It hasn't generated any surprises since we've been engaged. I'd say that 9/11 was a bit of a turning point in our collective consciousness. We've been adapting our training, education, and professional development, really, since the Cold War and when the wall came down. We've seen the world for what it is: intra-state as opposed to inter-state as the norm; complex conflict as opposed to red versus blue, good guy versus bad guy, and those simple scenarios. We've been adapting to that over a number of years.
I'd say that the real load in our training and professional development is in making sure that we, as professional soldiers, understand insurgency. Where does it come from? What motivates it? What enables it? How do you act against it? When I ask how you act against it, I don't mean how we as the military act against it, but how you create an environment that opposes the insurgency, the environment being the one created by local authorities, local police, and others. That's one.
The other one is raising the level of what we expect a soldier to be capable of doing. It is a lot easier for a rifle company commander of 150 soldiers to line them up and advance as a team than it is to send a pair into a building, supported by another pair across the street who are dealing with an angry cop, supported by an intelligence system with a source who is telling you where the bad guy is. The level of complexity has gone up.
What it requires us to do is make sure that our soldiers at all ranks are absolutely competent in their core skills--they bring those with them--can adapt them to the environment within which they're going to operate, and are confident not just in themselves but in their teammates.
This is why, if you look at it as a blank sheet of paper, the training journey would seem to be onerous, but actually it's required. Counter-insurgency has given us a new level of work to focus on and has made us make sure we create the confidence and competence, at the lowest possible level, to operate independently of chains of command in a very complicated environment.