A dozen U.S. troops just wrapped up a seven-week trip to Nigeria, where they trained local soldiers in advanced infantry tactics that, in all likelihood, they’ll use to beat back religious extremist terror in their country.

The soldiers, some two Green Berets and six conventional troops from Fort Bragg’s Security Assistance Training Management Organization and four infantrymen from 1st Brigade, 10th Mountain Division, visited the Nigerian Army Infantry School to train 200 soldiers from the 26th Infantry Battalion.

“They face a significant threat from both Boko Haram and ISIS,” Capt. Stephen Gouthro, the group’s officer-in-charge, told Army Times in a Feb. 15 phone interview. “We, as Americans, have been working with this country in various capacities, and this is just one more of those capacities where they would like our assistance with tactics … the way we do business.”

Members of the Security Assistance Training Management Organization team up with Nigerian Army Infantry School soldiers in Nigeria. (Capt. James Sheehan/Army)





SATMO, Gouthro’s unit, is mostly known for providing support to foreign military sales. Recently, SATMO soldiers have gone to countries like Slovakia and Colombia to train their troops on that new equipment.

“What’s unique about the Nigeria mission, for us, is that it’s not tied to any specific type of sale,” Gouthro said.



Instead, the group in Nigeria focused on advanced infantry skills, starting with patrolling and counter-IED training, working up to movement-to-contact and ambushes or raids with a platoon-sized element.

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Every day, according to the group’s noncommissioned officer-in-charge, the U.S. soldiers would take the Nigerian soldiers through a variety of training lanes.

“One lane could be doing IEDs and raids that day,” said Sgt. 1st Class Chris Campbell. “Another lane would be doing enemy prisoner-of-war searches or ambushes.”



Those rotations would go on all day, with a midday break.

“We take them out, we assess their capes, and then we try to improve what they already have,” Campbell said.



According to Gouthro, what they already had was more than his soldiers expected going into it.

“They’re structured very similarly to what we’re used to, which helps us. They have similar roles,” he said. “They understand that the platoon leader is in charge of the overall plan, understand the platoon sergeant is there to take care of – as we say – the ‘beans and the bullets.’ Sustainment-type operations.”

They had the basics, Campbell said.

“I think, really, what they need help with is, a little bit of planning and a little bit of employing leadership tactics on their platoon,” he said. “Because they move well, they just need a little tweaking in controlling, planning and executing their missions at the leadership level.”

So the group shared their skills, while being careful not to dictate how they manage discipline and organization.

“We do give guidance on that, but at the same time, it’s their army — so we’re not changing the way they do business,” he said. “We’re just building on what they already have.”

The SATMO members had some experience with training Iraqi and Afghan forces, he added, but they didn’t want to pre-judge the Nigerian army.

“We were very impressed at the level of motivation and desire to learn that the Nigerian soldiers brought to the training,” Gouthro said.

And, he added, in all likelihood the 26th Infantry Battalion will soon be using those honed skills in theater.

“They’re not specifically slated for a deployment, that we’re aware of, but we know that the rotation will come around for them to rotate up north, to the Lake Chad Basin, where most of the conflict is in the country,” Gouthro said.

While soldiers from both Special Forces and civil affairs backgrounds have been deploying to the area for years to help local forces stabilize, the U.S. presence in the region came to a head late last year when an ambush killed four Americans deployed to Niger.

Fallout from Niger ambush could scale back Africa missions, strip commanders of autonomy A probe into the Niger ambush that killed four U.S. soldiers is expected to recommend reducing ground missions in West Africa and stripping field commanders of the autonomy that allows them to send service members on risky missions.

“It really puts a spin of realism on what we’re doing,” Gouthro said. “It’s very possible that this training event will be some of the last training they get before they go into combat for their country.”



