Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,716,402 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

An unqualified training success story! The Defense Institute of Security Assistance Management sends a mobile education team to Egypt.


Our Defense Institute of Security Assistance Management (DISAM DISAM Defense Institute of Security Assistance Management
DISAM Direct Indexed Sequential Access Method
) Mobile Education Teams (MET) have traveled to Egypt in 1991, 1998, and 2001. After the 2001 classes, the Egyptian Armaments Authority (EAA EAA Experimental Aircraft Association
EAA European Aluminium Association (Brussels, Belgium)
EAA European Acoustics Association
EAA Export Administration Act
EAA Everglades Agricultural Area
EAA European Association of Archaeologists
) requested annual METs. The first "annual" MET was held in February-March 2002. To meet the EAA request for the 2003 class, DISAM sent a MET to Egypt in January-February 2003 to provide both a Foreign Purchaser Course (SAM-F) and a Foreign Executive Seminar (SAM-FE). This year's DISAM team consisted of Mr. Greg Sutton (Team Chief), Lieutenant Colonel Bill Rimpo, USAF, Major Bob Holzhauer, USA, and, for the second year in a row, Mr. Ed Smith.

Once again both courses were conducted at the Egyptian Armaments Authority Headquarters m Cairo, Egypt. Although the courses were primarily for Egyptian Armaments Authority officers involved in foreign military sales That portion of United States security assistance authorized by the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, as amended, and the Arms Export Control Act of 1976, as amended. This assistance differs from the Military Assistance Program and the International Military Education and Training Program  (FMS FMS - Flexible Manufacturing System (factory automation). ) programs, key officers from other Army, Air Force and Navy units involved in FMS also attended the courses.

The Egyptian Armaments Authority had originally planned for forty students for the SAM-F class and twenty students for the SAM-FE class. On opening day the classrooms were packed! The final student tally for the Foreign Purchaser Course was forty-six students, and for the Foreign Executive Seminar, there were twenty-one students. Students in the SAM-F ranged in grade from First Lieutenant to Major General, while the SAM-F consisted of Lieutenant Colonel to Lieutenant General (Retired).

Brigadier General Abdel Mohsen Shabrawy, Deputy Chief, Procurement Branch, Egyptian Armaments Authority, opened the courses by stressing the continued importance of FMS to the Egyptian military and the need for continued cooperation between the U.S. and Egyptian military forces. He requested the students study hard and ask lots of questions and they did both.

Of special note, the classrooms had been updated since our last visit. The Executive Conference Room where the SAM-FE was held, boasted a completely new projector, white board and software. Four additional video screens were added in the main auditorium. This allowed students in the rear to see the presentations more clearly. All the new equipment is controlled from a central control room which was continually manned by computer specialists.

Although an examination is optional for METs, the Foreign Purchaser Course students were required by Egyptian Armaments Authority to take and pass a final course exam. The examination we administered was based on the same examination that is given to our continental United States United States territory, including the adjacent territorial waters, located within North America between Canada and Mexico. Also called CONUS.  students in the SAM-C SAM-C Security Assistance Management - CONUS  course. All the students passed with high marks, a great ending to another successful MET.

Major General Mahfouz El Bassyouni, Assistant Chief, Armaments Authority, presided over the closing ceremonies, along with Major General Khaled Metwaly, Chief, Procurement Branch, Armaments Authority and Brigadier General Abdel Mohsen Shabrawy, Deputy Chief, Procurement Branch, Armaments Authority. In his graduation remarks, Major General Bassyouni noted that this was the largest class ever and congratulated all the students on their accomplishments. He then awarded the students their graduation certificates. Major General Metwaly, Colonel Mohammed Ibrahim Ali Abdalla and the entire administrative staff of the Armaments Authority pulled out all the stops to insure that the DISAM team was supported during the entire visit.

In preparation for the team's arrival, Lieutenant Colonel Garret Grimm (USA) and Major Sean Mahan (USAF), from the Office of Military Cooperation (OMC OMC Organisation Mondiale du Commerce (French: WTO)
OMC Organización Mundial del Comercio (Spanish: World Trade Organization)
OMC Organização Mundial do Comércio
) Training Division (Cairo), worked with DISAM and Egyptian Armaments Authority, collecting and delivering the training materials and coordinating the training facilities and arranging billeting and daily transportation. Special thanks to Major Mahan for developing and presenting a lesson on OMG Cairo's role and responsibilities to both classes and participating in the closing ceremonies. As always, the DISAM team appreciated the OMG support for this annual event.

The Egyptian Armaments Authority was enthusiastic with the response from the students. This was the largest class in the history of the program. Student feedback once again indicated that our courses exceeded the educational objective of providing students with a through overview of the security assistance program.

Brigadier General Mohsen, in his role as training coordinator, once again requested DISAM continue to schedule annual METs. The OMC Cairo has already received a formal request from Egyptian Armaments Authority for another MET in fiscal year 2004. DISAM looks forward to fulfilling the requirement, especially since January in Egypt is always a great respite from the winter in Dayton, Ohio.

About the Author

Ed Smith has an extensive background in security assistance programs and training. He is currently an Associate Professor of Security Assistance Management at DISAM as well as the CONUS Course Manager and USAF Seminar Lead. Ed has held positions as a Logistics Analyst for DSAMS DSAMS Defense Security Assistance Management System  Training and Field Support, Chief, Arabian Programs Branch, Air Force Security Assistance Center (AFSAC AFSAC Air Force Security Assistance Center
AFSAC Air Force Special Activities Center
), Chief, Cost Sharing Branch, ACofS (J-4), Yongsan, Korea, Air Force Logistics Command Air Force Logistics Command (AFLC) was a former United States Air Force command. Its headquarters was located at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio. On July 1, 1992, AFLC and Air Force Systems Command were merged to form the Air Force Materiel Command, also located at  Security Assistance Program Liaison Officer to PACOM PACOM Pacific Command
PACOM Pan-African Committee (for START, the Global Change System for Research, Analysis and Training) 
, and Security Assistance Program Manager, International Logistics Center (ILC). He was awarded a Master of Science/Logistics Management from the Air Force Institute of Technology The Naval Postgraduate School serves a similar purpose for the U.S. Navy and U.S. Marine Corps. The U.S. Army does not have a comparable school; Army officers study at the Naval Postgraduate School or AFIT. , and a Bachelor of Business A Bachelor of Business (BBus) is a three or four year business degree offered by many universities around the world, particularly the newer universities from the post-Dawkins era in Australia and New Zealand .  Administration/Business and Finance from the University of Massachusetts The system includes UMass Amherst, UMass Boston, UMass Dartmouth (affiliated with Cape Cod Community College), UMass Lowell, and the UMass Medical School. It also has an online school called UMassOnline. .
COPYRIGHT 2003 Defense Institute of Security Assistance Management
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Smith, Forrest
Publication:DISAM Journal
Date:Mar 22, 2003
Words:835
Previous Article:The Defense Institute of International Legal Studies sends a mobile education team to Sierra Leone.
Next Article:Mexico hosts the Defense Institute of Security Assistance Management's mobile education team.



Related Articles
Defense Institute of Security Assistance Management mobile education team returns to Egypt.(Brief Article)
The DISAM Journal of International Security Assistance Management.
Defense Institute of Security Assistance Management mobile education team travels to Kazakhstan.(U.S. security cooperation)
The DISAM Journal of international security assistance management.
Mexico hosts the Defense Institute of Security Assistance Management's mobile education team.
Defense Institute of Security Assistance Management mobile education team travels to Algeria.
The Defense Institute of Security Assistance Management international mobile education team visits Estonia.
Distinguished Visitor Orientation Tour and Orientation Tour Program.
The Defense Institute of Security Assistance Management Mobile Education Team visits Bahrain.(EDUCATION AND TRAINING)
Military education and training.(EDUCATION AND TRAINING)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles