- Payroll tax deal close: Why did Republicans back down? (+video)
- Israel says Bangkok, Delhi, and Tbilisi attacks all linked – to Iran
- Rick Santorum's new machine-gun ad: Will it work? (+video)
- As Sarkozy seeks new term, French are wary of 'Merkozy' (+video)
- Honduras prison fire kills more than 300, highlights regional problem (+video)
Iraqi expatriates play civilian roles to help train US troops for battlefield conditions
Abid Saeed, who's played everyone from a radical cleric to a police chief, may be the Al Pacino of military 'extras.'
(Page 2 of 2)
Like many of the role players at Fort Bragg, Mr. Washington is a former member of the military. He served with the XVIII Airborne Corps in the Balkans before leaving the Army in 2004 and starting a real estate career in Fayetteville.
"I decided that if this would help save one American life over there ... then it was worth doing," says Mike Hicks, a former Navy Corpsman who served with a Marine reconnaissance unit until a battlefield injury forced his retirement in 1991. "Believe me, I'm not doing it for the money."
Mr. Hicks recalls a recent nighttime training scenario in which he and other role players approached a transportation unit that was repairing a flat tire on a truck. Turned away when they asked for food and water, they were shot at by the soldiers when they tried to circle the convoy.
"A guy shot me in the stomach and we were friendly Iraqis," he says. "So we ended up telling them, 'You just turned some of us into a bunch of insurgents.' "
Role playing has long played a part in training US forces for deployment overseas. In 1941, the military staged massive maneuvers involving 500,000 soldiers in Louisiana in preparation for World War II. Local people played the part of civilians in dozens of towns that were "overrun" in the exercises. In the 1960s, Fort Polk, La., was the site of an advanced Army training center that used a mock Vietnamese village.
Yet civilian participation in exercises and the use of foreign language specialists has increased significantly since the US occupation of Iraq. Counterinsurgency training with civilian bit players is now carried out at numerous Army bases, including Camp Shelby in Mississippi, Fort Hood in Texas, Fort Riley in Kansas, and Fort Lewis in Washington State. Fort Polk regularly stages exercises that involve hundreds of "actors."
"These are immersion exercises with scenarios that involve dozens of Arabic-speaking people," says Dan Nance, a public affairs official at Fort Polk. "There's a great deal of realism involved. We also use people with amputated arms or legs to simulate those types of casualties in the aftermath of an IED [improvised explosive device]."
•••
As a woman, Iyleana Lopez added another dimension to the recent training of Army Reservists at Fort Bragg. Enduring a North Carolina summer while clad head to toe in a burqa, Ms. Lopez forced soldiers to consider their own cultural biases while negotiating strict Muslim gender codes. Carrying a doll, she had joined the sheikh's mob at the front gate, begging for baby food. In another scenario, she played a suicide bomber, with a small package labeled "C-4" hidden under her garments.
"Sometimes the soldiers get really stressed when I hide something, and they don't find it," says Lopez. "They can get really angry with me, but that's OK. I love to do this. I like helping people, and this is helping soldiers."
For Saeed, the job is a chance to do something for the US soldiers whose mission he embraces as well as for his own country. When Mr. Hussein invaded Kuwait in 1990, he was a soldier in the Iraqi Army stationed in his native Basra. He joined the rebellion against Hussein's rule. "We got fliers telling us to rise up, saying we would have support," he recalls, a revolution that collapsed within a month. Saeed's mother and two brothers were killed. "The Army came to my house looking for me and my other brothers, but they took them instead. We went to American forces, and they took us to Saudi camps."
Saeed spent six years there before immigrating to the US in 1997, settling in Lexington, Ky., where he worked in construction.
"I used to have a regular job, but when I heard the Army needs this kind of help, I wanted to do something," he says. "They go to help my country, so I have to do something for them."
Page:
1 | 2



