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United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

Report to Congressional Committees: 

August 2011: 

Iraq And Afghanistan: 

Actions Needed to Enhance the Ability of Army Brigades to Support the 
Advising Mission: 

GAO-11-760: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-11-760, a report to congressional committees. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Developing capable Iraqi and Afghan security forces is a key component 
of the U.S. military effort in Iraq and Afghanistan and, in 2009, the 
Army began augmenting brigade combat teams (BCT) with advisor 
personnel to advise the host nation security forces in these 
countries. House Armed Services Committee report 111-491 directed GAO 
to report on the Army’s plans to augment BCTs to perform advising 
missions in Iraq and Afghanistan. This report (1) identifies the key 
characteristics of the augmented BCT concept; (2) assesses the extent 
to which the Army has provided augmented BCTs, and what challenges, if 
any, these units have faced; and (3) assesses the extent to which 
requirements for augmented BCTs have impacted overall Army personnel 
requirements, including the Army’s ability to provide advisor 
personnel. GAO examined augmented BCT doctrine and guidance, analyzed 
advisor requirements, reviewed after-action reviews and lessons 
learned from augmented BCTs, and interviewed Army, theater command, 
and augmented BCT officials. 

What GAO Found: 

Army guidance identifies key characteristics of the augmented BCT 
concept, such as how advisors are to be organized, commanded, and 
supported. For example, BCT commanders are to organize the advisors 
into teams, with other necessary resources being provided to the teams 
by the brigade. The theater commander determines the specific numbers 
and types of advisors based upon the operational environment and 
mission requirements. BCTs are envisioned to exercise command of 
advisor teams and provide support such as specialized personnel, 
equipment, and transportation and security. However, it is recognized 
that BCTs may have other priorities and must balance the demand for 
resources between the advising mission and other missions. 

The Army has deployed augmented BCTs in response to theater commanders’
requests, but units have faced some challenges because commanders did 
not always set clear priorities between the advising mission and other 
missions or define specific requirements for how the BCTs should 
support the advising mission. For example, theater commanders did not 
require that advisor teams include specialized personnel, such as 
logisticians or intelligence officers. Because the BCTs already have 
high demand for these personnel, the brigades are challenged to meet 
the advisors’ requirements for those same personnel. As a result, some 
advising teams told GAO that they were limited in their ability to 
advise in some specialty areas or that they may be advising Iraqi and 
Afghan security forces in functional areas where the advisors have 
little or no experience. Also, theater commanders’ requests did not 
always specify command relationships. As a result, in some cases, 
advisors were reassigned to the control of a division or a brigade 
that they had not trained and deployed with, which disrupted the unity 
of command envisioned under the augmented BCT concept. 

The use of augmented BCTs has decreased the total number of advisor 
personnel required for the advising mission, but increased 
requirements for field grade officers, already in short supply. 
According to Army officials, as a result of these shortages, the Army 
has faced challenges meeting the requirement to provide field grade 
advisors at least 45 days prior to the brigades’ mission rehearsal 
exercise. In many cases, advisors did not join the brigades until 
after the exercise, hindering their integration into the BCTs and 
complicating efforts to establish support and command structures. Some 
officials suggested that it would be helpful if at least two or three 
of the highest-ranking advisors arrived significantly earlier than 
currently required in order to facilitate integration. Moreover, GAO 
found that augmented BCTs are organizing their advisors into smaller 
numbers of larger teams than envisioned in the theater commander 
requirements. As a result, augmented BCTs may not need the number and 
rank of advisors currently required by those requests. 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO recommends that theater commands assess and refine, as 
appropriate, advisor requirements and define advisor support and 
command structures. GAO also recommends that the Army provide certain 
advisor personnel to brigades earlier in pre-deployment training. DOD 
concurred with the recommendations. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-760] or key 
components. For more information, contact Sharon Pickup at (202) 512-
9619 or pickups@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

The Army Has Identified the Key Characteristics of the Augmented BCT 
Concept: 

Army Is Deploying Augmented BCTs to Iraq and Afghanistan, but Some 
Challenges Exist: 

Use of Augmented BCTs Has Alleviated Some Personnel Strains while 
Increasing Requirements for Field Grade Officers: 

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: Command Organizations and Offices Contacted During Our Review: 

Abbreviations: 

BCT: Brigade Combat Team: 

CENTCOM: U.S. Central Command: 

DOD: Department of Defense: 

FORSCOM: U.S. Army Forces Command: 

HRC: U.S. Army Human Resources Command: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

August 2, 2011: 

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

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

Key components of the U.S. military effort in Iraq and Afghanistan 
include developing capable host nation security forces and 
facilitating the transition of security responsibility to the host 
nations.[Footnote 1] Prior to 2009, the Department of Defense (DOD) 
relied on hundreds of small training and transition teams 
(collectively known as "transition teams") made up of personnel from 
all of the military services to advise and mentor Iraqi and Afghan 
security forces. However, filling the personnel requirements of the 
transition teams was difficult for the Army and the use of these teams 
led to command and control challenges, since they operated separately 
from major combat units. 

To help alleviate these difficulties, in 2009, the Army shifted its 
approach and, in coordination with theater commanders, began replacing 
many of the individual transition teams with brigade combat teams 
(BCT) augmented by advisor personnel, referred to in this report as 
"augmented BCTs." Under this concept, the Army envisioned that 
augmenting brigades would enable them to execute the advising mission, 
as well as their combat missions. Among the intended benefits of this 
strategy was the intent to make it easier for the Army to fill the 
requirements for trainers, since the number of individually sourced 
advisors for the augmented brigades would be smaller than the number 
of individually sourced personnel needed for all of the transition 
teams.[Footnote 2] In addition, it would also achieve unity of command 
over the advising mission, with both the mission and the advisor 
personnel being under the command and control of the brigades. 

The House Armed Services Committee report accompanying a proposed bill 
for the fiscal year 2011 National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 
5136) directed us to report on the Army's plans to augment BCTs to 
perform advising missions and on the use of such augmented brigades to 
support operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.[Footnote 3] To address 
this requirement, this report: (1) identifies the key characteristics 
of the Army's concept for augmenting BCTs with personnel to support 
advising missions; (2) assesses the extent to which the Army has 
provided augmented BCTs for operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, and 
what challenges, if any, these units have faced in implementing the 
concept; and (3) assesses the extent to which the requirements for 
augmented BCTs have impacted overall Army personnel requirements, 
including the Army's ability to provide advisor personnel to BCTs in 
required time frames. 

To accomplish these objectives, we reviewed doctrine and guidance from 
the Army and theater commanders, examined the training requirements 
and program of instruction for the advising mission, and analyzed the 
manning requirements for augmented BCTs, with specific focus on the 
leadership augment. We also reviewed selected mission briefs, after 
action reviews, task organization, and lessons learned from deployed 
and redeployed augmented BCTs, dating back to 2009. Additionally, we 
examined personnel data, also dating back to 2009. Finally, we met 
with, among others, officials from the Office of the Secretary of 
Defense, Department of the Army, U.S. Central Command, Army Human 
Resources Command, Army Forces Command, U.S. Forces--Iraq, U.S. 
Forces--Afghanistan, and various redeployed and deployed augmented 
BCTs and division headquarters in the United States, Iraq, and 
Afghanistan. 

We conducted this performance audit from July 2010 through August 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. Appendix I 
contains additional information about our scope and methodology. 

Background: 

Security force assistance--the effort to develop capable host nation 
security forces--is a key component of the U.S. efforts to create 
sustainable security in both Iraq and Afghanistan. The goal of this 
mission is to build partner capability and improve the security 
situation such that, over time, U.S. forces and partnered foreign 
security forces can collectively set the conditions to defeat common 
threats and ultimately achieve strategic success. The Army's field 
manual on security force assistance recognizes that this is not a new 
mission but also states that in the current operational environment, 
security force assistance is no longer an additional duty but is now a 
core competency of the Army. It is part of the full spectrum of 
military operations, meaning it can be conducted across the spectrum 
of conflict, from stable peace to general war. The field manual also 
notes that security force assistance can include both advising and 
partnering to develop competent and capable foreign security forces. 
[Footnote 4] 

* Advising. Advising is the primary type of security force assistance 
and is the use of influence to teach, coach, and advise while working 
by, with, and through the foreign security force. Advising helps 
foreign security forces conduct independent decision making and 
operations, and advisors may also provide foreign security forces with 
direct access to joint and multinational capabilities, such as air 
support, artillery, medical evacuation, and intelligence. 

* Partnering. In partnering, the U.S. attaches units to host nation 
units at various levels in order to leverage the strengths of both 
U.S. and foreign security forces. Partnered units should establish 
combined cells for intelligence, operations, planning, and 
sustainment. While effective coordination is always required and 
initial efforts may require completely fused efforts, foreign security 
forces should eventually build the capability and capacity to conduct 
all efforts autonomously. 

Advising and partnering, while complementary, are distinct activities 
that can be performed simultaneously, sequentially, or in combination. 
U.S. units, such as Army BCTs, are partnering with the Iraqi and 
Afghan security forces. Examples include U.S. battalions conducting 
combined route clearance missions or manning combined checkpoints with 
host nation military units in their area of operations. The Army's 
field manual notes that as a foreign security force's capabilities 
mature, the echelon and degree of partnering decrease. For example, a 
U.S. Army battalion may initially partner with a foreign security 
force battalion, but as the foreign security force matures, a U.S. 
Army battalion may partner at a higher echelon such as with a foreign 
security force division while the U.S. battalion's subordinate 
companies may partner with the foreign security force battalions. 

Like partnering, advising also can occur at various echelons of the 
foreign security force with the echelon of focus changing as foreign 
security forces mature. However, brigades have only recently assumed 
the advising mission in Iraq and Afghanistan. Specifically, prior to 
2009 and 2010, respectively, the advising mission was conducted 
primarily with transition teams. These transition teams did not exist 
as units in any of the services' force structures and were instead 
comprised of company-and field-grade officers and senior non- 
commissioned officers who were centrally identified and individually 
selected based on rank and specialty.[Footnote 5] For the Army alone, 
the number of individually sourced advisors--individually sourced 
advisors are those identified by Army Human Resources Command and 
assigned to transition teams--required to fill the transition teams in 
Iraq and Afghanistan at any one time totaled about 8,000 personnel. As 
we have previously reported, the demand for these leaders created 
challenges for the services because the leaders were generally pulled 
from other units or commands, which then were left to perform their 
missions while undermanned.[Footnote 6] In addition, the transition 
teams operated externally to the major combat units in their area of 
operations and reported to a different command structure, which led to 
a lack of unity of command that complicated coordination and 
communication between the transition teams and the combat units. 

The Army developed the concept of augmenting BCTs with specialized 
personnel to execute the advising mission, in part, as a means of 
alleviating these challenges. The replacement of transition teams with 
augmented BCTs was intended to mitigate strain on the Army by reducing 
the number of personnel who would have to be individually sourced by 
the Army Human Resources Command for the security force assistance 
advising mission, since the advisors would be able to leverage the 
capabilities of the existing BCTs for support functions, thus 
requiring fewer specially sourced individuals for the mission. 
Augmented BCTs also were intended to improve command and control over 
the mission by placing both the mission and personnel assigned to the 
mission under a single brigade commander. 

The Army Has Identified the Key Characteristics of the Augmented BCT 
Concept: 

In May 2009, the Army issued its Field Manual, Security Force 
Assistance, which, among other things, identifies the key 
characteristics of the augmented BCT concept and offers guidance on 
the roles and responsibilities of augmented BCTs performing security 
force assistance advising missions. In June 2009, the Army also issued 
The Modular Brigade Augmented for Security Force Assistance Handbook 
[Footnote 7] which, among other things, is intended to provide a 
useful summary of the Army's current security force assistance 
doctrine and give commanders a snapshot of the key elements of this 
mission. Taken as a whole, this guidance reinforces key 
characteristics of the augmented BCT advising mission, such as how 
advisors are to be task organized, the importance of clear command and 
control relationships, the types of personnel capabilities that should 
be considered when defining augment requirements, and the need to 
support advisor personnel with resources from the BCT. 

* Task organization: The BCT commander organizes the advisor augment 
personnel into advisor teams based on advising mission requirements in 
his area of operations. These advisor teams may be formed from organic 
resources from the brigade, external augmentation, or a combination of 
these. 

* Command and control: The BCT commander has command and control 
authority over the advisor personnel and advisor teams. The Army 
handbook notes the advantage of the advisor teams being under the 
command of the augmented BCT commander, with this unity of command 
resulting in a unity of effort and purpose. 

* Augmentation requirements: The field manual provides a basic 
conceptual design for augmentation, which can include personnel 
capabilities such as combat advisors, military police, or legal 
personnel. According to the field manual, the theater commander is to 
determine the precise mix of forces and augment capabilities--
including the specific numbers and types of advisors--required for 
augmented BCTs in his area of operations, based upon the operational 
environment and mission requirements. As advising tasks change in 
response to the evolving needs of the host nation security force, the 
theater commander can re-tailor the augmentation (i.e., the specific 
numbers and types of advisors) provided to successive BCTs, 
accordingly. 

* BCT support of advisors: The field manual notes that the advisor 
teams may need resources from the brigade for support functions, such 
as specialized personnel, equipment, transportation, and security. 
This would allow the advisor teams to stay focused on advising. The 
handbook acknowledges, though, that the brigades may have other 
mission priorities in addition to security force assistance. Although 
the augmented BCTs are specially resourced with advisor personnel to 
advise, assist, and mentor the Iraqi and Afghan security forces, the 
brigades still must balance the security force assistance advising 
mission with other brigade missions. 

The security force assistance field manual also addresses the training 
that should be received by soldiers assigned to security force 
assistance missions. The Army has tasked the 162nd Infantry Training 
Brigade to provide advisor augment personnel with specialized advisor 
training on topics such as language and culture, host nation 
government and security forces, cross-cultural communication, and 
rapport building as part of their pre-deployment training. The program 
also includes leadership engagement scenarios where advisor team 
leaders engage with role players in simulated exchanges and 
opportunities for the advisors and brigade and battalion leadership to 
conduct combined planning exercises with simulated host nation 
security force leadership. The final stage of pre-deployment training 
for the augmented BCT is the mission rehearsal exercise, through which 
the advisor personnel and the BCT are expected to exercise the 
augmented BCT concept as an integrated unit.[Footnote 8] In addition 
to participating in combat and advising mission exercises, the 
scenario is intended to enable the BCT and its advisors the 
opportunity to create advisor teams and establish the key command and 
control and support structures necessary for executing the mission in 
theater. 

Army Is Deploying Augmented BCTs to Iraq and Afghanistan, but Some 
Challenges Exist: 

The Army has deployed augmented BCTs in response to theater 
commanders' requests; however, these units have faced challenges 
because theater commanders' guidance did not always clearly define how 
these units were to perform key aspects of the augmented BCT concept 
and theater commanders' requests did not include some requirements 
needed to support the advising mission, given the brigades' resource 
limitations. As a result, brigade commanders have faced challenges 
determining how to prioritize their resources when supporting multiple 
missions in addition to the advising mission and providing specialized 
personnel, equipment, transportation, and security for the advisors. 
In addition, augmented BCTs and their assigned advisor personnel have 
sometimes lacked the unity of command envisioned under the Army's 
augmented BCT concept. 

The Army Has Deployed Augmented BCTs to Iraq and Afghanistan Based on 
Theater Commanders' Requests: 

In 2009 and 2010, U.S. Central Command, on behalf of theater 
commanders in Iraq and Afghanistan, submitted requests for augmented 
BCTs for ongoing operations. In May 2009, the theater commander for 
Iraq requested forces for the augmentation of Iraq-bound BCTs with 48 
field grade officers specially trained as advisors to execute the 
security force assistance advising mission. Likewise, in March 2010, 
the theater commander for Afghanistan submitted a request for forces 
for augmented BCTs that would each be augmented with a package of 48 
advisor personnel--24 field grade officers and 24 non-commissioned 
officers. Both requests envisioned that the 48 advisor personnel would 
be organized into 24 two-man advisor teams and that the teams would 
receive all necessary support--including additional specialized 
personnel, equipment, and transportation and security support--from 
the brigades. 

The Army has been able to deploy augmented brigades to Iraq and 
Afghanistan since August 2009 and June 2010, respectively, in 
accordance with theater commanders' requests. As of June 2011, there 
were six augmented BCTs operating in Iraq and nine in Afghanistan. The 
Army intends for all future BCTs deploying to Afghanistan to be 
augmented BCTs. 

Augmented BCTs Have Faced Challenges Allocating Resources across 
Multiple Missions and Supporting Advisor Teams: 

Augmented BCTs have faced challenges allocating resources across 
missions and providing support to enable the advising mission because 
theater commanders did not always set clear priorities, ultimately 
leading to challenges for these units. Specifically, augmented BCTs 
have sometimes had difficulty allocating resources between the 
advising mission and other missions, such as counterinsurgency 
operations; advisor teams have sometimes lacked the appropriate 
specialized personnel and equipment to conduct the advising mission; 
and advisor teams have not always received consistent transportation 
and security support from augmented BCTs to enable the advising 
mission. Each of these challenges is discussed below. 

Augmented BCTs Were Not Always Given Clear Priorities for Allocating 
Resources between Advising and Other Missions: 

Army guidance for security force assistance recognizes that augmented 
BCT commanders consider the extent of threats, combined with resource 
limitations, in order to set priorities, which would include 
determining the degree to which BCT resources can be allocated to 
support the advising mission. For example, augmented BCTs in Iraq and 
Afghanistan must balance their requirements to support the advising 
mission with other operational requirements, such as counterinsurgency 
operations, partnering with host nation security forces, or performing 
missions such as conducting checkpoints. Army officials told us that, 
in the absence of other guidance from theater commanders, in kinetic 
combat environments, such as Afghanistan, augmented BCT commanders 
naturally prioritize the combat mission and direct their resources 
that way. According to Army officials, the augmented BCT concept was 
initially intended to be introduced to an operating environment after 
major combat operations were concluded. This would make more of the 
resources of the augmented BCTs available to support the advising 
mission. When augmented BCTs first deployed to Iraq in 2009, the Iraqi 
Security Forces were assuming greater responsibility for combat 
operations and Iraqi forces have had the primary responsibility for 
security since 2010. Iraq theater command officials told us that 
advising the Iraqi Security Forces is the primary effort of U.S. 
military forces in Iraq, including augmented BCTs. In contrast, U.S. 
military forces in Afghanistan are still conducting counterinsurgency 
operations in a combat environment and the theater commander in 
Afghanistan has not specified the priority of the advising mission for 
the augmented BCTs, relative to counterinsurgency operations. The 
Afghanistan theater commander's request for augmented BCTs noted that 
these BCTs would be responsible for both advising and 
counterinsurgency operations, but provided no guidance as to how the 
brigades should balance resources and make trade-offs between the two 
different mission sets. Augmented BCTs in both theaters, though, had 
challenges balancing resources between the advising mission and other 
missions. 

The theater commanders' requests for both Iraq and Afghanistan 
envisioned the BCTs executing the advising mission by organizing their 
advisors into 24 two-man teams drawing additional support from the 
BCT. According to officials from several of these augmented BCTs, 
though, the brigades do not have enough organic resources to support 
24 dispersed teams while still preserving enough of their resources to 
conduct other missions. For instance, officials from one augmented 
Stryker brigade--Stryker brigades are significantly larger than other 
brigades--told us that the brigade could only organize into a maximum 
of 12 to 15 dispersed advisor teams using a company as the basis for 
support while still addressing other mission requirements. Given their 
resource limitations and the need to carry out other missions, 
augmented BCT officials told us that they organized their advisors 
into a smaller number of teams often consisting of more than two 
advisors. For example, 

* In Iraq, one augmented BCT that deployed with 43 advisors organized 
them into five different advisor teams, while another augmented BCT 
organized its 46 advisors into eight teams. 

* In Afghanistan, one augmented BCT organized the 44 advisors that it 
deployed with into 15 teams, while another augmented BCT organized its 
48 advisors into nine advisor teams. 

According to some of these officials, organizing the advisors in this 
manner was intended to enable the brigade to better support the 
advising mission while still retaining the capacity to meet other 
mission requirements. However, we found that some of the augmented 
BCTs that we visited faced challenges supporting their advisor teams, 
regardless of the number of teams they had. 

Augmented BCTs Sometimes Faced Challenges Providing Specialized 
Personnel and Equipment for the Advising Mission: 

The Army's augmented BCT concept and the theater commanders' augmented 
BCT requests assumed that any specialty personnel required by the 
advisor teams--such as logisticians and intelligence personnel--would 
be pulled from the brigade. The theater commanders' requests for 
advisors therefore do not include requirements for the advisors to 
have any specialized capabilities, despite the fact that advisors are 
frequently advising Iraqi and Afghan security forces in specialized 
areas. In contrast, the transition teams were often comprised of 
personnel with specialist capabilities in areas such as intelligence, 
logistics, or communications. According to the security force 
assistance field manual, the composition of the advisor teams is 
subject to objectives (e.g., the type of training to be provided) and 
conditions (e.g., the security environment), and BCT commanders tailor 
advisor teams to match those objectives and conditions. For example, 
the BCT commander, in coordination with the advisor personnel, could 
identify specialized personnel from the BCT who would be assigned to 
support the advisors. Because such personnel are also in high demand 
within the brigade, though, the brigade is expected to make trade-offs 
and prioritize its missions, including the advising mission. However, 
in the absence of advisor teams receiving specialized personnel from 
the brigade or the advisors themselves being specialists, some 
advising teams lacked specialized capabilities. For example, some 
advising teams told us that they were limited in their ability to 
advise in certain specialty areas and that advisor personnel may be 
advising Iraqi and Afghan leadership in functional areas where they 
have little or no experience. In one case, a field grade officer 
advisor in Iraq who had no prior intelligence experience was tasked 
with helping the Iraqis set up an intelligence fusion center. 

Since advisor teams are not regularly receiving specialized personnel 
from the brigades, Army and augmented BCT officials told us that 
including advisors with specialty capabilities as part of the 
augmented BCT advisor requirements would be very beneficial for the 
advising mission. The Army has gathered feedback from nine augmented 
BCT commanders and the 162nd Infantry Training Brigade, among others, 
that identified the need for logisticians to be a part of the advisor 
packages. The Army's feedback also identified the need for military 
police, military intelligence, and other specialties in augmentation 
packages. In order to mitigate the challenges that the augmented BCTs 
face with shortages of specialist personnel, the Army currently has an 
effort underway to examine the advisor requirements and determine the 
need to tailor them to include more specialized capabilities. The 
results of this effort have not been finalized, though, so its impact 
cannot yet be determined. 

The theater commanders' requests for the augmented BCTs assumed that 
the advisors would get all of their equipment from the BCTs. As was 
the case with specialized personnel, the theater commanders' requests 
did not establish specific advisor equipment requirements for the Army 
to fill, with the exception of some individual weapons and other small 
items. As a result, some augmented BCTs experienced challenges 
providing personal and operational equipment to the advisors both 
prior to and after deploying to theater since all advisor equipment 
had to come from the brigades' existing stocks. For example, augmented 
BCT and advisor officials told us that, prior to deploying, the 
advisors joining the brigades expected to have equipment such as 
personal computers with both unclassified and classified capabilities 
as well as office space to work from, but that some of the brigades 
had difficulties providing these things without limiting the access of 
others in the brigade. 

Theater command and augmented BCT officials told us that, once in 
theater, advisors sometimes lacked personal equipment, such as 
navigation equipment, personnel locators, and cell phones. 
Additionally, augmented BCTs sometimes lacked the operational 
equipment necessary to support advisor teams at dispersed locations. 
Iraq theater command officials told us that some augmented BCTs had 
submitted requests for additional communications equipment to support 
advisor teams at dispersed locations because the brigades did not 
deploy with the number of communications systems necessary to support 
all of the advisor teams that needed to operate separately from the 
brigade. In instances where additional operational equipment for 
advisors was not available, equipment shortages for advisors could 
impact the way that brigades organized for the advising mission. For 
example, officials from one augmented BCT in Iraq told us that the 
brigade only had seven command and control communications nodes, which 
limited the number of dispersed locations where the brigade could 
operate. While the brigade mitigated that limitation as much as 
possible by co-locating units and advisor teams, the shortage of key 
communications equipment, in part, limited the brigade's ability to 
support a larger number of advisor teams. 

Augmented BCTs Sometimes Faced Challenges Providing Transportation and 
Security Support for the Advising Mission: 

The theater commanders' requests for the augmented BCTs envisioned 
that the advisor teams would get their required support from the 
brigades to which they were attached, but did not define the minimum 
level of support that the brigades were to provide to the advisor 
teams. Augmented BCT officials and advisors told us that the augmented 
BCTs are responsible for making determinations regarding the 
allocation of support to the advisor teams, balancing those needs 
against the needs of other missions. According to augmented BCT 
officials, advisor teams often operate away from larger combat units 
or established bases and could therefore require up to a platoon or 
company of soldiers for support. In the absence of guidance on the 
level of support that the augmented BCTs were to provide, the level of 
support that the augmented BCTs we visited provided to their advisor 
teams varied, depending on the operating environment and the 
priorities of the BCT commander. For example, 

* Officials from an augmented BCT that had redeployed from Iraq told 
us that, once in theater, the BCT received a requirement to secure a 
number of joint checkpoints with the Iraqi Security Forces, which 
limited its ability to provide transportation and security assets to 
the number of advisor teams that it had initially planned to support. 

* Advisors from an augmented BCT in Afghanistan told us that the 
advising mission was a low priority for the brigade and that the 
brigade and its battalions had too many other requirements to provide 
support to the advisor teams. Instead, the advisor teams relied on 
nondedicated support from a separate military police company operating 
in the area. 

* Advisors from an augmented BCT in Afghanistan told us that there was 
no official allocation of support resources within the brigade and, in 
some cases, the support was haphazard and came from other units 
outside the brigade. 

Transportation and security support is considered to be critical for 
the augmented BCT advisors' ability to execute the advising mission. 
Some advisors told us that the level of dedicated transportation and 
security support they received from the brigade directly impacted 
their ability to meet with host nation security forces in order to 
build relationships and advise the host nation security forces. 

Augmented BCTs and Advisors Have Sometimes Lacked Unity of Command: 

Augmented BCTs and their advisor personnel sometimes lacked the unity 
of command envisioned under the Army's augmented BCT concept because 
theater commanders did not always provide clear guidance on command 
and control structures for the advisors. As a result, in some cases, 
advisors were reassigned to be under the control of a division or a 
brigade other than the one that they trained and deployed with. 
According to Army guidance on security force assistance, advisor teams 
require a clearly defined and structured chain of command under which 
to operate, which alleviates confusion regarding who tasks or monitors 
the teams' progress and ensures that advisor teams are supported. The 
Army augmented BCT concept envisions the advisor teams being under the 
command of the augmented BCT commander, with this unity of command 
facilitating the integration of all aspects of the augmented BCT 
mission. This was intended to address a challenge with the prior 
transition teams, which operated independently from major combat units 
and were overseen by higher headquarters at the division or theater 
level. Iraq theater command, Army, and augmented BCT officials told us 
that the unity of command is one of the primary benefits of the 
augmented BCT concept. 

The theater commander's request for augmented BCTs for Iraq included 
direction on the intended command and control structure of the 
advisors, but the request for augmented BCTs for Afghanistan did not 
address this topic. Although the operational commander on the ground 
may tailor the force as deemed necessary to meet mission requirements--
including changing command and control structures--the successful 
implementation of the augmented BCT concept hinges significantly on 
leveraging the resources of the BCT to support the advisors and 
synchronizing the advise and assist mission as part of the overall 
mission of the BCT. In addition, augmented BCTs we met with in both 
Iraq and Afghanistan had planned and trained for their advising 
mission consistent with the intention that advisors will act as a 
synchronized force with established support and command and control 
relationships and with the advisor teams being a part of the BCT. For 
example, advisors and officials at the 162nd Infantry Training Brigade 
told us that augmented BCT and advisor training focuses on the advisor 
role as being part of the BCT. Augmented BCT officials also told us 
that their final mission rehearsal exercises typically included 
scenarios that allowed the BCT, including advisors, to exercise their 
support and command and control relationships. 

Absent guidance from theater commanders on advisor command and 
control, we found several instances, particularly in Afghanistan, 
where advisor personnel were diverted away from the augmented BCT with 
which they had deployed. In such instances, division commanders 
assumed control of the advisor teams and managed them as a division 
resource, similar to how the prior transition teams were managed. 
Those advisor teams were sometimes tasked for other advising missions 
not linked to the augmented BCT to which they were initially attached, 
or for other assignments, such as serving on division headquarters 
staff. For example, in the operating area of one division in 
Afghanistan, 

* The division commander assumed control of all 48 advisors from a 
National Guard augmented BCT and created three division level teams, 
each focused on different areas of the security force assistance 
mission. That National Guard BCT was then assigned advisor teams from 
another augmented BCT and the National Guard also provided additional 
field grade officers to allow the BCT to meet advising requirements in 
its area of operations, since it had lost its original advisor 
personnel. 

* The division commander tasked a five-man advisor team from one of 
the augmented BCTs to mentor the brigade of a North Atlantic Treaty 
Organization partner and some individual advisor personnel to serve as 
liaisons to the division. 

Changes to the established command relationships between the brigades 
and advisors after the units deploy can cause a range of challenges 
for augmented BCTs and advisors. These include questions about how or 
if the advisors' mission continues to fit with their parent augmented 
BCT; how or if the advisors will continue to be supported by their 
parent augmented BCT, particularly if the advisors and the BCT are 
operating in different areas; and what the chain of command is for the 
advisors. 

Use of Augmented BCTs Has Alleviated Some Personnel Strains while 
Increasing Requirements for Field Grade Officers: 

Advisor requirements for augmented BCTs have decreased the total 
number of individually sourced advisor personnel required for the 
advising mission, but have increased Army personnel requirements for 
field grade officers, already in short supply. According to Army 
officials, as a result of field grade officer shortages, the Army has 
faced challenges meeting the requirement to provide field grade 
advisors to the augmented BCTs at least 45 days prior to the brigades' 
mission rehearsal exercise. Since augmented BCTs have been forming 
fewer advisor teams than initially intended by theater commanders' 
requests, augmented BCTs may not need to be sourced with as many total 
advisor personnel or such large numbers of field grade advisors. 

Shift to Augmented BCTs Has Decreased the Total Number of Advisors and 
Alleviated Personnel Strain on Some Ranks, but Increased the Demand 
for Field Grade Officers: 

Moving from transition teams to augmented BCTs to advise the Iraqi and 
Afghan security forces, driven, in part, by the need to address some 
of the challenges the Army faced in filling requirements for 
transition teams, has decreased the total number of advisors required 
for the advising mission and alleviated the strain on certain ranks, 
but increased the strain on others. Specifically, the shift to 
augmented BCTs has: 

* Decreased the total number of advisors required for the advising 
mission because, rather than relying completely on transition teams 
comprised of individually sourced personnel to man the advisor teams, 
the augmented BCT concept envisions advisor teams led by advisor 
augments (who are individually sourced) and further manned by pulling 
additional personnel from the brigade, as needed; 

* Alleviated the strain on the Army's pool of company grade officers 
(e.g., Captains) and non-commissioned officers (e.g., Sergeants 1st 
class) because these ranks were required in greater numbers on the 
transition teams than the augmented BCTs; and: 

* Increased requirements for field grade officer advisors, since the 
ranks of the advisors required for augmented BCTs are generally higher 
than the ranks of transition team personnel--particularly in Iraq, 
where all advisors are field grade officers. For example, according to 
Army Human Resources Command data, augmented BCT advisor requirements 
increased demand for deployable field grade officers by 463 in fiscal 
year 2010 and by 398 in the first two quarters of fiscal year 2011. 

Deployable field grade officers were already in short supply prior to 
the introduction of the augmented BCT requirements. For example, 
taking into account requirements for augmented BCT advisor personnel, 
Army Human Resources Command data showed that the Army had shortages 
of 2,469 majors and 1,297 lieutenant colonels as of June 2011. To 
manage these shortages, the Army has prioritized the units and 
commands for sourcing personnel such that filling advisor requirements 
for augmented BCTs is among the highest sourcing priorities. As a 
result, Army Human Resources Command data showed that, as of October 
2010, 97 percent of all advisor requirements for augmented BCTs were 
ultimately filled. However, the high priority for the augmented BCT 
advisor requirements, combined with the field grade officer shortages, 
has, at times, resulted in the understaffing of field grade ranks in 
other commands and units, such as U.S. Army Europe, Army Training and 
Doctrine Command, and units in South Korea, among many others. 

Army Has Been Challenged in Providing Advisors to the Augmented BCTs 
within Specified Time Frames: 

While the Army has been able to fill most requirements for augmented 
BCT advisor personnel, it has not always been able to provide advisors 
to the units within specified time frames. Army officials have told us 
that Army execution orders for augmented BCTs require that advisors 
join the augmented BCTs at least 45 days prior to the units' mission 
rehearsal exercise. Army and augmented BCT officials have told us that 
early advisor arrival is critical to integrating the advisors into the 
unit, building advisor teams, and establishing key support and command 
and control relationships between the advisor teams and the BCT. 
Similarly, according to Army guidance, building the advisor teams as 
early as possible facilitates cohesion and trust. Given the shift in 
how the advising mission is being handled--from stand-alone transition 
teams operating independently to advisors who are integrated with and 
reliant on a BCT--these exercises help the augmented BCTs become 
comfortable with their structure and facilitate their missions once 
they are in theater. 

However, Army Human Resources Command has had difficulty providing the 
field grade officer advisors to the units being augmented in 
accordance with the 45-day time line because they were challenged by 
shortages of deployable field grade officers and changes in unit 
theater arrival and mission rehearsal exercise dates for operational 
reasons, which may shorten the time that Army Human Resources Command 
has to identify personnel who meet the requirements. Many of the 
augmented BCTs we met with did not receive the total number of advisor 
personnel that they would deploy with until after the mission 
rehearsal exercise. For example, one augmented BCT that we visited in 
Afghanistan told us that, prior to its exercise, it had received only 
six of its 24 non-commissioned officer advisors and none of its 24 
field grade officer advisors, while another augmented BCT we visited 
in Afghanistan had received only one of its 22 field grade officer 
advisors that it ultimately deployed with prior to the exercise. In 
both instances, the units were limited in their ability to organize 
for and exercise the advising mission because they lacked the field 
grade officers necessary to lead the advisor teams. While recent Iraq-
bound units have not received all of their advisors by the specified 
report date, the deployed augmented BCTs that we visited in Iraq had 
received most of their advisors--40 of 43 in one instance and 42 of 46 
in the other--prior to their mission rehearsal exercises. 

Some officials suggested that, given the challenge of providing all 
the advisors to the augmented BCTs within specified time frames, it 
would be helpful if at least two or three of the highest-ranking 
advisors arrived significantly earlier than currently required to help 
integrate the advisors into the BCT's mission and structure. For 
example, officials from some augmented BCTs as well as the 162nd 
Infantry Training Brigade suggested that the ideal would be for the 
highest-ranking advisors to arrive at the unit by the time that key 
brigade leadership planning events begin, such as the brigade's Leader 
Training Program.[Footnote 9] These events typically occur as early as 
90 days prior to the final mission rehearsal exercise. That would 
enable those leaders to represent the advising mission during brigade 
mission planning and to help mitigate some of the challenges related 
to integrating advisors, particularly late-arriving advisors, into the 
brigade. We met with an augmented BCT that received one of its highest-
ranking advisors well before the 45-day window and in time for the 
brigade's major leadership events. As a result, this advisor was able 
to integrate into the brigade's leadership and provide inputs on the 
advising mission into the brigade's mission planning. The advisor was 
also able to set up a structure for the other advisor personnel to 
integrate into when they arrived, develop the advisor teams, and 
facilitate the provision of equipment to advisors. 

The Number and Size of Advisor Teams May Impact the Number and Rank of 
Advisors Needed for the Advising Mission: 

Theater requests for the augmented BCTs assumed that (1) each BCT's 48 
advisors would form the base of 24 advising teams, and (2) all of the 
field grade officer advisors would be team leaders or deputy team 
leaders. However, as discussed above, augmented BCTs are sometimes 
operating with a smaller number of advisor teams that are comprised of 
a larger number of advisors. This could affect the necessary numbers 
and rank structure of advisor personnel since, with a smaller number 
of advisor teams being formed, the augmented BCTs may not need to be 
sourced with as many advisors. Further, since not as many advisors are 
serving as team chiefs or deputy team chiefs, BCTs may not need such 
large numbers of field grade officers. Army and augmented BCT 
officials have told us that rank is an important factor for advisors 
in establishing credibility with the Afghan and Iraqi officers that 
they are advising. However, with larger advising teams, the higher 
rank structure may be of less importance as all advisors may not have 
the leadership roles within the advisor teams that were envisioned 
when the rank structure requirements were initially established. 
Further, several augmented BCT officials told us that capable company 
grade officers, particularly when they are introduced by and lent the 
weight of the brigade and battalion leadership, can establish the 
necessary credibility with host nation leaders. Moreover, the 
augmented BCTs in Afghanistan are executing the advising mission with 
half as many field grade officers as augmented BCTs in Iraq--the 
request for augmented BCTs in Iraq required 48 field grade officers, 
versus 24 field grade officers in the request for augmented BCTs in 
Afghanistan.[Footnote 10] Given the identified field grade officer 
shortages that the Army is facing, re-assessing current requirements 
for field grade officer advisors is important to ensure that the Army 
is not being strained unnecessarily. 

Conclusions: 

Developing capable Iraqi and Afghan security forces is a key component 
of the U.S. military effort in Iraq and Afghanistan. Shifting from the 
use of individual transition teams comprised of advisors that operated 
somewhat independently to augmenting BCTs with advisor personnel that 
are an integral part of the BCT is a significant change in the way 
Army units perform the advising mission. As the Army continues to 
deploy augmented BCTs and theater commanders gain operational 
experience with these types of units, some challenges are emerging 
that suggest further refinements are needed to achieve greater unity 
of command and other benefits envisioned by the Army in moving to the 
augmented BCT concept. By reassessing needs and clarifying key 
requirements such as the appropriate number, rank, and capabilities of 
advisor personnel; the level of resources and support that the BCT 
should provide; and how the BCT should prioritize and balance demands 
associated with the advising mission with the demands of other BCT 
missions, the Army and theater commanders will enhance the ability of 
the BCTs to more effectively command and support the advisors. In 
addition, assessing and validating the appropriate composition of the 
advisor augment will ensure that the Army is providing the right mix 
of personnel needed for the advising mission. Lastly, integrating 
advisor personnel into the BCT is an important element of the 
augmented BCT concept and requires advisor and other BCT personnel to 
train together. Arranging for key leaders from the advisor augment to 
arrive in sufficient time to participate in leadership planning events 
would facilitate integration of the advisors and enable the units to 
maximize the benefits of the time spent in training. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

To enhance the ability of the augmented BCTs to support the advising 
mission and to facilitate the integration of advisor personnel into 
pre-deployment training, GAO is making the following three 
recommendations. 

We recommend that the Secretary of Defense, in consultation with 
Secretary of the Army and U.S. Central Command, direct that theater 
commanders in Iraq and Afghanistan: 

* Assess their needs for how advisor teams should be structured and 
supported and, based on this assessment, ensure that any future 
requests for augmented BCTs clearly define related requirements, 
including the number of advisors, ranks of advisors, capabilities of 
advisors, and equipment for advisors. 

* Clearly define, in guidance to divisions and augmented BCTs, the 
relative priority of the advising mission; the minimum level of 
transportation and security support to be provided to the advisors; 
and command and control relationships for augmented BCTs and their 
advisors, including the level of command that has tasking authority 
over and support responsibilities for the advisors. 

We recommend that the Secretary of the Army revise existing guidance 
to require that the highest-ranking field grade officer advisors join 
the augmented BCTs in time to be present for major brigade leadership 
planning events, such as the Leader Training Program. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

In written comments on a draft of this report, DOD concurred with our 
three recommendations. Overall, DOD stated that it believes that the 
information being sought in GAO's first two recommendations related to 
more clearly defining requirements for advisors and the advising 
mission is being provided through established processes. The full text 
of DOD's written comments is reprinted in appendix II. 

DOD concurred with our recommendation that the Secretary of Defense, 
in consultation with Secretary of the Army and U.S. Central Command, 
direct that theater commanders in Iraq and Afghanistan assess their 
needs for how advisor teams should be structured and supported and, 
based on this assessment, ensure that any future requests for 
augmented BCTs clearly define related requirements, including the 
number of advisors, ranks of advisors, capabilities of advisors, and 
equipment for advisors. In its comments, DOD stated that combatant 
commanders have provided and will continue to provide detailed 
requests for the advising mission. DOD stated that the Vice Chief of 
Staff of the Army has directed that commanders provide assessment of 
their needs regarding advisor team structure and support. DOD, 
therefore, stated that it saw no need for the Secretary of Defense to 
direct these actions. In our report, we acknowledge that the Army 
currently has an effort underway to examine the advisor requirements. 
As theater commanders revise their requirements to reflect the Army's 
effort, we would expect that future requests for advising capabilities 
would more clearly define specific requirements, such as specialized 
advisor capabilities that are needed. 

DOD also concurred with our recommendation that the Secretary of 
Defense, in consultation with Secretary of the Army and U.S. Central 
Command, direct that theater commanders in Iraq and Afghanistan 
clearly define the relative priority of the advising mission, the 
minimum level of transportation and security support to be provided to 
the advisors, and command and control relationships for augmented BCTs 
and their advisors. In its comments, DOD stated that, as presented, 
our recommendation may be too prescriptive and, in of itself, 
impractical to implement. Specifically, DOD stated that our 
recommendation suggests that the priority of the vast number of 
mission requirements under the commander's responsibility are static 
and can be determined void of any external factors. DOD stated that 
the recommendation's intent is captured within existing departmental 
practices. DOD noted that the Department's approach to determining 
mission priorities is based upon a thorough understanding of its 
strategic objectives within the area of operations. Based upon this 
understanding, DOD stated the commander gives his guidance through 
mission objectives and subsequent creation of operational plans. It 
noted that the commander's ability to employ these plans, and thus 
identify mission priorities and allocation of resources, remains 
situation specific and environmentally dependent. DOD further stated 
that, for similar reasons, the command and control relationships 
within the BCT are situation dependent and are tailored based upon the 
commander's requirements. 

We agree that DOD has an approach for developing operational plans and 
that commanders establish mission priorities and allocate resources 
based on specific situations and operating environments. We also agree 
that command and control relationships are situation dependent and 
need to reflect commanders' requirements. As we state in our report, 
the Army has worked with theater commanders to define the key 
characteristics of augmented BCTs while leaving commanders the 
discretion to tailor the force as needed, and has provided guidance, 
accordingly. We do not agree, though, that our recommendation is too 
prescriptive or impractical to implement. Specifically, during our 
review, we found that in some cases, theater commanders did more 
clearly define some aspects of the advising mission, while in other 
cases they did not. In those latter cases, the lack of clarity led to 
some challenges, including with establishing priorities and command 
and control relationships. For example, as we state in our report, 
Iraq theater command officials made it clear that advising the Iraqi 
Security Forces was the primary mission of U.S. forces there, but the 
Afghanistan theater command has not established the relative priority 
for the advising mission. Likewise, we found that the theater 
commander's request for augmented BCTs for Iraq included direction on 
the intended command and control structure of the advisors, but that 
the request for augmented BCTs for Afghanistan did not address this 
topic. Clarifying key requirements for augmented BCTs, including how 
the BCTs should prioritize and balance demands of the advising mission 
with the demands of the other BCT missions, will enhance the ability 
of the BCTs to more effectively command and support the advisors. 

DOD concurred with our recommendation that the Secretary of the Army 
revise existing guidance to require that the highest-ranking field 
grade officer advisors join the augmented BCTs in time to be present 
for major brigade leadership planning events. DOD stated that the 
Department of the Army agrees that maximum benefit is achieved when 
the entire augment of advisors is available and prepared to 
participate in both pre-deployment planning and training events. 
However, due to the nature of advisor force requirements, DOD's 
comments noted that there will be instances where the entire augment 
is not available to participate. DOD stated that the Army will 
maximize coordination, prioritization, and integration of highest-
ranking advisors to ensure participation in deployment planning and 
training events. 

We are sending copies of this report to appropriate congressional 
committees, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Secretary 
of Defense, and the Secretary of the Army. This report will be 
available at no charge on GAO's Web site, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staff have any questions about this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-9619 or by e-mail at pickups@gao.gov. Contact 
information for our Offices of Congressional Relations and Public 
Affairs may be found on the last page of this report. GAO staff who 
have made major contributions to this report are listed in appendix 
III. 

Signed by: 

Sharon Pickup: 
Director, Defense Capabilities and Management: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

To determine the extent to which the Army has developed its concept 
for augmenting brigade combat teams (BCT) with additional personnel to 
support security force assistance missions we reviewed Army guidance, 
such as the Army field manual for security force assistance and the 
Modular Brigade Augmented for Security Force Assistance Handbook. We 
also reviewed advisor and augmented BCT training materials from the 
162nd Infantry Training Brigade. Further, we analyzed the 2009 and 
2010 requests for forces for augmented BCTs that were submitted by 
U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) for ongoing operations in Iraq and 
Afghanistan to document advisor personnel requirements for augmented 
BCTs. We interviewed officials at the Office of the Secretary of 
Defense, CENTCOM, U.S. Special Operations Command, Joint Staff, 
Headquarters Department of the Army, U.S. Army Forces Command 
(FORSCOM), U.S. Army Human Resources Command (HRC), and the Army 
Capabilities Development Integration Directorate Maneuver Center of 
Excellence regarding the development of the augmented BCT concept, 
including how the BCTs were to be augmented, how command and control 
structures were intended to function, and what advantages, if any, the 
concept afforded the Army and theater commanders. We interviewed 
officials at the 162nd Infantry Training Brigade, as well as advisor 
augments with redeployed and currently deployed augmented BCTs in Iraq 
and Afghanistan in order to discuss the structure and content of the 
advisor training program for advisor augments. We interviewed 
officials at the Joint Readiness Training Center, as well as officials 
with redeployed and currently deployed augmented BCTs, in order to 
discuss the mission rehearsal exercise and its functionality for the 
augmented BCT. 

To determine the extent to which the Army has provided augmented BCTs 
for operations in Iraq and Afghanistan and what challenges, if any, 
these units have faced in implementing the concept, we reviewed Army 
unit deployment schedules, after action reviews and lessons learned 
from redeployed augmented BCTs, and mission briefings from deployed 
augmented BCTs and division commanders, dating back to 2009. We also 
analyzed the above-mentioned requests for forces submitted by CENTCOM 
for augmented BCTs to document advisor personnel and equipment 
requirements for augmented BCTs and guidance provided by theater 
commanders on augmented BCT and advisor task organization, advisor 
support, advisor command and control, and augmented BCTs roles, 
missions, and priorities. Additionally, we reviewed key documents 
related to the advising mission and priorities from theater commanders 
in Iraq and Afghanistan. Furthermore, we conducted interviews with a 
range of deployed and redeployed BCTs that had served or were serving 
as augmented BCTs in Iraq and Afghanistan. We interviewed augmented 
BCT officials and advisor personnel regarding augmented BCT task 
organization, advisor team formation, the integration of advisors into 
the brigade, the suitability of advisor personnel capabilities, the 
ability of the brigade to support advisor teams, the equipping 
requirements for advisor augments, and the guidance received by the 
brigade on the augmented BCTs' roles and missions. In addition, we met 
with theater command-and division-level officials in Iraq and 
Afghanistan to discuss the execution of the augmented BCT mission in 
their respective theaters and areas of operation, and management of 
and guidance provided to augmented BCTs on the advising mission. We 
also interviewed officials at Headquarters Department of the Army, 
CENTCOM, FORSCOM, and 162nd Infantry Training Brigade for their 
perspectives on how the augmented BCT concept is being executed in 
theater and any related challenges. 

To determine the extent to which requirements for augmented BCTs have 
impacted overall Army personnel requirements, including the Army's 
ability to provide advisor personnel to BCTs in required time frames, 
we examined data provided to us by HRC regarding Army shortfalls faced 
in certain officer ranks currently and in coming years. We also 
discussed with HRC officials how this data was calculated, including 
the details of how they determined the fill rate for advisor 
requirements, overall Army field grade officer shortages, and extent 
to which requirements for augmented BCTs increased overall Army 
requirements for field grade officers. We found this data to be 
reliable for the purpose of determining the impact of advisor 
requirements on overall Army personnel requirements. To gain an 
understanding of the extent to which BCTs are experiencing late 
arrival of advisor augment personnel, we conducted analysis of advisor 
fill rate and arrival time data provided by HRC, FORSCOM and augmented 
BCTs, dating back to 2009, and comparing such data against the arrival 
timelines laid out in the requests for forces for each theater. We 
also met with officials from Headquarters Department of the Army, HRC, 
FORSCOM, Joint Forces Command, Office of the Secretary of Defense 
Personnel and Readiness, 162nd Infantry Training Brigade, and 
redeployed and currently deployed augmented BCTs to discuss the impact 
of advisor personnel requirements on overall Army personnel 
requirements, the Army's ability to provide authorized numbers of 
augment personnel within the specified arrival time frames, and any 
challenges faced as a result of the late arrival of advisor augments 
to the BCTs to which they have been assigned. 

Table 1 below identifies the organizations, offices, commands, and 
units that we contacted during our review, including the units and 
commands we met with in Iraq and Afghanistan. 

Table 1: Command Organizations and Offices Contacted During Our Review: 

Command organization or office: 

Office of the Secretary of Defense. 

Office of Personnel and Readiness; 
Location: Arlington, Virginia. 

Office of Special Operations and Low Intensity Conflict; 
Location: Arlington, Virginia. 

Office of Policy--Force Development; 
Location: Arlington, Virginia. 

Unified Commands: 

United States Joint Forces Command; 
Location: Norfolk, Virginia. 

United States Central Command; 
Location: MacDill Air Force Base, Florida. 

United States Special Operations Command; 
Location: MacDill Air Force Base, Florida. 

Joint Staff: 
Location: Arlington, Virginia. 

United States Army: 

Department of the Army Headquarters; 
Location: Arlington, Virginia. 

United States Army Forces Command; 
Location: Fort McPherson, Georgia. 

United States Army Central Command; 
Location: Fort McPherson, Georgia. 

Army Maneuver Center of Excellence; 
Location: Fort Benning, Georgia. 

United States Army Human Resources Command; 
Location: Fort Knox, Kentucky. 

United States Army Combined Arms Center; 
Location: Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. 

Center for Army Lessons Learned; 
Location: Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. 

162nd Infantry Training Brigade; 
Location: Fort Polk, Louisiana. 

Redeployed Augmented BCTs[A]: 

4th Brigade, 1st Armored Division; 
Location: Fort Bliss, Texas. 

2nd Brigade, 3rd Infantry Division; 
Location: Fort Stewart, Georgia. 

1st Brigade, 82nd Airborne Division; 
Location: Fort Bragg, North Carolina. 

4th Brigade, 82nd Airborne Division; 
Location: Fort Bragg, North Carolina. 

Commands and Units Deployed in Iraq: 

Commands: 
United States Forces - Iraq; 
25th Infantry Division, United States Division - Central; 
4th Infantry Division, United States Division - North; 

BCTs: 
2nd Brigade, 25th Infantry Division; 
4th Brigade, 3rd Infantry Division. 

Commands and Units Deployed in Afghanistan: 

Commands: 
United States Forces - Afghanistan; 
101st Airborne Division, Regional Command - East; 
10th Mountain Division, Regional Command - South; 
International Security Assistance Force Joint Command; 

BCTs: 
3rd Brigade, 1st Infantry Division; 
1st Brigade, 4th Infantry Division; 
4th Brigade, 10th Mountain Division; 
2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment; 
2nd Brigade, 34th Infantry Division. 

Other Joint Organizations: 

Joint Center for International Security Force Assistance; 
Location: Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. 

Joint Readiness Training Center; 
Location: Fort Polk, Louisiana. 

Source: GAO. 

[A] We also met with officials formerly with the 3rd Brigade, 3rd 
Infantry Division and 1st Brigade, 1st Armored Division at their new 
assignments to discuss their operational experiences as part of an 
augmented BCT. 

[End of table] 

To perform its review, we reviewed an illustrative, non-generalizable 
sample of redeployed and deployed augmented BCTs. We met with three of 
the four augmented BCTs that had returned from Iraq and the only 
augmented BCT that had returned from deployment in Afghanistan at the 
time that we selected our sites for visits. We also met with deployed 
augmented BCTs in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as theater commands 
and deployed division commands. We selected deployed BCTs for visits 
based on where they were in their deployments (we aimed for BCTs that 
were at the midpoints of their deployments so that they had been in 
theater long enough to be familiar with their missions, but not yet at 
the point where they were preparing to redeploy). We worked with 
theater commands in Iraq and Afghanistan to arrange visits or meetings 
with deployed BCTs that fit our criteria, making adjustments as needed 
because of security, transportation, or weather issues. Ultimately, we 
met with personnel from two augmented BCTs and two divisions in Iraq 
and personnel from five augmented BCTs and two divisions in 
Afghanistan. 

We conducted this performance audit from July 2010 through August 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. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of Defense: 

[DOD's comments were provided July 27, 2011] 

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

July 27, 2011: 

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

Ms. Pickup, 

This is the Department of Defense (DoD) response to the GAO draft 
report, GAO-11-760, "Iraq And Afghanistan: Actions Needed to Enhance 
the Ability of Brigades to Support the Advising Mission," dated June 
23, 2011 (GAO Code 351514). 

The Department's position is that the information sought through the 
first two of the three recommendations being made by GAO is being 
provided through established processes. For the third recommendation, 
the Department agrees that, in lieu of the entire augment, the highest-
ranking advisors should join the Augmented Brigade Combat Teams prior 
to any major leadership planning event. The complete Department of 
Defense response to the recommendations accompanies this letter. 
Additionally, the Office of Security Review has completed its review 
of the draft report. No classified or sensitive defense-related 
information that could result in harm to national security was found 
and there is no Department of Defense objection to the report's public 
release. 

The Department appreciates the opportunity to comment on this draft 
report. Please direct any questions or comments you may have to 
Captain George Parisi, at (703) 693-6263 and george.parisi@osd.mil. 

Signed by: 

Jeffrey Lemmons, RADM, USN: 
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense (Readiness): 

Enclosure: As Stated. 

[End of letter] 

GAO Draft Report — Dated June 23, 2011: 
GAO-11-760 (GAO Code 351514): 

"Iraq And Afghanistan: Actions Needed To Enhance The Ability Of 
Brigades To Support The Advising Mission" 

Department Of Defense Response To The Recommendations: 

Recommendation 1: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense, in 
consultation with the Secretary of the Army and U.S. Central Command, 
direct that theater commanders in Iraq and Afghanistan assess their 
needs for how advisor teams should be structured and supported and, 
based upon this assessment, ensure that any future requests for 
augmented brigade combat teams (BCTs) clearly define related 
requirements, including the number of advisors, ranks of advisors, 
capabilities of advisors, and equipment for advisors. 

DOD Response: Concur with comment. Combatant Commanders have and will 
continue to provide detailed requests for the advising mission. 
Furthermore, the Vice Chief of the Army has directed that Commanders 
provide assessment of their needs regarding advisor team structure and 
support. Therefore, there is no need for the Secretary of Defense to 
direct these actions. 

Recommendation 2; The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense, in 
consultation with the Secretary of the Army and U.S. Central Command, 
direct that theater commanders in Iraq and Afghanistan clearly define, 
in guidance to divisions and augmented BCTs, the relative priority of 
the advising mission; the minimum level of transportation and security 
support to be provided to the advisors; and command and control 
relationships for augmented BCTs and their advisors, including the 
level of command that has tasking authority over and support 
responsibilities for the advisors. 

DOD Response: Concur with comment. As presented, this recommendation 
maybe too prescriptive and, in of itself, impractical to implement. It 
suggests that the priority of the vast number of mission requirements 
under the commander's responsibility are static and can be determined 
void of any external factors. However, the recommendation's intent is 
captured within existing departmental practices. The Department's 
approach to determining mission priorities is based upon a thorough 
understanding of our strategic objectives within the area of 
operations. Based upon this understanding, the Commander gives his 
guidance through mission objectives and subsequent creation of 
operational plans. The Commander's ability to employ these plans, and 
thus identifying mission priorities and allocation of resources, 
remains situation specific and environmentally dependent. For similar 
reasons, the Command and Control relationships within the BCT are 
situation dependent and are tailored based upon the Commander's 
requirements. 

Recommendation 3: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of the Army 
revise existing guidance to require that the highest-ranking field 
grade officer advisors join the augmented BCTs in time to be present 
for major brigade leadership planning events, such as the Leader 
Training Program. 

DOD Response: Concur. The Department of the Army agrees that maximum 
benefit is achieved when the entire augment of advisors is available 
and prepared to participate in both pre-deployment planning and 
training events. However, due to the nature of advisor force 
requirements, there will be instances where the entire augment is not 
available to participate. The Army will maximize coordination, 
prioritization, and integration of highest ranking advisors to ensure 
participation in deployment planning and training events. 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

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

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the contact named above, key contributors to this 
report were James Reynolds (Assistant Director), Grace Coleman, Kasea 
Hamar, Jonathan Mulcare, and Maria Storts. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] As of August 31, 2010, U.S. forces transitioned from combat and 
counterinsurgency activities in Iraq to a more limited focus on 
training and advising the Iraqi Security Forces under Operation New 
Dawn as the Iraqis have assumed security responsibility. The United 
States intends to begin transitioning security to the Afghan 
government by July 2011. 

[2] Transition teams are not units that exist in the Army force 
structure, so they have to be formed from personnel identified 
individually by the Army Human Resources Command, and then pulled 
together to form these teams. Likewise, the personnel who augment Army 
brigades for the advising mission are identified individually by the 
Army Human Resources Command, since they are not part of the brigades' 
existing personnel. We refer to both of these groups of personnel as 
being "individually sourced." 

[3] H.R. Rep. No. 111-491, at 337-338 (2010). 

[4] Department of the Army, Army Field Manual 3-07.1, Security Force 
Assistance (May 1, 2009). 

[5] Army company grade officers are those in the pay grades of O-1 to 
O-3 or 2ND Lieutenants, 1ST Lieutenants, and Captains. Army field 
grade officers are those in pay grades O-4 to O-6, or Majors, 
Lieutenant Colonels, and Colonels. Army senior non-commissioned 
officers are those in the pay grades of E7 to E9, or Sergeant 1ST 
Class, Master Sergeant and First Sergeant, and Sergeant Major. 

[6] GAO, Iraq and Afghanistan: Availability of Forces, Equipment, and 
Infrastructure Should Be Considered in Developing U.S. Strategy and 
Plans, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-380T] 
(Washington, D.C.: February 12, 2009). 

[7] U.S. Army Infantry School, The Modular Brigade Augmented for 
Security Force Assistance Handbook (Jun. 1, 2009). 

[8] Mission rehearsal exercises are the final collective training 
event that units conduct prior to deployment. 

[9] The Leader Training Program focuses on battle command and the 
staff planning, coordinating, integrating, synchronizing and execution 
of combat power. The program's goal is to refine the warfighting 
skills of brigade and battalion task force commanders and their battle 
staffs. 

[10] For augmented BCTs in Afghanistan, the requests called for 48 
advisors--24 field grade officers and 24 senior non-commissioned 
officers. 

[End of section] 

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