Studying to Prepare: What Washington and Taipei Can Study from Safety Cooperation in Ukraine and the Baltic States 


From Russia’s brutal re-invasion of Ukraine to China’s outraged response to former Home Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s go to to Taiwan, 2022 had a profound affect on Taiwan’s nationwide safety. It was thus solely becoming that the yr would finish with a consequential shift within the nation’s protection coverage. In a nationally televised deal with on Dec. 27, President Tsai Ing-wen elevated obligatory navy service for all Taiwanese males from 4 months to 1 yr, and directed her protection officers to repeat the coaching strategies utilized by the US. 

It was a welcome determination. American consultants and officers — in addition to Taiwanese legislators and even Taiwan’s present minister of nationwide protection — have lengthy thought of the four-month scheme insufficient in mild of Taiwan’s deteriorating safety atmosphere. Taiwanese voters additionally help the transfer. A ballot carried out by the Taiwan Public Opinion Basis in March exhibits that 76 p.c favored lengthened conscription. Broad public help however, Tsai ought to nonetheless be applauded for making the decision so quickly after her occasion’s drubbing in November’s 9-in-1 elections. She might have simply kicked the can down the highway, and there have been indications that she would possibly.

Politics apart, conscription extension was additionally a militarily necessity. For years, Taiwan’s all-volunteer drive has struggled to recruit sufficient younger women and men. 12 months-long conscription, which takes impact in 2024, will assist Taiwan to extend the dimensions of its lively navy drive by no less than 60,000 inside the subsequent three years.

Now the actual work begins. As a lot as extending conscription is a navy necessity, Taiwan must overhaul the way it trains its troops — conscript and common alike. Coaching, particularly in Taiwan’s military, is notoriously insufficient and unrealistic. Troopers spend an excessive amount of time sitting in lecture rooms and too little time practising particular person and small-unit fight abilities. Workouts are closely scripted. Junior leaders are anticipated to observe orders, not make choices. 

 

 

Fortunately, Tsai has acknowledged the issue and U.S. Secretary of Protection Lloyd Austin has already publicly dedicated the American navy to serving to Taiwan to defend itself. American “boots” are already “on the bottom” (as they’ve been for many years — one in all us helped prepare Taiwanese Marines within the early 2000s). And the 2023 Nationwide Protection Authorization Act creates a clear framework and foundation for serving to Taiwan’s navy. The true query is how the U.S. navy can finest “scale up” these current efforts as shortly as potential, particularly as a result of many in Washington suppose that time is working out earlier than China launches a cross-strait invasion. 

We predict the U.S. navy’s efforts coaching navy forces in Ukraine and the Baltic states can function a blueprint for serving to Taiwan. The 2 most vital takeaways from these experiences? First, that fast transformation calls for a holistic method — one combining a bottom-up, battle-focused coaching methodology emphasizing techniques, strategies, and procedures with a top-down emphasis on institutional, authorized, and political reform. And second, that “fast” is a relative time period in relation to navy reform. Even the Ukrainian navy’s dramatic transformation took seven years to get so far — and stays a piece in progress.

Under, we establish seven key classes realized from safety cooperation efforts in japanese and central Europe. We contextualize these classes to the distinctive challenges dealing with Taiwan earlier than concluding with 4 suggestions for American policymakers. 

Classes Realized from Instructing Classes

There may be no scarcity of evaluation about making use of lessons-learned from the battle in Ukraine to the protection of Taiwan. In any case, most of this current work focuses on what the battle ought to educate Taiwan in regards to the nature of latest high-intensity warfare, the necessity for an uneven protection posture, whether or not Russia’s assault on Ukraine will or won’t make a battle over Taiwan extra probably, or what Chinese language chief Xi Jinping and his generals is perhaps studying from the continued battle.

Our focus is completely different. We imagine the teachings from how the US, together with its NATO allies, helped Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Ukraine to remodel their militaries in a matter of years are the perfect mannequin for coaching the Taiwanese navy. For the Baltic states, these modifications started with the lead-up to their admission into NATO in 2004. For Ukraine, the method started after Russia’s two-pronged invasion in 2014 despatched shockwaves by means of the Ukrainian navy, which then-Chief of the Normal Employees Viktor Muzhenko described as “a military actually in ruins.”

Seven classes stand out. 

Small-Unit Coaching Targeted on Concrete Warfighting Abilities 

A central attribute of U.S. and European safety help efforts in Ukraine was their emphasis on rigorous and sensible fight coaching. Following the debacle of 2014, NATO members surged coaching missions into Ukraine that have been a lot completely different to earlier efforts and offered quite a lot of battle-focused coaching help increasing the capabilities of Ukrainian tactical formations, each of their “home-station” garrisons in addition to in a maneuver coaching middle. Cell coaching groups from the UK (Operation Orbital), Canada (Operation Unifier), and Lithuania helped Ukrainian typical items to enhance particular person and small-unit abilities on a bunch of duties, together with infantry, airborne, sniper, and medical operations. 

In the meantime, the US established the Joint Multinational Coaching Group Ukraine in Ukraine’s Yavoriv Coaching Heart below the U.S. Army’s seventh Army Coaching Command in Germany. There, rotational items from the U.S. Army and Army Nationwide Guard organized difficult mixed arms coaching for Ukrainian brigades, whereas concurrently mentoring Ukrainian observer/controllers to take the lead in coaching their very own items. NATO particular operations forces from a number of nations additionally organized cellular coaching groups and fight coaching middle help for his or her Ukrainian counterparts.

Our conversations with U.S. safety cooperation personnel and Ukrainian armed forces officers counsel that these efforts have been vital to creating the small-unit capabilities that gave Ukrainian forces a tactical edge over Russian items.

Joint and Multinational Workouts Facilitated Studying Amongst Senior Leaders and Staffs

In fact, the best small-unit techniques on the planet are ineffective with out a commensurate skill to regulate increased formations, mix arms, and combine joint forces in large-scale fight operations. Creating these types of senior officer and employees abilities is usually a lot more durable and takes longer to perform than enhancing tactical abilities, one thing each of us have skilled personally. In spite of everything, in peacetime junior officers typically have the luxurious of specializing in coaching with their items. In distinction, employees and senior officers spend the overwhelming majority of their time consumed with administrative and bureaucratic issues — duties which might be radically completely different from these they need to grasp to achieve fight. Furthermore, getting senior officers and their staffs to embrace a new coaching system or doctrine requires educating them strategies, abilities, and practices which might be typically radically completely different from people who obtained them promoted to these senior ranges within the first place. 

Apparently, based on an interview with a retired U.S. Army particular operations officer who had labored intently with the Baltic states, this difficulty was much less of a problem when working with the Estonian, Latvian, and Lithuanian armed forces as a result of all of their senior leaders have been new — former Soviet field-grade and above officers have been prevented from becoming a member of the post-Soviet navy. In distinction, different safety cooperation officers noticed that the Ukrainian navy had no such prohibition, and its navy was nonetheless adhering to a Soviet-style system as late as 2015. Transitioning to Western navy practices proved hardest for these officers who have been most accustomed to the “previous approach” of doing enterprise — and who additionally, not coincidentally, held probably the most energy and authority.

In each circumstances, senior officers benefited from multinational workout routines that allowed their commanders and staffs from tactical to strategic stage to follow their wartime command and management duties whereas concurrently exposing them to the strategies and finest practices of partnered American and NATO forces. For the Baltic states, annual NATO workout routines examined the fast deployment of U.S. and different NATO floor and air forces to strengthen the area after which conduct high-intensity mixed coaching with each Baltic and NATO forces. The NATO-facilitated multinational enhanced ahead presence battlegroups established in all three Baltic states (together with Poland) have additionally confirmed useful on this regard. For Ukraine, the Fast Trident sequence of annual Ukraine-NATO workout routines introduced a brigade-sized drive collectively for joint coaching. The Lithuanian-Polish-Ukrainian Brigade, a navy brigade-level group below Polish command, introduced battalion staffs from these nations collectively for annual battle employees coaching, battalion employees programs, and multinational workout routines at Joint Multinational Coaching Group Ukraine.  

Finally, new Ukrainian senior management acquiesced and extra large-scale Ukrainian workout routines benefited from NATO mentors. Simply previous to the invasion, the summer time 2021 Joint Endeavor train introduced embedded NATO observers for the primary time into Ukrainian instructions above the brigade stage — each their operational instructions and Joint Pressure Headquarters. A safety cooperation official interviewed noticed this as a significant change within the Ukrainian armed forces’ method to transformation and as indicative of their elevated trajectory in direction of the aim of NATO interoperability.

The State Partnership Program Constructed Relationships … When It Had Time to Take Root

The U.S. Army Nationwide Guard’s State Partnership Program relationships strengthened these strains of effort by constructing long-term partnerships between Ukraine and the Baltic states and U.S. Army Nationwide Guard items from California (Ukraine), Pennsylvania (Lithuania), Michigan (Latvia), and Maryland (Estonia). This system helps to create a pool of American subject-matter consultants who can rotate ahead to offer useful coaching as wanted by their companions, or host them for coaching in the US. It’s an efficient, if lower-profile, program. Most Nationwide Guard personnel keep inside the similar state as they’re promoted up the ranks. This consistency permits for secure relationship-building, as the identical people are persevering with to work together as they advance from lieutenant to colonel, and sergeant to sergeant main. Such long-term relationships assist to construct a stage of belief that’s in any other case not possible. 

Pennsylvania Army Nationwide Guard officers we interviewed described how their shut companion relationship led to a Lithuanian mechanized firm deploying to the U.S. Army’s Nationwide Coaching Heart in 2018 embedded inside a Pennsylvania Nationwide Guard battalion. Conversely, Pennsylvanian officers have served on the staffs of Lithuanian items throughout a number of NATO workout routines in their very own nation, as have officers from active-duty safety drive help brigades.

Crucially, the State Partnership Program works finest when it has time to take root. Consequently, the reinvigorated partnership between Californian items and Ukraine actually solely had time to give attention to particular person tactical abilities. The longer-running pairings with Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania nevertheless, have allowed American and partnered navy officers to work on every thing from creating non-commissioned officer corps, rehearsing fight air controller strategies, to enhancing command and management strategies on the battalion and brigade ranges.

Protection Establishment Constructing Was Important

The dialogue to this point has centered on tactical coaching efforts on the brigade stage and decrease. But bottom-up transformation additionally required top-down change. To make lower-level modifications everlasting required organizational and ministry-level reform. Legislative approval was additionally important to make sure that the navy has each the mandatory authorized authorization and monetary sources to undertake doctrinal change. 

The Ukrainian expertise is particularly instructive on this respect. The U.S. embassy put a concerted effort into pushing for high-level bureaucratic and authorized reform inside the authorities. Their efforts seem to have paid giant dividends. U.S. safety cooperation personnel and a small variety of embedded U.S. and different NATO advisors within the Ministry of Protection offered sustained engagement, supported by key engagements by the ambassadors and different State Division personnel. A Multinational Joint Committee of NATO common officers travelled to Kyiv each six months, offering yet one more alternative for key leaders to stay engaged on either side of the connection. Collectively, these helped to provide the exhausting however needed systemic modifications needed for protection transformation.

Warzone Studying Labs

Each Ukraine and the Baltic states benefited from deploying and preventing. First-hand fight expertise gave their leaders and troopers alike an opportunity to hone their warfighting abilities in a real-world fight atmosphere. For the Baltic states, this expertise got here in the type of deployments to Afghanistan (largely, however not solely, undertaken by particular operations forces). Preventing alongside different NATO forces additionally gave these items an unparalleled alternative to follow coordination and mixed operations in fight atmosphere. 

For Ukraine, seven years of preventing within the Donbas offered fight expertise for hundreds of Ukrainian troopers and officers. U.S. safety cooperation officers noticed that the static however violent preventing gave some Ukrainian brigades the possibility to make use of not too long ago acquired Western techniques, strategies, and procedures. General, nevertheless, the static nature of most of this fight didn’t lend itself to furthering larger use of the mission command idea and the larger reliance on empowering non-commissioned officers being pushed by NATO companions. 

Skilled Army Schooling

The Baltic states made attendance at skilled navy education schemes in the US and different NATO nations a key aspect within the improvement of their officer corps, based on a former U.S. particular operations officer who works intently with these militaries. Skilled navy training, significantly for the extra senior ranks, gives the chance for prolonged publicity to NATO customary practices and a community of Western navy friends. Many of the senior management ranks of Baltic state militaries are stuffed with graduates of U.S. senior service faculties, demonstrating a big return on funding from America’s Worldwide Army Schooling and Coaching Program. 

Though this program’s funding has additionally paid for the training of Ukrainian officers at U.S. senior service faculties, these graduates thus far haven’t been chosen for senior management positions. Former U.S. safety help personnel have indicated the necessity for conditionality in future help to Ukraine requiring that senior service faculty graduates be positioned in designated positions within the Ukrainian navy to justify the price of their education. That is vital, as we contend that it’s the utilization of those personnel in positions the place their militaries can finest make the most of their training that’s most vital, not merely sending officers to those faculties.

Fast Change Demanded a Complete Strategy

Our conversations with safety cooperation officers counsel that earlier than February 2022, Ukrainian command and management above the brigade stage was considerably enhancing, however nonetheless a piece in progress. Protection transformation takes time. Many officers describe the way it took time to develop momentum for change inside the Ukrainian armed forces as all of those components — significantly protection establishment constructing and opening higher-level workout routines to NATO advisors — regularly took maintain. 

Importantly, there’s a synergistic impact, and every line of effort amplified the impact of the others. For instance, items that had obtained coaching from NATO militaries (or whose commanders had been educated in U.S. or NATO employees faculties) have been extra receptive and open to additional engagement and mentoring throughout subsequent Ukrainian coaching workout routines, whereas others have been nonetheless reluctant to permit NATO mentors entry. Equally, doctrine modifications needed to be licensed by the Ukrainian parliament earlier than they may very well be carried out large-scale throughout the Ukrainian armed forces.

Are These Classes Related for Taiwan?

It goes with out saying that Taiwan just isn’t Ukraine. Neither is it Estonia, Latvia, or Lithuania. The variations are vital, particularly as American and Taiwanese decision-makers think about which facets of earlier safety cooperation efforts to emulate, and which to discard. Fortunately, among the most evident variations offset each other, which is why we think about classes realized from each Ukraine and the Baltic states. For instance, the Baltic states take pleasure in a proper protection dedication from the US. Taiwan doesn’t. However neither does Ukraine. Ukraine has strategic depth, which Taiwan — just like the Baltic states — lacks. Each Ukraine and the Baltic states share a land border with NATO, whereas Taiwan is a whole lot of miles away from its closest potential navy companion. 

Extra related to the query of coaching reform is the truth that all 5 of those militaries confronted — or, in Taiwan’s case, proceed to face — the identical fundamental organizational problem: To deal with an more and more actual safety risk, every wanted to remodel from hierarchical, hole organizations overly reliant on outdated weapons into much more decentralized and combat-credible preventing forces. All 5 wanted an exterior “shock” to beat institutional inertia and jump-start the reform course of. For Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, the concern of Russian revanchism and the hope of NATO membership offered the mandatory impetus from the second they gained independence. For Ukraine, the shock got here from Russia’s 2014 seizure of Crimea and destabilization of the Donbas. For Taiwan, Russia’s renewed assault on Ukraine in 2022 appears to have lastly set the mandatory alarm bells off.   

On the similar time, any future safety cooperation effort in Taiwan ought to take care of three vital variations between the challenges dealing with Kyiv, Riga, Tallinn, and Vilnius and people dealing with Taipei.  

Firstly, Taiwanese forces needs to be educated and able to “combat tonight” to a far larger diploma. Ukraine’s strategic depth and shared border with NATO make it comparatively simple for the 2 to work collectively, even because the preventing rages. Though Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania are far smaller than Ukraine (or Taiwan), even within the face of a (extremely unlikely) overwhelming Russian onslaught their forces might conceivably fall again on allied territory to regroup, refit, and retrain. Sadly, a whole lot of miles of water separate Taiwan from its closest potential safety companion, and seven,000 miles of water separate it from the continental United States. It stands to purpose that Beijing will do every thing it might probably to isolate Taiwan earlier than invading it, thereby eliminating significant alternatives for coaching as soon as hostilities start.

Second, Ukrainian forces had the possibility to study from preventing within the Donbas between 2014 and 2022. Seven years of battle created combat-experienced items and leaders, producing vital classes. Estonian, Latvian, and Lithuanian troopers had the chance to serve in Afghanistan, and naturally have a front-row view of the preventing in Ukraine. It appears protected to say that Beijing is unlikely to offer Taiwan an identical alternative. If Chinese language battle planners have their approach, the Taiwanese navy’s baptism by hearth may even be its funeral.

Lastly, Chinese language pink strains complicate the availability of navy coaching to a a lot larger diploma than has been the case for Ukraine and the Baltic states. To make sure, U.S. and NATO policymakers needed to engineer round Russian paranoia and the NATO-Russia Founding Act when designing coaching packages for Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. Moscow’s distrust towards Ukraine’s westward tilt positioned comparable limitations on Western efforts in that nation after 2014. However these constraints pale compared to those dealing with potential safety coaching efforts in Taiwan. Particularly, it has been lengthy understood that Beijing considers the presence of international troops on Taiwan to be a justification for battle. This concern is a key purpose why Washington has lengthy gone out of its strategy to decrease or in any other case preserve believable deniability over the servicemen and girls it has routinely despatched to Taiwan over the previous 4 many years. Thus, sending giant numbers of small-unit trainers to, or organizing large-scale workout routines on, Taiwan are probably non-starters as choices. 

Suggestions for Washington and Taipei

How, then, ought to Washington proceed? We provide three suggestions.

Coaching, Not Arms Gross sales, Ought to Be the New Precedence 

Arms gross sales dominate the Taiwan debate in Washington. However having the perfect weapons on the planet won’t matter if Taiwanese troops lack the coaching — and the sensible doctrinal ideas — to make use of them. Moreover, most of the most high-profile weapons won’t make it to Taiwan for years. For instance, the 100 AIM-9X Block II Sidewinders permitted on the market in September 2022 will make it to Taiwan in 2030. And even when the US finds a strategy to expedite the supply of already-sold weapons, Taiwan’s Ministry of Nationwide Protection will battle to soak up such an inflow. It admitted as a lot when Washington started exploring methods to hurry up the supply of 66 F-16s — licensed on the market in 2019 — final January. 

Historical past is plagued by failed militaries (Iraq and Afghanistan function current examples) that proved unable to make efficient use of the high-tech weaponry given or bought to them by the US. We, like most American protection commentators and Taiwan’s former Chief of the Normal Employees, hope that Taiwan’s navy will embrace uneven doctrinal ideas as a part of this course of. However no matter how the Ministry of Nationwide Protection plans on countering a Chinese language invasion drive, so long as Washington leaves open the chance that it’s going to come to Taiwan’s support, it ought to do what it might probably to make Taiwanese items as efficient as potential. 

Authorize and Fund a Complete, Backside-Up Safety Cooperation Program 

The Estonian, Latvian, Lithuanian, and Ukrainian examples illustrate that transformation requires change from the underside up. Congress ought to subsequently authorize and applicable funding to enact a holistic safety cooperation program with Taiwan. Current efforts, such because the not too long ago permitted State Partnership Program, the choice to let Taiwan take part within the Worldwide Army Schooling and Coaching program, and the authority to keep up an everlasting rotational coaching presence on Taiwan as stipulated within the 2023 Nationwide Protection Authorization Act, are all good begins. So too is the push to include Taiwanese observers into giant, high-profile multinational workout routines just like the Rim of the Pacific (higher often known as RIMPAC). 

Washington can construct on this basis in 3 ways. First, though issues over how Beijing would possibly react to the presence of international troops will probably preserve the American footprint on Taiwan comparatively small, there are methods to maximise the affect of even a small presence. Particularly, the Biden administration ought to push Taipei to embed American advisors in Taiwanese coaching instructions and items and may encourage allies to do the identical. Ukraine’s 2021 Joint Endeavor train exhibits how this was lastly beginning to happen and bear fruit at senior ranges within the Ukrainian navy. Though Washington could also be inclined to leverage non-public navy contractors to maintain its profile low, the observe file of such efforts has a checkered historical past. Any contracted advisory help must be embedded inside U.S. navy organizations moderately than rather than them.

Second, the Division of Protection ought to combine Taiwanese officers and staffs into joint U.S. workout routines. Transformation efforts in Ukraine and the Baltic states counsel that such efforts pay super dividends when it comes to coaching senior staffs and officers in companion militaries, and when it comes to enhancing coordination and familiarity on either side of the connection. Though the precedence is to place Taiwanese observers and liaison officers on U.S. staffs, the eventual aim needs to be to additionally combine American officers into Taiwanese staffs throughout workout routines. Washington’s skill to coordinate with Taiwanese forces in a battle might activate these types of efforts. 

Lastly, Congress ought to let the Division of Protection prepare Taiwanese items in the US. The actual fact is that whereas the Nationwide Protection Authorization Act lets the division preserve an everlasting, rotational coaching presence in Taiwan, wholesale, bottom-up transformation of how Taiwan’s navy trains calls for an method far bigger in scale. One possibility is to rotate Taiwanese corporations and finally battalions by means of coaching cycles at U.S. amenities, significantly fight coaching facilities. The U.S. Army’s new Joint Pacific Multinational Coaching Heart in Hawaii is a logical vacation spot. However the U.S. Army’s Nationwide and Joint Readiness Coaching Facilities in Fort Irwin, California and Fort Polk, Louisiana, in addition to the Air Pressure’s Crimson Flag workout routines at Nellis Air Pressure Base, make sense as effectively. 

Reinforce Backside-Up Change with a Concerted Push for High-Down Reform

Reform efforts in Ukraine and the Baltic states make it clear that altering how a military trains on the backside requires altering the way in which it does enterprise on the high. It’s no secret that Taiwan’s Ministry of Nationwide Protection has lengthy resisted change. Tsai has struggled to beat opposition from her senior generals and officers, no less than partially as a result of she lacks an efficient bureaucratic mechanism for sustaining civilian oversight, supervision, and management. Particularly, she has no equal to the Workplace of the Secretary of Protection to which she will flip when implementing an unpopular determination. 

Creating one thing much like the Workplace of the Secretary of Protection inside the Ministry of Nationwide Protection is clearly a monumental endeavor and one thing that Taiwan should resolve to do for itself. Nevertheless, Washington may help Taipei to put the groundwork. Biden administration officers — significantly these working inside the Workplace of the Secretary of Protection — can present their Taiwanese counterparts with a blueprint and roadmap. The Division of Protection can be sure that each mid-career and senior Taiwanese officer despatched to the US for skilled navy training spends time within the Workplace of the Secretary of Protection to see the way it works. Congress additionally has a job to play. It could create and fund tailor-made packages to coach younger politicians from throughout the Taiwanese political spectrum on the finer factors of civilian oversight of the navy, to incorporate conferences with senior American protection officers, conversations with employees from the Senate and Home Armed Companies Committees, and alternatives to satisfy and work alongside protection analysts at D.C. suppose tanks. Congressional members touring to Taiwan can be sure that this difficulty is one in all their important speaking factors when assembly with Taiwanese officers and legislators behind closed doorways. Most vital, Congress ought to think about including circumstances and strings to the billions of {dollars} in International Army Financing grants licensed by the newest Nationwide Protection Act.

Conclusion

Time is working out for Taiwan’s navy to adapt to the not-so-new risk atmosphere. In fact, nobody is aware of if battle is imminent, as a result of nobody is aware of what’s going on inside Xi’s thoughts. However so long as Xi retains the usage of drive on the desk, Taipei and Washington ought to do every thing of their energy to persuade him that the prices of constructing that alternative will vastly exceed the advantages. 

The choice to increase conscription can go a good distance towards reshaping Xi’s calculus, particularly whether it is paired with a dramatic enchancment in coaching high quality. Nevertheless it takes time to alter a military. Even the Ukrainian navy’s fast modernization, which stays a piece in progress, took seven years — the equal of a blink of an eye fixed in bureaucratic phrases. The highway forward may very well be even longer for Taiwan’s navy in mild of the constraints that it should navigate. 

Fortunately, Washington may help to expedite the method. Our expertise helping Ukraine and the Baltic states provides a combat-tested mannequin displaying how.  

 

 

Jerad I. Harper, Ph.D., is an active-duty U.S. Army colonel and an assistant professor on the U.S. Army Struggle School. These views are his personal and don’t signify these of the U.S. Army Struggle School, the U.S. Army, or the Division of Protection.

Michael A. Hunzeker (@MichaelHunzeker) is an affiliate professor at George Mason College’s Schar College of Coverage and Authorities, the place he’s additionally affiliate director of the Heart for Safety Coverage Research. He served within the Marine Corps from 2000 to 2006.

Picture: U.S. Army photograph by Sgt. Lauren Harrah





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