified before the House Armed Services Committee, 
Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations to provide an update on 
DOD's progress in implementing recommendations from our June 2009 
report.[Footnote 3] At that time, we noted that DOD had not yet 
produced a comprehensive strategic plan to synchronize language and 
culture transformation efforts and that the department did not have 
complete language and culture requirements data needed to properly 
assess capability gaps and associated risks. In February 2011, DOD 
published the Department of Defense Strategic Plan for Language 
Skills, Regional Expertise, and Cultural Capabilities (2011-2016) 
noting that a more detailed implementation plan would be issued 
separately with elements such as action plans that detail specific 
tasks to be accomplished and performance measures. 

The committee report accompanying a proposed bill for the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2011 (H.R. 5136) directed us 
to review a number of issues related to language and culture training 
for the Army's and Marine Corps' respective general purpose forces. 
[Footnote 4] For this report, we evaluated (1) the extent to which the 
Army and Marine Corps had developed language and culture strategies 
with key elements, such as goals, funding priorities, and metrics to 
guide training approaches and investments that were aligned with 
departmentwide planning efforts; and (2) DOD's approach for 
identifying language and culture training requirements for Army and 
Marine Corps general purpose forces that will deploy to the U.S. 
Central Command area of responsibility. We will report separately at a 
later date on other issues related to the House report, including 
steps the Army and Marine Corps are taking to incorporate language and 
culture in training and personnel processes. 

For the first objective, we focused on the Army's and Marine Corps' 
general purpose forces. Therefore, excluded from this review were 
training programs for language and regional experts (e.g., foreign 
area officers and intelligence specialists), special operations 
forces, and service efforts (e.g., human terrain teams) to provide 
culture experts to deployed forces.[Footnote 5] We examined the Army 
Culture and Foreign Language Strategy and the Marine Corps Language, 
Regional and Culture Strategy: 2011-2015[Footnote 6] and training 
documents to determine training priorities and metrics that have been 
used to measure progress in meeting service and DOD capability needs. 
We reviewed these documents in the context of our prior work, DOD 
budget documents, and service guidance[Footnote 7] to determine the 
extent to which the Army and Marine Corps developed strategies that 
identified key elements, such as goals and objectives, training 
programs and priorities, resource requirements, and approaches for 
measuring progress, including results-oriented performance metrics. We 
also reviewed Army and Marine Corps funding data associated with the 
implementation of the two services' respective language and culture 
strategies for fiscal years 2009 through 2012. To corroborate our 
understanding of the documents provided, we conducted interviews with 
officials responsible for developing the Army's and Marine Corps' 
respective language and culture strategies and related training 
programs, as well as with Office of the Secretary of Defense officials 
responsible for providing strategic direction and programmatic 
oversight of the department's language and culture programs. We also 
discussed the content and status of ongoing departmental efforts that 
are intended to further align language and culture training approaches 
with officials representing the Office of the Secretary of Defense and 
the Joint Staff. 

For the second objective, we focused on training requirements for the 
Army's and Marine Corps' respective general purpose forces that are 
preparing for deployments in the U.S. Central Command area of 
responsibility. We reviewed statutory provisions, including certain 
sections of Title 10 of the U.S. Code and related DOD guidance that 
characterize the training roles and responsibilities of combatant 
commanders and the military services.[Footnote 8] We examined Office 
of the Secretary of Defense, U.S. Central Command, U.S. Forces 
Afghanistan, and Army and Marine Corps documents published from 2008 
to 2011 and identified specific language and culture training 
requirements. To corroborate our understanding of the documents 
provided, we conducted interviews with officials representing the 
Office of the Secretary of Defense, U.S. Central Command, U.S. Forces 
Afghanistan, and Army and Marine Corps force provider and training 
commands to discuss the processes they use to identify language and 
culture requirements for Army and Marine Corps general purpose forces 
that will deploy to the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility 
and steps taken to synchronize service predeployment training so that 
it addresses operational needs. We assessed these efforts in light of 
a DOD strategic plan that describes the importance of establishing a 
robust training requirements identification process and synchronizing 
service training programs with combatant commander requirements. 
[Footnote 9] 

We conducted this performance audit from June 2010 to May 2011 in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. 
Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain 
sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe 
that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. A more 
detailed discussion of our scope and methodology can be found in 
appendix I. 

Background: 

DOD, the Army, and the Marine Corps have emphasized the need for 
improved language and culture skills in strategic guidance and are 
implementing training and education programs to begin to address these 
needs. 

DOD and Service-Level Guidance on Building Language and Culture Skills: 

Before September 11, 2001, DOD generally focused efforts to build 
language and culture capabilities on its professional communities. 
[Footnote 10] As military operations in Afghanistan and Iraq have 
continued, DOD has broadened this focus to the general purpose forces. 
In figure 1, we show that in departmentwide and service-level 
documents issued since 2005, DOD and the Army and Marine Corps 
addressed the need for improved language and culture skills. 

Figure 1: Selected DOD, Army, and Marine Corps Documents that 
Addressed the Need for Improved Language and Culture Skills: 

[Refer to PDF for image: time line] 

2005: 
Defense Language Transformation Roadmap; 
DOD Directive 5160.41E on the Defense Language Program. 

2006: 
2006 Quadrennial Defense Review. 

2007: 
DOD Instruction 5160.70 on the Management of DOD Language and
Regional Proficiency Capabilities. 

2008: 
Marine Corps Vision and Strategy 2025. 

2009: 
Army Culture and Foreign Language Strategy; 
Army Regulation 350-1 on Army Training and Leader
Development. 

2010: 
2010 Quadrennial Defense Review; 
Under Secretary of Defense Directive Type Memorandum 11-002 on
Counterinsurgency (COIN) Training and Reporting Guidance for
Preparing U.S. Forces to Succeed in Afghanistan and Pakistan. 

2011: 
Marine Corps Language, Regional, and Culture Strategy 2011-2015; 
DOD Strategic Plan for Language Skills, Regional Expertise and Cultural
Capabilities. 

Source: GAO analysis of DOD documents. 

[End of figure] 

Roles and Responsibilities for Language and Culture Training: 

The responsibilities within DOD for identifying, developing, and 
maintaining language and culture capabilities are shared among several 
components, including the Office of the Secretary of Defense, the 
combatant commanders, and the military services. The Office of the 
Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness provides 
overall policy guidance for the defense language program and is also 
responsible for reviewing the policies, plans, and programs of the DOD 
components to ensure that foreign language and regional proficiency 
needs are adequately addressed. 

DOD has designated Senior Language Authorities within the Office of 
the Secretary of Defense, the military services, and other DOD 
components, and established a governance structure for DOD's language 
and culture programs, which consists of a number of entities, 
including the following: 

* Defense Language Office: provides strategic direction and 
programmatic oversight to the DOD components, including the services 
and combatant commands, on present and future requirements related to 
language as well as regional and cultural proficiency. The Director of 
the Defense Language Office, within the Office of the Under Secretary 
of Defense for Personnel and Readiness, has been designated as the DOD 
Senior Language Authority. 

* Defense Language Steering Committee: comprised of Senior Language 
Authorities from the military services and other DOD organizations and 
chaired by the DOD Senior Language Authority, the committee provides 
senior-level guidance regarding the development of DOD's language 
capabilities.[Footnote 11] 

* Defense Language Action Panel: comprised of less-senior 
representatives from the same entities represented on the Defense 
Language Steering Committee, the panel supports the activities, 
functions, and responsibilities of the Defense Language Steering 
Committee. 

Combatant commanders, such as the Commander of U.S. Central Command, 
are responsible for identifying foreign language and culture 
requirements in support of operations in their geographic areas of 
responsibility. In some cases, battlefield commanders, such as the 
Commander of U.S. Forces in Afghanistan, may publish guidance and 
other documents that specify training tasks that should be completed 
before military forces deploy to an area where combat operations are 
being conducted. 

Each military service is responsible for training forces with the 
language and culture capabilities necessary to support departmentwide 
and service-specific requirements and the needs of combatant 
commanders. Army and Marine Corps headquarters staff and service 
commands develop guidance and training programs to prepare forces with 
required skills, such as language and culture. The Army and Marine 
Corps have published language and culture strategies to guide 
servicewide efforts. Within the Army, the Training and Doctrine 
Command has been designated as the lead agency for implementing the 
Army Culture and Foreign Language Strategy and has also established 
the Training and Doctrine Command Culture Center. The Marine Corps has 
established a culture center--the Center for Advanced Operational 
Culture Learning--which is responsible for developing and implementing 
the aspects of the Marine Corps Language, Regional and Culture 
Strategy: 2011-2015 that apply to general purpose forces. 

Overview of Language and Culture-Related Training Programs for Army 
and Marine Corps General Purpose Forces: 

The Army and Marine Corps provide language and culture training at 
various points of a service member's career through formal service 
institutions, such as professional military education schools, and 
within operational units. The following are examples: 

* Training offered during enrollment in formal service institutions: 
The Army offers new recruits courses to build basic cultural 
competence and is in the process of adjusting training programs at 
each of its schools to expand the amount of cultural content in 
training. The Army has also provided some soldiers with an opportunity 
to study a foreign language in professional military education courses 
and develop foreign language skills through self-directed, computer-
based training. The Marine Corps has begun implementing a career 
development program for all marines that begins when marines enter 
military service and continues throughout their career.[Footnote 12] 
During the initial part of the program, marines receive training and 
education on general cultural skills that can be applied to any 
operational environment and an assignment to 1 of 17 regions around 
the world for future instruction. Each sequential part of the program 
is designed to deepen understanding of general culture skills and 
build specific regional knowledge, including some computer-based 
foreign language study. As of December 2010, the Marine Corps had 
provided more than 7,000 officers with a regional assignment. 

* Predeployment training. The Army and Marine Corps offer 
predeployment training programs to provide additional language and 
culture instruction focused on the particular area to which a unit 
will deploy. The Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center 
and Army and Marine Corps culture centers provide deploying forces 
with language survival kits, briefings on culture issues, and mobile 
training teams that present more in-depth language and culture 
training.[Footnote 13] 

DOD and Service-Level Funding for Language and Culture Training 
Programs: 

Funding for language and culture training programs is provided at the 
department and service level in base and Overseas Contingency 
Operations portions of the annual budget. In fiscal year 2010, DOD 
received about $550 million for major language and culture programs 
identified by the Defense Language Office. In addition, the Army and 
Marine Corps have received funding to implement their respective 
language and culture strategies. For example, in fiscal year 2010, the 
Army's Training and Doctrine Command received about $13 million for 
activities related to implementing the Army Culture and Foreign 
Language Strategy and the Marine Corps' Center for Advanced 
Operational Culture Learning received about $10 million to develop 
language and culture-related programs for general purpose forces. 

Regarding funding for predeployment training, the Office of the 
Secretary of Defense directed the Army to include a total of about 
$160 million in its budget submissions for fiscal years 2011 through 
2015 for language training sites on selected military installations to 
teach foreign languages to military and civilian personnel, including 
Army and Marine Corps operational units that are preparing for 
deployments to Afghanistan. This training includes self-directed 
learning, classroom instruction, and role playing (see figure 2). 
According to DOD, ultimately approximately 3,500 service members will 
learn basic Afghan language skills each year at its language training 
sites. 

Figure 2: Soldiers Participating in Training at Fort Carson Language 
Training Site: 

[Refer to PDF for image: photograph] 

Source: U.S. Army. 

[End of figure] 

For Afghanistan deployments, the focus of language training has varied 
because of the multiple languages in that country. Among the country's 
many ethnic groups (which are known collectively as Afghans), Dari and 
Pashto are the dominant and official languages of Afghanistan. Pashto 
speakers are found in large numbers in Afghanistan and northern 
Pakistan, and the use of the language is generally limited to these 
regions. Dari, by contrast, can be understood by anyone proficient in 
Persian-Farsi. Although Pashto is the language of the largest ethnic 
group in Afghanistan, Dari is the working language for the majority of 
Afghans. 

Army and Marine Corps Developed Language and Culture Strategies, but 
Did Not Include Some Key Elements and Departmentwide Efforts to 
Establish a Planning Process Are Incomplete: 

Our prior work shows that establishing priorities and results-oriented 
performance metrics can help federal agencies target training 
investments and assess the contributions that training programs make 
toward achieving strategic program goals and objectives.[Footnote 14] 
The Army and Marine Corps have developed service-specific strategies 
with elements such as broad goals and objectives for building language 
and culture capabilities, but the strategies did not fully address 
other key elements, such as the identification of training priorities 
and investments and results-oriented performance metrics. We found 
that the Army and Marine Corps had not conducted comprehensive 
analyses to prioritize language and culture training investments and 
assign responsibilities for program performance and departmentwide 
efforts to establish a planning process for language and culture 
capabilities were not yet complete. 

The Army and Marine Corps Developed Broad Goals and Objectives within 
Language and Culture Strategies and Identified Some Training Programs 
and Activities: 

The Army and Marine Corps developed broad service-specific goals and 
objectives for language and culture training within their respective 
language and culture strategies and identified some key training 
programs and activities. In the strategy it issued in December 2009, 
the Army states that the service's goal is to develop a baseline of 
foreign language and culture capabilities for all leaders and soldiers 
to support the accomplishment of unit missions.[Footnote 15] The Army 
strategy establishes language and culture subject areas and learning 
objectives for officers and enlisted soldiers for various stages of a 
military career for both career development and predeployment 
training.[Footnote 16]According to the Army strategy, the learning 
objectives are intended to provide a vision of the desired end state 
for soldiers at each career stage. For example, the strategy 
identifies three components of cross-cultural competence, which 
include culture fundamentals, culture self-awareness, and culture 
skills, and a number of learning objectives for each subject area that 
are tied to rank and level of responsibility. The Army's strategy 
notes that its primary focus is establishing the framework and content 
of training, and that additional steps are needed to determine the 
methods that are the most appropriate for delivering the education and 
training necessary to support the Army's requirements. 

In the strategy it issued in January 2011, the Marine Corps 
established a broad strategic goal to provide all marines in the 
general purpose forces with a baseline in cross-cultural competence 
while simultaneously enhancing regional proficiency and functional 
language/communication skills throughout the force.[Footnote 17] The 
strategy outlines a number of language and culture training areas that 
are designed to enhance marines' ability to communicate and interact 
with local populations on a basic level and perform core missions in a 
culturally complex environment. For example, to support its cross- 
cultural competence goal, the strategy discusses the need for marines 
to be able to conduct a cultural analysis, incorporate operational 
culture into planning, influence a foreign population, apply 
operational culture, and interact with a foreign population. In 
addition, the strategy identifies specific programs and the training 
activities that are available to achieve the Marine Corps' strategic 
goal. Additionally, according to the strategy, the service's 
operational culture training manual identifies the specific learning 
outcomes and objectives across the entire training and education 
continuum in the areas of cross-cultural competence, regional 
proficiency, and communication skills.[Footnote 18] 

The Army's and Marine Corps' Strategies Did Not Fully Identify 
Training Priorities and Required Investments or Results-Oriented 
Performance Metrics to Assess Language and Culture Training: 

The Army's and Marine Corps' respective strategies did not address 
some key elements that could guide their training efforts and 
investments. Our prior work has found that effective planning includes 
a clear identification of training priorities and the investments 
required to implement and sustain training programs and activities. 
[Footnote 19] These elements provide a framework for decision makers 
to assess the extent to which annual budget requests are coordinated 
with training priorities and strategic goals and objectives. 
Additionally, our work has found that it is important for agencies to 
incorporate performance metrics that can be used to assess the 
contributions training programs make collectively toward achieving 
strategic program goals and objectives. DOD noted in its fiscal year 
2012 budget request that every level of the department is accountable 
for measuring performance and delivering results that support 
departmentwide strategic goals and objectives.[Footnote 20] With 
regard to training programs, both the Army and Marine Corps have 
included requirements to perform evaluations in their respective 
training-related guidance.[Footnote 21] 

We found that the Army and Marine Corps did not always identify 
training priorities with the proposed investments that are required 
for implementing and sustaining the training within their respective 
language and culture strategies. Within its strategy, the Army 
identifies a number of career development and predeployment training 
objectives, for example that all individuals have a basic 
understanding of the language used in their potential area of 
deployment appropriate to their mission, but the strategy does not 
identify training priorities to achieve these objectives. Furthermore, 
the Army's strategy does not identify the investments that are needed 
to implement and sustain training programs and activities that will 
build the Army's desired language and culture capability. The Marine 
Corps' strategy identifies two language and culture training 
priorities for its general purpose forces--the Regional, Culture, and 
Language Familiarization and predeployment training programs and 
provides information on training activities, such as language learning 
software and language learning centers, that support these training 
programs. However, the Marine Corps' strategy did not identify the 
total investment required to develop and sustain these training 
programs and activities. 

In some instances, the Army and Marine Corps have identified language 
and culture funding requirements, for example within their annual 
budget requests, but this information is not linked with the services' 
respective language and culture strategies. Officials with Army and 
Marine Corps headquarters and training commands told us that there is 
not a cohesive picture of language and culture training investments 
and that multiple commands and units have separately developed and 
funded language and culture training programs. For example, the Marine 
Corps' Center for Advanced Operational Culture Learning has funded 
language and culture training for all marines in the general purpose 
forces, while operational units have also funded predeployment 
language training for these marines to attend classes at a local 
community college and university. In addition, other DOD 
organizations, such as the Defense Language Office, have funded 
language and culture training for Army and Marine Corps general 
purpose forces. For example, the Defense Language Office has funded 
some language and culture predeployment training for Army and Marine 
Corps general purpose forces and also the development of interactive 
training tools to enhance the cultural proficiency skills of service 
members. Because the Army and Marine Corps have not linked their 
budget requests with their respective strategies and multiple DOD and 
service organizations have funded language and culture training 
programs, the department does not have full visibility over the 
potential total costs associated with implementing the Army's and 
Marine Corps' respective language and culture training strategies. 

We also found that the Army and Marine Corps had not yet established a 
systematic approach with results-oriented performance metrics to 
assess the contributions that training programs have made collectively 
in achieving their strategic goals and objectives. Within its 
strategy, the Army notes that performance metrics are necessary to 
determine the effectiveness of training programs, but the strategy 
does not establish any specific metrics or other indicators to 
evaluate progress toward the service's strategic goals or an approach 
to assess them. Similarly, the Marine Corps' strategy does not discuss 
any metrics that the service will utilize to assess language and 
culture training programs that are intended to achieve the service's 
strategic goals and objectives. 

While the Army and Marine Corps had not established comprehensive 
metrics within their strategies to assess progress towards achieving 
their overall strategic goals and objectives, the services have 
established limited metrics to inform the development of specific 
language and culture training programs. For example, in July 2010, the 
Army set out a requirement for at least one leader per platoon 
deploying to Afghanistan and Iraq that will have regular contact with 
a local population to have more advanced language training and set 
standards for the leader's language capability using DOD's agreed upon 
method of measuring proficiency.[Footnote 22] Army officials reported 
that, based on their testing, nearly 100 percent of soldiers who have 
completed the language training program intended to support this 
requirement are meeting or exceeding the performance metric. The 
Marine Corps published an operational culture training manual in April 
2009 with language-and culture-related training tasks and the Center 
for Advanced Operational Culture Learning has developed training 
programs to assist Marine Corps units in accomplishing the tasks 
called for in the manual.[Footnote 23] These training programs include 
individual and unit-level performance metrics, such as student exams 
and training evaluation scorecards. However, the Army and Marine Corps 
have not yet established a comprehensive set of metrics for their 
respective language and culture training programs. For example, the 
Army had not established performance metrics for its culture training 
programs and the Marine Corps had not established metrics for 
predeployment language training. 

We found that the Army and Marine Corps did not include these key 
planning elements within their respective strategies because they did 
not fully analyze their training efforts to identify a clear 
prioritization of training investments and formalize responsibilities 
for ensuring the accountability for program performance prior to the 
design and implementation of their language and culture strategies and 
related training programs. Both the Army and the Marine Corps note 
that their respective language and culture strategies will be updated 
as needed. The Army is taking steps to further define the investments 
it requires to implement the service's language and culture strategy 
and develop performance metrics to determine language and culture 
proficiency gaps that would inform the development of training and 
education programs. Once these analyses are completed, the Army plans 
to revise its servicewide strategy. An official from the Marine Corps' 
Center for Advanced Operational Culture Learning told us that the 
Marine Corps had not formally assigned it or any other service 
organization with the responsibility and accountability for language 
and culture program performance. For example, the center is 
responsible for developing training programs of instruction and other 
materials, but not for ensuring that operational units complete the 
training programs in total or assessing training programs in meeting 
strategic goals and objectives. The Marine Corps plans to develop a 
concept of operations document that will formalize stakeholder roles 
and responsibilities for implementing its strategy and conduct 
additional analyses to identify language and culture capability needs 
that are not currently being addressed by current training programs. 
However, at the time of our review, these efforts were in the planning 
stage and are not yet complete. Without a complete understanding of 
the actions and investments that are necessary to achieve their 
strategic goals and objectives, the Army and the Marine Corps cannot 
provide DOD and the Congress with a reasonable assurance that their 
approaches and funding requests are building a capability that meets 
service and DOD long-term needs. 

Departmentwide Efforts to Establish a Planning Process to Further 
Align Service Language and Culture Training Approaches Are Not Yet 
Complete: 

In June 2009, we reported that DOD did not have a comprehensive 
strategic plan to transform language and culture capabilities with 
measures to assess the effectiveness of its transformation efforts. At 
that time, we recommended that DOD develop a strategic plan or set of 
linked plans that contain measurable performance goals and objectives 
and investment priorities that are linked to these goals to guide the 
military services' efforts to transform language and culture 
capabilities.[Footnote 24] In February 2011, DOD published the 
Department of Defense Strategic Plan for Language Skills, Regional 
Expertise, and Cultural Capabilities (2011-2016). The strategy 
outlines a broad planning process that includes a vision, goals, and 
objectives and notes that the department will review the strategy 
annually and modify it when needed to ensure alignment with 
overarching DOD guidance. While the strategy broadly describes a 
strategic planning process, the department has not yet set up internal 
mechanisms, such as procedures and milestones, which our prior work 
has found can assist the department reach consensus with the military 
departments and others on priorities, synchronize the development of 
department-and servicewide plans with each other and the budget 
process, and guide efforts to monitor progress and take corrective 
action.[Footnote 25] DOD officials told us that a more detailed 
implementation plan will be issued separately and the plan would 
likely include action plans that define responsibilities and time 
frames for completing specific tasks, as well as performance measures 
to assess progress and guide the allocation of resources, but it is 
unclear if this plan will provide the department with the clearly 
defined planning process needed to achieve it goals. During the course 
of our review, officials with the Army and Marine Corps told us that 
there has been a lack of strategic direction and coherent 
departmentwide policy on language and culture capability needs, which 
has limited the services' ability to train service personnel in the 
general purpose forces with the right mix of skills to meet combatant 
commander requirements and develop service-specific strategies that 
align with departmentwide goals. 

In June 2009, we also reported that DOD did not have the information 
it needs to identify gaps and make informed investment decisions about 
language and culture capability needs, in part because DOD did not 
have a standardized methodology to determine language and regional 
proficiency requirements. We recommended that DOD develop a validated 
methodology for identifying language and regional proficiency 
requirements, which includes cultural awareness.[Footnote 26] Citing 
our June 2009 recommendation, DOD has taken steps to develop a new, 
standardized methodology to define geographic combatant commander 
language and culture capability requirements and plans to implement 
the methodology by March 2012.[Footnote 27] However, since these 
requirements are still incomplete, the Army's and Marine Corps' 
strategies do not yet address the specific actions that the services 
will be required to take to address DOD-wide language and culture 
capability requirements. 

Without a clearly defined planning process that includes internal 
mechanisms, such as procedures and milestones, and a validated set of 
language and culture capability requirements, the department does not 
have the tools it needs to set strategic direction for language and 
culture training efforts, fully align departmentwide efforts to 
develop plans and budget requests that reflect its priorities, and 
measure progress in implementing various initiatives. 

U.S. Central Command Did Not Synchronize Varying Language and Culture 
Training Requirements for Army and Marine Corps General Purpose Forces: 

DOD components identified language and culture training requirements 
for Army and Marine Corps general purpose forces that will deploy to 
the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility, but these 
requirements varied among and within DOD components. Within recent 
planning guidance, DOD describes the importance of establishing a 
robust training requirements identification process and synchronizing 
training among DOD components. However, we found that U.S. Central 
Command did not clearly identify and approve predeployment language 
and culture training requirements and synchronize them among and 
within DOD components, because the command has not yet developed a 
comprehensive, analytically based process for identifying and 
synchronizing training requirements. 

Language and Culture Training Requirements Intended to Guide Service 
Predeployment Training Programs for General Purpose Forces Varied in 
Documents Published by DOD Components: 

Given the dynamic security environment presented by current operations 
in the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility, DOD components 
have been required to rapidly respond to changing capability needs for 
language and culture. This has resulted in multiple DOD components 
promulgating language and culture predeployment training requirements 
that are intended to prepare forces for operations in the U.S. Central 
Command area of responsibility. Since 2008, the Office of the 
Secretary of Defense, U.S. Central Command, U.S. Forces Afghanistan, 
and the Army and the Marine Corps have utilized various means to 
articulate joint force and service-specific language and culture 
predeployment training requirements, including combatant commander 
orders, battlefield commander guidance, departmentwide memorandums, 
and service-level orders and administrative messages. 

We surveyed 15 documents issued since June 2008 that address language 
and culture predeployment training requirements. In table 1, we list 
the documents we reviewed and include descriptions of language and 
culture training requirements, which are not intended to be 
comprehensive descriptions of the documents. Within these documents, 
we found several examples of variances in language and culture 
training requirements among and within DOD components. In particular, 
we identified examples of language and culture predeployment training 
requirements that varied even at similar points in time with respect 
to the specific language to be trained--whether Dari, Pashto, or both 
languages, as well as variances in the type and duration of training. 
For example, the language designated as the focus of training varied 
amongst multiple pieces of guidance issued since 2009. In November 
2009, U.S. Forces Afghanistan issued guidance recommending that all 
forces deploying to Afghanistan focus their predeployment language 
training on Dari. In that same month, the Marine Corps issued an 
administrative message directing that certain commanders deploying to 
Afghanistan develop a basic language capability in Pashto. From 
November 2009 to March 2011, the Office of the Secretary of Defense, 
U.S. Central Command, U.S. Forces Afghanistan, and the Army and the 
Marine Corps issued additional guidance addressing language training, 
and the language focus has continued to vary among the different 
pieces of guidance. For example, in October 2010, U.S. Forces 
Afghanistan published an order that required all forces to complete 
training with a focus on Dari, and included an option for commanders 
to specify training with a focus on Pashto in certain cases. In 
November 2010, the Secretary of Defense approved Afghanistan 
counterinsurgency training standards that include a requirement that 
U.S. forces understand basic phrases in both Dari and Pashto. 
Additionally, just as the focus of training has varied, the type and 
duration of training has varied as well. For example, in July 2010, 
the Army required that all forces deploying to either Afghanistan or 
Iraq complete a 4-to 6-hour online training program for language and 
culture. In September 2010, the Marine Corps directed that all ground 
units assigned to the I Marine Expeditionary Force preparing for 
Afghanistan deployment complete a 2-day culture course and receive an 
introduction to software used for self-paced study. During the course 
of our review, Army and Marine Corps officials noted that language and 
culture predeployment training requirements changed constantly, which 
led to some confusion over the training that was needed to meet 
operational needs and that considerable time and resources were spent 
adjusting training programs. 

Table 1: Examples of Language and Culture Predeployment Training 
Requirements for General Purpose Forces Deploying to the U.S. Central 
Command Area of Responsibility: 

Date: June 2008; 
DOD component: U.S. Central Command; 
Description of requirements[A]: Requires that all forces deploying to 
the area of responsibility complete training on cultural aspects of 
host countries. 

Date: Nov. 2009; 
DOD component: U.S. Forces Afghanistan; 
Description of requirements[A]: Recommends that all forces learn basic 
language and that each platoon with regular contact with the 
population have at least one leader with a measurable language 
capability. Focus language is Dari. 

Date: Nov. 2009; 
DOD component: U.S. Marine Corps; 
Description of requirements[A]: Requires that battalion and regimental 
commanders deploying to Afghanistan develop a basic language 
capability through 40 hours of language training. Focus language is 
Pashto. 

Date: Dec. 2009; 
DOD component: U.S. Army; 
Description of requirements[A]: Establishes language training sites on 
Ft. Campbell, Ft. Carson, and Ft. Drum for select soldiers deploying 
to Afghanistan. Training at these sites began in February 2010. Focus 
languages are "Afghan languages." 

Date: Jan. 2010; 
DOD component: U.S. Forces Afghanistan; 
Description of requirements[A]: Re-emphasizes prior recommendation 
that all forces learn basic language and each platoon with regular 
contact with the population have at least one leader with a measurable 
language capability. Focus language remains Dari. 

Date: Feb. 2010; 
DOD component: U.S. Marine Corps; 
Description of requirements[A]: Requires that all marines receive 
predeployment culture training and selected marines receive basic 
language training for all deployments with the amount determined by a 
mission analysis. 

Date: July 2010; 
DOD component: U.S. Army; 
Description of requirements[A]: Requires that all soldiers deploying 
to Afghanistan and Iraq complete a 4-to 6-hour online language and 
culture training program and at least one leader per platoon develop a 
measurable language capability through 16 weeks (at least 480 hours) 
of on-site language training or 100 hours of online training. For 
Afghanistan deployments, focus language is Dari. 

Date: Sept. 2010; 
DOD component: U.S. Central Command; 
Description of requirements[A]: Endorses counterinsurgency training 
standards for Afghanistan that include, for example, a requirement 
that all forces understand basic Dari and Pashto phrases. 

Date: Sept. 2010; 
DOD component: U.S. Marine Corps; 
Description of requirements[A]: Directs that marines assigned to the I 
Marine Expeditionary Force preparing for Afghanistan deployment take a 
2-day culture course and that selected marines take basic language 
training. 

Date: Oct. 2010; 
DOD component: U.S. Forces Afghanistan; 
Description of requirements[A]: Requires that all deploying forces 
complete a 4-to 6-hour online training program for language and 
culture. Focus language is Dari, with a focus on another language to 
be decided on a case-by-case basis. 

Date: Nov. 2010; 
DOD component: Office of the Secretary of Defense; 
Description of requirements[A]: Directs implementation of Afghanistan 
counterinsurgency training standards--e.g., that U.S. forces 
understand basic Dari and Pashto phrases. 

Date: Dec. 2010; 
DOD component: Office of the Secretary of Defense; 
Description of requirements[A]: Requires that the military services 
ensure that forces are trained to Afghanistan counterinsurgency 
standards and that at least one leader per platoon that will have 
regular contact with the population will have a measurable language 
capability in the language of the region to which they will be 
assigned. 

Date: Dec. 2010; 
DOD component: U.S. Army; 
Description of requirements[A]: Reinforces and incorporates training 
guidance provided in July 2010 that requires all soldiers complete 
training in the basics of the culture of the country to which the unit 
is planning to deploy and that at least one leader per platoon develop 
a measurable language capability through about 16 weeks of on-site 
language training or 100 hours of online training. For Afghanistan 
deployments, focus language is Dari, with a focus on another language 
to be decided on a case-by-case basis. 

Date: Mar. 2011; 
DOD component: U.S. Central Command; 
Description of requirements[A]: Requires that all nonstandard 
forces[B] deploying to the area of responsibility complete cultural 
training that includes a general overview of the political and 
religious conditions of the country and that all forces deploying to 
Afghanistan complete a 4-to 6-hour online training program for 
language and culture. Focus language is Dari or Pashto. 

Date: Mar. 2011; 
DOD component: U.S. Central Command; 
Description of requirements[A]: Requires that all standard forces 
deploying to the area of responsibility complete cultural training 
that includes a general overview of the political and religious 
conditions of the country and that all forces deploying to Afghanistan 
complete a 4-to 6-hour online training program for language and 
culture. Focus language is Dari or Pashto. 

Source: GAO analysis of DOD documents. 

Note: Several squads form a platoon, and several platoons form a 
company. Several companies with a headquarters form a battalion. 

[A] The descriptions of language and culture training requirements 
included in this table are not intended to be comprehensive 
descriptions of the documents. 

[B] Nonstandard forces are defined as joint sourced, in lieu of, and 
ad hoc forces as well as individual augmentees. These forces support 
ground-based operations in the areas of policing, detainee operations, 
and customs and border patrol, among others. 

[End of table] 

U.S. Central Command Did Not Clearly Identify and Approve 
Predeployment Training Requirements and Synchronize Them among and 
within DOD Components: 

According to DOD guidance, the Commander of U.S. Central Command is to 
coordinate and approve training necessary to carry out missions 
assigned to the command.[Footnote 28] DOD's 2010 strategic plan calls 
for the establishment of a robust, relevant requirements process that 
includes investing in front-end analysis and supporting requirements 
identification activities and synchronizing service training programs 
with combatant commander requirements.[Footnote 29] Moreover, in 2011 
guidance, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff stated that DOD 
will convert requirements into deployable capabilities more quickly 
and effectively, synchronizing force-providers with force-commander 
needs.[Footnote 30] 

At the time of our review, we found that U.S. Central Command had not 
yet developed a comprehensive, analytically based process for 
identifying and synchronizing predeployment training requirements 
among DOD components. In the absence of a comprehensive process, we 
identified instances in which U.S. Central Command did not clearly 
identify and approve training requirements and coordinate them with 
key stakeholders, such as the military services and subordinate 
commands, to ensure that requirements are synchronized among and 
within DOD components and with departmentwide guidance. We also 
observed instances in which U.S. Central Command did not obtain 
feedback to determine the extent to which predeployment training 
approaches met battlefield commander needs. For example: 

* U.S. Central Command did not formally approve U.S. Forces 
Afghanistan's January 2010 language training guidance requiring 
language training.[Footnote 31] For example, the command did not 
conduct front-end analyses of feasibility or cost of the training 
requirements or release a message validating U.S. Forces Afghanistan's 
language predeployment training requirements. 

* U.S. Central Command, as the combatant commander responsible for 
coordinating training requirements for the geographic area of 
responsibility, had not coordinated U.S. Forces Afghanistan's October 
2010 order mandating online language and culture training for all U.S. 
forces and DOD civilians currently deployed and deploying to 
Afghanistan with the Army and Marine Corps prior to its release. 
[Footnote 32] U.S. Forces Afghanistan officials told us that 
coordination with the services on the requirements would have provided 
better insight as to potential issues associated with its 
implementation. During the course of our review, U.S. Forces 
Afghanistan reissued the October 2010 order once to clarify confusion 
over the training requirements and was considering another revision to 
the order to further clarify its requirements. 

* U.S. Central Command had not synchronized language and culture 
predeployment training requirements with departmentwide guidance. For 
example, in December 2010, the Office of the Secretary of Defense 
released a directive type memorandum on counterinsurgency training and 
reporting guidance that requires the services to ensure that at least 
one leader per platoon that will have regular contact with the 
population will have a measurable language capability in the language 
of the region to which they will be assigned.[Footnote 33] According 
to senior officials within the Office of the Secretary of Defense, 
this guidance is based on their understanding of U.S. Forces 
Afghanistan's requirements, a subordinate command of U.S. Central 
Command, and is the authoritative department policy on training 
requirements for ongoing operations and is considered mandatory 
training. However, U.S. Central Command did not explicitly include the 
requirement established by the Office of the Secretary of Defense 
within either of its March 2011 orders on training requirements for 
standard and nonstandard forces. 

* U.S. Central Command had not coordinated with the Army and Marine 
Corps to obtain feedback on the services' language and culture 
predeployment training approaches in meeting operational needs prior 
to issuing new training requirements. For example, until December 
2010, neither U.S. Central Command nor U.S. Forces Afghanistan had 
obtained feedback from the Marine Corps on language and culture 
training approaches that were developed by the Marine Corps to address 
service-specific requirements. We were told that informal efforts 
exist among DOD components to receive feedback on service training 
approaches, such as training forums and action officer-level 
communication, but U.S. Forces Afghanistan training officials told us 
that these informal processes had not provided them with full 
visibility over the services' training programs. 

In its March 2011 order establishing theater predeployment training 
requirements for standard forces, U.S. Central Command consolidated 
predeployment training requirements that have been published in 
various documents in a single source.[Footnote 34] Refinements to 
training requirements occur over time due to changing operational 
conditions, and one aspect of this new order calls for an annual 
review and validation of U.S. Central Command's consolidated training 
requirements followed by the publication of an order announcing 
updates. In addition, the order assigns responsibilities within U.S. 
Central Command for approving new requirements, describes how 
organizations can request modifications to existing requirements, and 
identifies how decisions on training requirements will be communicated 
within the command through official messages. While this appears to be 
a positive step in identifying predeployment training requirements, 
including those for language and culture, the order does not provide 
details on the analysis that is required to support these decisions, a 
coordination process with key stakeholders, such as the military 
services and subordinate commands, to ensure that requirements are 
synchronized among and within DOD components and with departmentwide 
guidance and to solicit feedback on service training approaches in 
meeting operational needs. Without a comprehensive process, U.S. 
Central Command will not have a mechanism to identify and synchronize 
training for current and future operations, which may result in 
deploying forces that receive training that is inconsistent and may 
not meet operational needs. 

Conclusions: 

DOD continues to emphasize the importance of language and culture 
training and, along with the military services, is investing millions 
of dollars to provide it to general purpose forces. However, the Army 
and Marine Corps have not established investment priorities, assigned 
responsibilities for training program performance, or developed 
comprehensive metrics to gauge progress in achieving their strategic 
goals and objectives and therefore cannot provide DOD and the Congress 
with a reasonable assurance that their approaches and funding requests 
are building a capability that meets service and DOD long-term needs. 
Further, without a clearly defined planning process, the department 
does not have the tools it needs to set strategic direction for 
language and culture training efforts, fully align departmentwide 
efforts to develop plans and budget requests that reflect its 
priorities, and measure progress in implementing various initiatives. 
Regarding predeployment language and culture training, over the last 
several years multiple DOD components have issued requirements for 
deploying forces, resulting in the Army and Marine Corps expending 
considerable time and resources adjusting service training programs. 
U.S. Central Command has taken some steps to consolidate training 
requirements, but the command has not yet established a comprehensive, 
analytically based process for identifying and synchronizing 
predeployment training requirements. Without a comprehensive process, 
U.S. Central Command will not have a mechanism to identify and 
synchronize training for current and future operations, which may 
result in deploying forces that receive training that is inconsistent 
and may not meet operational needs. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

We recommend the Secretary of Defense take the following three actions. 

To help ensure that the Army's and Marine Corps' strategies address 
key planning elements and are aligned with departmentwide efforts, we 
recommend that the Secretary of Defense direct the Secretary of the 
Army and the Secretary of the Navy to assign responsibilities for 
training program performance and include in subsequent updates of the 
Army's and Marine Corps' respective language and culture strategies: 

* training priorities and investments that are necessary to achieve 
strategic goals and objectives: 

* results-oriented performance metrics to measure progress in 
achieving the strategic goals and objectives: 

To enhance DOD's ability to set strategic direction for its language 
and culture training efforts, and better align its efforts to develop 
and implement plans and measure progress against established goals, we 
recommend that the Secretary of Defense direct the Under Secretary of 
Defense for Personnel and Readiness to: 

* issue guidance to establish within the implementation plan for the 
Department of Defense Strategic Plan for Language Skills, Regional 
Expertise, and Cultural Capabilities (2011-2016) a clearly defined 
planning process with mechanisms, such as procedures and milestones, 
by which it can reach consensus with the military departments, 
coordinate and review approval of updates to plans, synchronize the 
development of plans with the budget process, monitor the 
implementation of initiatives, and report progress, on a periodic 
basis, towards achieving established goals: 

To provide a consistent approach for identifying predeployment 
language and culture training requirements for the U.S. Central 
Command area of responsibility, we recommend that the Secretary of 
Defense direct the Commander of U.S. Central Command to establish a 
comprehensive, analytically based process to: 

* identify and approve predeployment training requirements and include 
in this documentation a description of the analysis to be conducted 
prior to approving the requirements: 

* coordinate with key stakeholders, such as the military services and 
subordinate commands to ensure that requirements are synchronized 
among and within DOD components and with departmentwide guidance, and 
solicit feedback on service training approaches in meeting operational 
needs: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

In written comments on a draft of this report, DOD concurred with two 
recommendations and partially concurred with one recommendation. DOD's 
comments are reprinted in their entirety in appendix II. DOD also 
provided technical comments, which we incorporated into the report as 
appropriate. 

DOD partially concurred with our recommendation that the Secretary of 
Defense direct the Secretary of the Army and the Secretary of the Navy 
to assign responsibilities for training program performance and 
include in subsequent updates of the Army's and Marine Corps' 
respective language and culture strategies training priorities and 
investments that are necessary to achieve strategic goals and 
objectives and results-oriented performance metrics to measure 
progress in achieving their strategic goals and objectives. In its 
comments, DOD separately addressed the two elements in our 
recommendation--training priorities and investments, and results-
oriented performance metrics. With regard to identifying training 
priorities and investments, DOD stated that linking strategy 
development with training and resource prioritization would better 
identify the resources that are necessary to address goals, 
objectives, and programs outlined in the language, regional, and 
culture strategy. DOD noted that this would allow senior leaders to 
obtain a better understanding of the time and resources necessary to 
implement the strategy and may prompt modifications early in the 
process when viewed against time and fiscal realities. DOD also 
stated, however, that the department develops strategy and 
capabilities separately from the resource allocation process to 
capture the required operational capability and determine the gaps, 
independent of the fiscal environment. It noted that capability 
requirements are then prioritized and compete for resources. DOD 
stated that before definitive measures are implemented to more closely 
integrate requirements development and resource allocation at a much 
earlier stage, it is necessary to assess potential negative 
consequences and then weigh costs versus benefits. Our report did not 
address the timing of the requirements development and resource 
allocation processes, but rather emphasized the importance of a 
clearly defined planning process that produces outcomes that clearly 
link strategy development with training prioritization and resource 
allocation. As noted in our report, the Army and Marine Corps had not 
yet fully defined the language and culture capabilities needs of their 
general purpose forces; prioritized the investments required to 
implement their respective language and culture strategies; or clearly 
linked their funding requests with their respective strategies. We 
therefore continue to believe that as the Army and Marine Corps update 
their strategies, the services should fully identify the language and 
culture capabilities and the training priorities and needed 
investments in order to provide DOD and the Congress with a reasonable 
assurance that their approaches and funding requests are building a 
capability that meets service and DOD long-term needs. 

With regard to results-oriented performance metrics, DOD stated that 
several efforts are being pursued to enhance and fully implement 
metrics that accurately capture programmatic performance and utility, 
to include initiatives to more closely link training and readiness 
standards with operational readiness through the Defense Readiness 
Reporting System and other reporting mechanisms. DOD noted that any 
effort to start measuring and tracking individual performance with 
"hard" metrics such as cultural proficiency should be thoroughly 
reviewed before implementation and that such metrics may not provide 
an accurate assessment tied to operational effectiveness. Lastly, DOD 
stated that the actual administrative and logistical costs associated 
with the effort may far outweigh any benefits that are potentially 
gained. We agree that it is important for the Army and Marine Corps to 
establish metrics that accurately capture programmatic performance and 
utility in a manner that provides an accurate assessment of 
operational effectiveness. As stated in our report, the Army and 
Marine Corps have established limited metrics focused on individual 
and unit-level assessments, but had not established comprehensive 
metrics that would enable them to assess the contributions that 
training programs are making collectively toward achieving their 
overall strategic goals and objectives. We also noted that the Army 
and Marine Corps are planning to make additional investments to build 
the language and culture capabilities of their general purpose forces. 
We recognize that there is a cost associated with the time and effort 
required to establish metrics and implement efforts to measure 
progress against any metrics. However, developing comprehensive 
metrics is a key element needed to provide DOD and the Congress with 
the assurance that the services' training approaches and funding 
requests are building a capability that meets service and DOD long-
term needs. Therefore, we continue to believe the development of such 
metrics would better inform the services' investment decisions and 
enhance their ability to maximize available resources. 

DOD concurred with our recommendation that the Secretary of Defense 
direct the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness to 
issue guidance to establish within the implementation plan for the 
Department of Defense Strategic Plan of Language Skills, Regional 
Expertise, and Cultural Capabilities (2011-2016) a clearly defined 
planning process with mechanisms, such as procedures and milestones, 
by which it can reach consensus with the military departments, 
coordinate and review approval of updates to plans, synchronize the 
development of plans with the budget process, monitor the 
implementation of initiatives, and report progress, on a periodic 
basis, towards achieving established goals. DOD stated that the DOD 
Implementation Plan for Language Skills, Regional Expertise, and 
Cultural Capabilities for FY 2011-2016 will include a clearly defined 
planning process for working with the military departments to 
coordinate plans, synchronize plans with resources, and evaluate and 
report performance as the department works toward its strategic goals. 
DOD stated that it planned to complete the implementation plan by June 
2011. 

DOD concurred with our recommendation that the Secretary of Defense 
direct the Commander of U.S. Central Command to establish a 
comprehensive, analytically based process to (1) identify and approve 
predeployment training requirements that includes a description of the 
analysis to be conducted prior to approving the requirements and (2) 
coordinate with key stakeholders, such as the military services and 
subordinate commands to ensure that requirements are synchronized 
among and within DOD components and with departmentwide guidance, and 
solicit feedback on service training approaches in meeting operational 
needs. In its comments, DOD separately addressed our recommendation on 
conducting analysis as part of the requirements identification process 
and coordinating with key stakeholders to ensure that requirements are 
synchronized. DOD stated that U.S. Central Command agreed that such a 
process was necessary at the time of our review and noted that U.S. 
Central Command has established and instituted a process to coordinate 
and synchronize requirements among the service components and 
subordinate commands, to include cross directorate coordination within 
U.S. Central Command headquarters, to ensure all training requirements 
are meeting operational needs. Specifically, DOD stated that U.S. 
Central Command utilized this process in the development of U.S. 
Central Command Fragmentary Order 09-1700, USCENTCOM Theater Training 
Requirements, dated March 28, 2011. DOD also stated that U.S. Central 
Command assessed it is a service responsibility to determine the 
training approach they utilize to meet training requirements for the 
U.S. Central Command's area of responsibility. As stated in our 
report, we recognize that DOD has taken positive steps in developing 
the fragmentary order, but continue to believe that additional actions 
are needed to ensure that U.S. Central Command has a comprehensive, 
analytically based process to coordinate and synchronize predeployment 
training requirements. For example, in its current form, U.S. Central 
Command Fragmentary Order 09-1700 order does not provide details on 
the analysis that is required to support decisions on the 
identification of training requirements, despite the fact that DOD's 
September 2010 Strategic Plan for the Next Generation of Training for 
the Department of Defense calls for the establishment of a robust, 
relevant requirements process that includes investing in front-end 
analysis and supporting requirements identification activities. 
Moreover, in developing its March 2011 order, U.S. Central Command did 
not fully synchronize language and culture predeployment training 
requirements with departmentwide guidance. Specifically, U.S. Central 
Command did not explicitly include the language training requirement 
established by the Office of the Secretary of Defense in December 2010 
counterinsurgency training and reporting guidance that requires the 
services to ensure that at least one leader per platoon that will have 
regular contact with the population will have a measurable language 
capability in the language of the region to which they will be 
assigned. We therefore continue to believe that additional actions are 
necessary for U.S. Central Command to establish a comprehensive, 
analytically based process to identify training requirements and 
coordinate with key stakeholders to ensure that requirements are 
synchronized among and within DOD components and with departmentwide 
guidance. 

We are sending copies of this report to the Secretary of Defense, the 
Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness, the Secretary 
of Army, the Secretary of the Navy, the Commandant of the Marine 
Corps, and the Commander of U.S. Central Command. This report also is 
available at no charge on the GAO Web site at [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov]. If you or your staff have any questions about 
this report, please contact me at (202) 512-9619 or pickups@gao.gov. 
Contact points for our Offices of Congressional Relations and Public 
Affairs may be found on the last page of this report. Key contributors 
to this report are listed in appendix III. 

Signed by: 

Sharon L. Pickup:
Director: 
Defense Capabilities and Management: 

List of Committees: 

The Honorable Carl Levin: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable John McCain: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Armed Services: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Howard P. "Buck" McKeon: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Adam Smith: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Armed Services: 
House of Representatives: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

To address our objectives, we met with officials from the Office of 
the Secretary of Defense; the Joint Staff; U.S. Central Command; U.S. 
Forces Afghanistan; U.S. Joint Forces Command; and the Army and the 
Marine Corps. To evaluate the extent to which the Army and Marine 
Corps had developed language and culture strategies with key elements, 
such as goals, funding priorities, and metrics to guide training 
approaches and investments that were aligned with departmentwide 
planning efforts, we focused on the Army's and Marine Corps' general 
purpose forces. Therefore, excluded from this review were training 
programs for language and regional experts, such as foreign area 
officers, intelligence specialists, special operations forces, and 
other service efforts to provide culture experts to deployed forces, 
such as "human terrain teams."[Footnote 35] We examined the Army 
Culture and Foreign Language Strategy and the Marine Corps Language, 
Regional and Culture Strategy: 2011-2015 and training documents to 
determine training priorities and metrics that have been used to 
measure progress in meeting service and departmentwide capability 
needs.[Footnote 36] We reviewed these documents in the context of our 
prior work, Department of Defense (DOD) budget documents, and service 
guidance to determine the extent to which the Army and Marine Corps 
were developing strategies that identified goals and objectives, 
training programs and priorities, resource requirements, and 
approaches for measuring progress, including results-oriented 
performance metrics.[Footnote 37]We also reviewed funding data for 
fiscal years 2009 through 2012 provided by the Army's Training and 
Doctrine Command and the Marine Corps' Center for the Advanced 
Operational Culture Learning that are associated with the 
implementation of the Army's and Marine Corps' respective language and 
culture strategies. To corroborate our understanding of the documents 
provided, we conducted interviews with officials responsible for 
developing the Army's and Marine Corps' language and culture 
strategies and related training programs, as well as Office of the 
Secretary of Defense officials that are responsible for providing 
strategic direction and programmatic oversight of the department's 
language and culture programs. We also discussed the content and 
status of ongoing departmental efforts that are intended to further 
align Army and Marine Corps language and culture training approaches 
with officials representing the Office of the Secretary of Defense and 
the Joint Staff. These efforts include the implementation of a new, 
departmentwide methodology for determining geographic combatant 
commander language and regional proficiency requirements, which 
includes culture, and the development of DOD's strategic plan for 
language skills and cultural capabilities.[Footnote 38] 

To evaluate DOD's approach for identifying language and culture 
predeployment training requirements for Army and Marine Corps general 
purpose forces that will deploy to the U.S. Central Command area of 
responsibility, we reviewed relevant provisions of Title 10 of the 
U.S. Code[Footnote 39] and related DOD guidance that characterize the 
training roles and responsibilities of combatant commanders and the 
military services.[Footnote 40] We examined Office of the Secretary of 
Defense, U.S. Central Command, U.S. Forces Afghanistan, and Army and 
Marine Corps documents published from 2008 to 2011 and identified 
specific language and culture training requirements. To corroborate 
our understanding of the documents provided, we conducted interviews 
with officials representing the Office of the Secretary of Defense, 
U.S. Central Command, U.S. Forces Afghanistan, and Army and Marine 
Corps force provider and training commands to discuss the processes 
they use to identify language and culture training requirements for 
ongoing operations in the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility, 
including any analyses that were conducted to identify the feasibility 
of implementing the training and associated costs. We also discussed 
the processes used by DOD components to synchronize battlefield 
commander operational needs with training conducted by the services to 
prepare forces to conduct military operations. We analyzed these 
processes to determine the level of coordination among DOD components 
with respect to joint and service-specific predeployment training 
requirements for language and culture. We assessed these efforts in 
light of DOD guidance that describes the importance of establishing a 
robust training requirements identification process and synchronizing 
service training programs with combatant commander requirements. 
[Footnote 41] 

We conducted this performance audit from June 2010 to May 2011 in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. 
Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain 
sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe 
that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

We interviewed officials, and where appropriate obtained 
documentation, at the following locations: 

Office of the Secretary of Defense: 

* Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness: 

- Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Readiness: 

- Defense Language Office: 

* Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy: 

Department of the Army: 

* Office of the Deputy Chief of Staff, G1: 

* Office of the Deputy Chief of Staff, G2: 

* Office of the Deputy Chief of Staff, G3/5/7: 

* Army Central Command: 

* Army Forces Command: 

* Army Reserve Command: 

* Army Training and Doctrine Command: 

- Center for Army Lessons Learned: 

- Combined Arms Center: 

- Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center: 

- Training and Doctrine Command Culture Center: 

* First United States Army: 

Department of the Navy: 

* Marine Corps Training and Education Command: 

- Center for Advanced Operational Culture Learning: 

- Marine Corps Air-Ground Task Force Training Command: 

* Marine Corps Center for Lessons Learned: 

* Marine Corps Forces Central Command: 

* Marine Corps Forces Command: 

* Marine Corps Forces, Pacific: 

* I Marine Expeditionary Force: 

* II Marine Expeditionary Force: 

* III Marine Expeditionary Force: 

Other DOD Components: 

* Joint Center for International Security Force Assistance: 

* Joint Chiefs of Staff Manpower and Personnel, J1: 

* Joint Chiefs of Staff Operational Plans and Joint Force Development, 
J7: 

* U.S. Central Command: 

- U.S. Forces Afghanistan: 

* U.S. Joint Forces Command: 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of Defense: 

Office Of The Under Secretary Of Defense: 
Personnel And Readiness: 
4000 Defense Pentagon
Washington, D.C. 20301-4000: 

May 9, 2011: 

Ms. Sharon L. Pickup: 
Director, Defense Capabilities and Management: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, N.W. 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Dear Ms. Pickup, 

This is the Department of Defense (DoD) response to the GAO draft 
report, GAO-11-456, "Military Training: Actions Needed to Improve 
Planning and Coordination of Army and Marine Corps Language and 
Culture Training," dated April 8, 201 1 (GAO Code 351586). 

DoD concurs with most of the recommendations made in the draft report. 
Detailed responses to those recommendations are contained in the 
enclosure. 

Thank you for the opportunity to comment on this draft report. We look 
forward to receiving the final report, when available. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Samuel	D. Kleinman: 
Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense (Readiness): 

Enclosure: As stated: 

[End of letter] 

GAO Draft Report Dated April 8, 2011: 
GAO-11-456 (GAO Code 351586): 

"Military Training: Actions Needed To Improve Planning And 
Coordination Of Army And Marine Corps Language And Culture Training" 

Department Of Defense Comments To The GAO Recommendations: 

Recommendation 1: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense 
direct the Secretary of Army and the Commandant of the Marine Corps to 
assign responsibilities for training program performance and include 
in subsequent updates of their respective service-specific language 
and culture strategies training priorities and investments that are 
necessary to achieve strategic goals and objectives. 

DoD Response: Partially concur. Linking strategy development with 
training and resource prioritization across the enterprise would 
better identify, up front, what resources are necessary to address 
goals, objectives, and programs outlined in the language, regional, 
and culture strategy. This would allow senior leadership to obtain a 
better understanding of the rough order of magnitude in time and 
resources necessary to implement the strategy being presented, and may 
prompt modifications early in the process when viewed against time and 
fiscal realities. Currently, strategy and capability requirements 
within the Department and Services are developed separately from the 
resource allocation/Program Objective Memorandum process. The purpose 
is to accurately capture the required operational capability and 
determine the gaps, independent of the fiscal environment. From there, 
those capability requirements are then prioritized and compete for 
resources. This approach has some advantages that could be negated if 
the two processes were more closely linked early on. Consequently, 
before definitive measures are implemented to more closely integrate 
requirements development and resource allocation at a much earlier 
stage, assessing potential negative consequences and then weighing 
costs versus benefits will need to be conducted. 

Recommendation 2: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense 
direct the Secretary of Army and the Commandant of the Marine Corps to 
assign responsibilities for training program performance and include 
in subsequent updates of their respective service-specific language 
and culture strategies results-oriented performance metrics to measure 
progress in achieving their strategic goals and objectives.
DoD Response: Partially concur. Enhancing and fully implementing 
metrics that accurately capture programmatic performance and utility 
remains a consistent focus for the Army and Marine Corps. Several 
efforts are being pursued to achieve this objective, to include 
current initiatives to more closely link training and readiness 
standards outlined in training and readiness manuals with operational 
readiness through the Defense Readiness Reporting System and other 
reporting mechanisms. However, any effort to start measuring and 
tracking individual performance with "hard" metrics such as cultural 
proficiency scale/rating should be thoroughly studied and reviewed 
before implementation. There is significant data to suggest this is 
far from an exact science, and may not be able to provide an accurate 
assessment tied to operational effectiveness. Furthermore, even if it 
is achievable, the actual administrative and logistical costs 
associated with the effort may far outweigh any benefits that are 
potentially gained. 

Recommendation 3: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense 
direct the Undersecretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness to 
issue guidance to establish within the implementation plan for the 
Department of Defense Strategic Plan of Language Skills, Regional
Expertise, and Cultural Capabilities (2011-2016) a clearly defined 
planning process with mechanisms, such as procedures and milestones, 
by which it can reach consensus with the military departments, 
coordinate and review approval of updates to plans, synchronize the 
development of plans with the budget process, monitor the 
implementation of initiatives, and report progress, on a periodic 
basis, towards achieving established goals. 

DoD Response: Concur. The DoD Implementation Plan for Language Skills, 
Regional Expertise, and Cultural Capabilities for FY 2011-2016 will 
include a clearly defined planning process for working with the 
Military Departments to coordinate plans, synchronize plans with
resources, and evaluate and report performance as the Department works 
toward its strategic goals. The target date for its completion is June 
2011. 

Recommendation 4: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense 
direct the Commander of the U.S. Central Command to establish a 
comprehensive, analytically-based process to identify and approve 
predeployment training requirements and include in this
documentation a description of the analysis to be conducted prior to 
approving the requirements. 

DoD Response: Concur. US Central Command (USCENTCOM) concurs that an 
analytically-based process by which to identify and approve 
predeployment training requirements was necessary at the time of this 
study. USCENTCOM Commander approved USCENTCOM FRAGO 09-1700, USCENTCOM 
Theater Training Requirements, dated March 28, 2011, which establishes 
the process for Service Components and Sub-Unified Commands to 
nominate training requirements for approval, modification, or deletion 
for approval by the Director of Operations, USCENTCOM. This document 
will be reviewed annually to ensure requirements are updated and 
promulgated to USCENTCOM Service Components, Sub-Unified Commands,
Service Force Providers, and the Joint Staff. 

Recommendation 5: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense 
direct the Commander of the U.S. Central Command to establish a 
comprehensive, analytically-based process to coordinate with key 
stakeholders, such as the military services and subordinate commands 
to ensure that requirements are synchronized among and within DOD 
components and with department wide guidance, and solicit feedback on 
service training approaches in meeting operational needs. 

DoD Response: Concur. USCENTCOM concurs that a process to ensure that 
requirements are synchronized among the Service Components and 
Subordinate commands was necessary at the time of this study. 
USCENTCOM has established and instituted a process that synchronizes 
requirements among the Service Components and Subordinate Commands. 
USCENTCOM coordinates with all Service Components and Sub-Unified 
Commands, to include cross-directorate coordination within 
Headquarters USCENTCOM, to ensure all training requirements are 
meeting operational needs. USCENTCOM utilized this process in the 
development of USCENTCOM FRAGO 09-1700, USCENTCOM Theater Training 
Requirements. USCENTCOM assesses it is a Service responsibility to 
determine the training approach they utilize to meet the training 
requirements for the USCENTCOM area of responsibility. 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Sharon Pickup, 202-512-9619 or pickups@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the contact named above, Patricia Lentini, Assistant 
Director; Nicole Harms; Mae Jones; Susan Langley; Michael Silver; 
Matthew Ullengren; and Chris Watson made significant contributions to 
this report. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] Department of Defense Directive Type Memorandum 11-002, 
Counterinsurgency (COIN) Training and Reporting Guidance for Preparing 
U.S. Forces to Succeed in Afghanistan and Pakistan (Dec. 9, 2010). 

[2] GAO, Military Training: DOD Needs a Strategic Plan and Better 
Inventory and Requirements Data to Guide Development of Language 
Skills and Regional Proficiency, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-568] (Washington, D.C.: June 19, 
2009). 

[3] GAO, Military Training: Continued Actions Needed to Guide DOD's 
Efforts to Improve Language Skills and Regional Proficiency, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-879T] (Washington, 
D.C.: June 29, 2010). 

[4] H.R. Rep. No. 111-491 at 259 (2010). 

[5] According to DOD, "foreign area officers" are commissioned 
officers who, in addition to their primary military specialty, also 
possess a combination of strategic focus, regional expertise, cultural 
awareness, and foreign language skills. "Human terrain teams" are 
comprised of sociocultural experts that are deployed to Afghanistan 
and Iraq to help improve Army and Marine Corps commanders' and staffs' 
understanding of local populations. 

[6] See Army Culture and Foreign Language Strategy (Dec. 2009) and 
Marine Corps Language, Regional and Culture Strategy: 2011-2015 (Jan. 
2011). 

[7] See, for example, GAO, Human Capital: A Guide for Assessing 
Strategic Training and Development Efforts in the Federal Government, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-546G] (Washington, 
D.C.: Mar. 2004); Department of Defense, Fiscal Year 2012 Budget 
Request (Feb. 4, 2011); Army Regulation 350-1, Army Training and 
Leader Development (Dec. 18, 2009); and Marine Corps Order P3500.72A, 
Marine Corps Ground Training and Readiness Program (Apr. 18, 2005). 

[8] See, for example, 10 U.S.C. §164 for responsibilities of 
commanders of combatant commands and 10 U.S.C. §§3013, 5013, and 8013 
for the responsibilities of the service secretaries; and Department of 
Defense Directive 5100.01, Functions of the Department of Defense and 
Its Major Components (Dec. 21, 2010). 

[9] Department of Defense, Strategic Plan for the Next Generation of 
Training for the Department of Defense (Sept. 23, 2010). 

[10] DOD's professional communities of linguists and regional experts 
generally include personnel--such as foreign area officers, human 
intelligence collectors, and signal intelligence analysts--who require 
language and culture skills to perform their primary functions. 

[11] The Defense Language Steering Committee includes representatives 
from the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy; the 
Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence; the Office 
of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller); the Office of the 
Under Secretary for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics; the Office 
of the Director, Program Analysis and Evaluation; the combatant 
commands; the Office of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; the 
Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and Air Force; the Defense Intelligence 
Agency; the Defense Security Cooperation Agency; the Defense Threat 
Reduction Agency; the National Security Agency; and the National 
Geospatial Intelligence Agency. 

[12] The Marine Corps refers to this concept as the Regional, Culture, 
and Language Familiarization program. 

[13] The Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center provides 
culturally based foreign language education, training, evaluation, 
research and sustainment for DOD personnel. 

[14] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-546G]. 

[15] Army Culture and Foreign Language Strategy (Dec. 2009). 

[16] The Army strategy defines these stages as: stage 1: new recruit 
through the end of initial military training; stage 2: the end of 
initial military training through the 7th year of a career; stage 3: 
the 8th year of a career through the 16th year; and stage 4: the 17th 
year of a career and beyond. 

[17] Marine Corps Language, Regional and Culture Strategy: 2011-2015 
(Jan. 2011). 

[18] Navy Marine Corps Directive 3500.65, Operational Culture and 
Language Training and Readiness Manual (Apr. 8, 2009). 

[19] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-546G]. 

[20] Department of Defense, Fiscal Year 2012 Budget Request (Feb. 4, 
2011). 

[21] See, for example, Army Regulation 350-1, Army Training and Leader 
Development (Dec. 18, 2009); and Marine Corps Order P3500.72A, Marine 
Corps Ground Training and Readiness Program (Apr. 18, 2005). 

[22] Soldiers who complete language training may be given an 
Interagency Language Roundtable score for listening, reading, and 
speaking proficiency in foreign languages as measured on a scale from 
0 (no proficiency) to 5 (functionally native proficiency). The Army 
standard is for at least one leader per platoon to achieve a level 0+ 
in speaking and listening, described as memorized proficiency, with a 
goal of a level 1, described as elementary proficiency. 

[23] Navy Marine Corps Directive 3500.65, Operational Culture and 
Language Training and Readiness Manual (Apr. 8, 2009). 

[24] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-568]. 

[25] GAO, Defense Business Transformation: DOD Needs to Take 
Additional Actions to Further Define Key Management Roles, Develop 
Measurable Goals, and Align Planning Efforts, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-181R] (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 26, 
2011). 

[26] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-568]. 

[27] At the time of our work, DOD was training the geographic 
combatant commands to implement the new requirements methodology. Once 
implemented, DOD intends to update the geographic combatant command 
requirements on an annual basis and also apply the methodology to 
other DOD components, such as the functional combatant commands and 
combat support agencies. 

[28] Department of Defense Directive 5100.01, Functions of the 
Department of Defense and Its Major Components (Dec. 21, 2010). 

[29] Department of Defense, Strategic Plan for the Next Generation of 
Training for the Department of Defense (Sept. 23, 2010). 

[30] Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Guidance for 2011 (Jan. 5, 
2011). 

[31] Commander International Security Assistance Force/U.S. Forces 
Afghanistan Memorandum, Training Guidance for Language Training (Jan. 
24, 2010). 

[32] U.S. Forces Afghanistan Fragmentary Order 10-371 (Oct. 29, 2010). 

[33] Department of Defense Directive Type Memorandum 11-002, 
Counterinsurgency (COIN) Training and Reporting Guidance for Preparing 
U.S. Forces to Succeed in Afghanistan and Pakistan (Dec. 9, 2010). 

[34] U.S. Central Command Fragmentary Order 09-1700, USCENTCOM Theater 
Training Requirements (Mar. 28, 2011). 

[35] According to the Department of Defense, "foreign area officers" 
are commissioned officers who, in addition to their primary military 
specialty, also possess a combination of strategic focus, regional 
expertise, cultural awareness, and foreign language skills. "Human 
terrain teams" are comprised of socio-cultural experts that are 
deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq to help improve Army and Marine Corps 
commanders' and staffs' understanding of local populations. 

[36] See Army Culture and Foreign Language Strategy (Dec. 2009) and 
Marine Corps Language, Regional and Culture Strategy: 2011-2015 (Jan. 
2011). 

[37] See, for example, GAO, Human Capital: A Guide for Assessing 
Strategic Training and Development Efforts in the Federal Government, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-546G] (Washington, 
D.C.: Mar. 2004); Department of Defense, Fiscal Year 2012 Budget 
Request (Feb. 4, 2011); Army Regulation 350-1, Army Training and 
Leader Development (Dec. 18, 2009); and Marine Corps Order P3500.72A, 
Marine Corps Ground Training and Readiness Program (Apr. 18, 2005). 

[38] Department of Defense, Department of Defense Strategic Plan for 
Language Skills, Regional Expertise, and Cultural Capabilities, 2011- 
2016 (Feb. 2011). 

[39] See 10 U.S.C. §164 for responsibilities of commanders of 
combatant commands; and 10 U.S.C. §§3013, 5013, and 8013 for the 
responsibilities of the service secretaries. 

[40] See, for example, Department of Defense Directive 5100.01, 
Functions of the Department of Defense and Its Major Components (Dec. 
21, 2010) and Department of Defense Directive 1322.18, Military 
Training (Jan. 13, 2009). 

[41] Department of Defense, Strategic Plan for the Next Generation of 
Training for the Department of Defense (Sept. 23, 2010). 

[End of section] 

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