During his 2008 campaign, President Barack Obama promised he would create a "specialized military advisers corps" to train foreign militaries to take on various threats.
When we last assessed this pledge in 2012, we reported some progress, noting the shift to advisory roles for the military in Afghanistan. Today, most of the U.S. soldiers remaining in Afghanistan have a mission to "train, advise and assist" Afghan forces.
Four years later, the Army is working on make this a more permanent feature of its structure.
The Army is developing several "train, advise, assist" brigades, which would primarily serve to help foreign militaries, said Chief of Staff of the Army Gen. Mark A. Milley in June. The training brigades will be structured so they can quickly take on more soldiers to prepare for combat in the case of a national emergency.
Because these brigades can serve this dual purpose — advising and combat — they are useful as Army troop numbers go down, Milley said in an interview at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
The first of the new brigades should be operational by 2018 or 2019, he added.
The plan to put these new brigades in the permanent force structure "is designed to do exactly what Obama intended in his 2008 remarks," said David Barno, a retired Army lieutenant general and practitioner in residence at American University.
"These units will be purposefully built, trained and deployed to provide military advice and training for foreign militaries engaged in a variety of threat environments, but especially to combat terrorist or insurgent groups," Barno said. "That sounds very much like what Obama had in mind in 2008."
We rate Obama's Promise Kept.