January 1, 2007 at 09:18:45

Changing the Game: Brainstorming Peace in Iraq

by Colleen Turner




Americans now overwhelmingly believe a change in Iraq
strategy is needed regardless of their initial
positions on the war. Unfortunately, the options
currently proposed involve undesirable consequences
and offer little in the way of innovation. President
Bush recently said, "I'm open to any idea or
suggestion that will help us achieve our goals of
defeating the terrorists and ensuring that Iraq's
democratic government succeeds." Soon thereafter, the
new Secretary of Defense, Robert Gates, said, "It's my
impression that, frankly, there are no new ideas on
Iraq." Coming up with creative ways for dealing with
difficulties used to be a USA trademark. Is ingenuity
no longer a fundamental American characteristic?

Great sports coaches, scientists, and business
entrepreneurs change the game when their approach
fails to achieve the results they want. Football
quarterbacks mix it up by throwing the ball to open up
the playing field. Medical researchers creatively
visualize formulas to develop ground-breaking cures.
Engineers conjure up revolutionary technologies by
imagining wonderful inventions if only they existed.
Are resolutions to conflicts any different in terms of
the creative thinking processes needed to achieve
breakthroughs?

The international relations "playing field" is
offering a tremendous opportunity to change our "game"
and creative solutions could well serve Iraqi desires
to achieve peace. From reasonable to ridiculous,
brainstorming a profusion of ideas without initial
criticism or rejection can enhance the pool of options
from which viable solutions can be realized. To get
the American innovation ball rolling, the following
suggestions are offered:

1. HOLLYWOOD Entertainment minds regularly figure out
ways to beat overwhelming odds in their fantasy realms
and some of them could prove useful in reality. Pull
together a team of creative political TV and movie
scriptwriters from shows like The Sum of All Fears,
The Bourne Identity, The West Wing, The X-Files, Close
Encounters of the Third Kind, and Mission: Impossible
to develop a script that credibly transforms Iraq's
current conundrum into an inspiring example for
reformers in the region.

2. CONFLICT PREVENTION As the limits of military might
become apparent, vigorously champion soft power
methods that emphasize cultural and ideological means
of international influence. Use pre-conflict
management tools (PCMT) developed by the Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) to address a
range of factors before they result in the outbreak of
violence. Draw upon best practices for deterring
violent street gangs to constructively redirect
sectarian conflicts.

3. MASTERFUL TRAINERS Call upon coaches from
cutting-edge management training, systems, and
education programs to provide their potentially
transferable expertise to the international arena. For
example:

• Ask the USC Institute for Creative Technologies to
adapt their virtual immersion program for junior Army
officers to train our nation's spokespersons in ways
of communicating that lead to more desirable outcomes.


• Use programs like "Merging Cultures" and "The
Organization Workshop" developed by Power and Systems,
Inc. featured in Fast Company magazine to enhance
understanding and performance effectiveness when
diverse groups need to work together to achieve
outcomes.

• Request IntelliLearn develop multi-sensory
experiential programs that dramatically reduce
training time while increasing retention for enhancing
the skills of public servants.

• Invite Frontier Associates, Inc., dedicated to
making "impossible" organizational changes possible
without resistance, to enhance leadership
effectiveness for empowering Iraqi forces as well as
our own.

4. RECRUIT CELEBRITIES For better and worse, popular
American stars broadcast an image of the U.S. around
the globe. When they behave badly, their behaviors
represent American cultural values to those in other
countries, often causing a loss of respect. When taken
to the extreme, their actions can even create a
security risk for all Americans. Recruit celebrities
like Britney, Paris, Lindsay, Mel, Michael, and Miss
USA to make patriotic public service announcements
that inspire hearts and minds by expressing humility
and contrition instead of evoking anything but
jealousy of our freedoms.

5. REVERSE CO-PAY Insurgents cannot be successful
without support from the wider population. A "tough
love" approach to how U.S. monetary contributions are
dispensed might help Iraqis decide (and show us) who
and what they want to support. For every person killed
or injured by an insurgent attack, publicize a reverse
co-pay system that diverts a portion of U.S. money
slated to build hospitals, schools, and infrastructure
in Iraq to a starvation relief effort in Africa.

6. MOTIVATION INTEGRITY A desire to control Iraqi oil
and establish permanent military bases in the region
has been widely perceived as motivating factors behind
the U.S. occupation of Iraq. To help dispel these
opinions and the negative actions they encourage, make
repeated declarations these perceptions are inaccurate
and back our words with dramatic measures to
underscore these points.

7. REFRAMING: THE GOAL IS PEACE! Stop fighting
terrorism to defend our way of life and start
reinventing ourselves and our way of life. Acknowledge
what is great about what we do as well as what needs
to be changed because it isn't working. Strive for
success for all groups involved rather than make
winning the objective. Refocus our attention and
resources away from the problem of terror (an emotion)
and terrorism (a tactic/strategy for achieving
political ends) and instead, put our effort into
solutions that support the goal of peace and stability
in Iraq, the region, and around the globe.

These ideas represent a small sample of what
brainstorming the peace in Iraq can offer to change
the game. Solutions abound for those willing to
unleash transformative thinking processes and there
are no limits on what all of us together can create.
Yet as one notable American who overcame a series of
"insurmountable" odds to achieve success once said:

"We can't become what we need to be by remaining what
we are."

- Oprah Winfrey



colleenturner.com

The author is a retired U.S. Air Force Reserve
Lieutenant Colonel who conducted research on "Best
Practices for Inspiring Pro-American Sentiment –
Exploring Methods of American Masters for Winning
Hearts and Minds Around the Globe": See University of
Southern California link - USC Center on Public
Diplomacy -
http://uscpublicdiplomacy.com/pdfs/turner.pdf She has
also designed and evaluated terrorist defense
scenarios and served as a management trainer and
consultant. In the sport of volleyball, she was a
member of the USA team and her jersey was retired at
UCLA where she obtained her Ph.D. in Social Welfare.

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