Train and Equip soldier instructing Georgian troops on the dangers of conducting live-fire ambushes and maintaining muzzle control. The
Georgia Train and Equip Program (
GTEP) was an American-sponsored 18-month,
$64-million program aimed at increasing the capabilities of the
Georgian armed forces by training and equipping four 600-man
battalions with light weapons,
vehicles and communications. The program enabled the US to expedite funding for the Georgian military for
Operation Enduring Freedom. On 27 February 2002, the US media reported that the U.S. would send approximately two hundred
United States Army Special Forces soldiers to Georgia to train Georgian troops. The program implemented
President Bush's decision to respond to the
Government of Georgia's request for assistance to enhance its counter-terrorism capabilities and addressed the
situation in the
Pankisi Gorge. The program was planned to be a 20-month long, $64 million effort. The move drew protests from many
Russians. On 1 March 2002, in response to the domestic outcry, Russian president
Vladimir Putin met with Georgian president
Eduard Shevardnadze in
Kazakhstan and pledged his support for the American military initiative. The program began in May 2002 when
American special forces soldiers of the
10th Special Forces Group began training select units of the Georgian Armed Forces, including the 12th Commando Light Infantry Battalion, the 16th Mountain-Infantry Battalion, the
13th "Shavnabada" Light Infantry Battalion, the 11th Light Infantry Battalion, a mechanized company, and small numbers of Interior Ministry troops and border guards. The goal of the program was to boost the proficiency of Georgia's security forces in areas including
border security,
anti-terrorism, disaster response. Responsibility for training Georgian forces was eventually handed off to the
U.S. Marine Corps in conjunction with the
British Army. British and American teams worked as part of a joint effort to train each of the four infantry battalion staffs and their organic rifle companies. This training began with the individual soldier and continued through fire team, squad, platoon, company, and battalion level tactics as well as staff planning and organization. Upon completing training, each of the new Georgian infantry battalions began preparing for deployment rotations in support of the Global
War on Terrorism. As part of the program Georgian troops were issued new uniforms, boots, weapons, and other articles of equipment. Although GTEP formally ended in April 2004, US military assistance to Georgia continued through the
Georgia Sustainment and Stability Operations Program. Part of this program involved preparing
Georgian units for operations in US-led
Multinational Force Iraq. That program ended in September 2007.
Sustainment and Stability Operations John F. Tefft addresses the Georgian graduates of the GSSOP II Program. June 17, 2007.
The Georgia Sustainment and Stability Operations Program (
GSSOP) was a security assistance program designed to create an increased capability in the
Georgian military to
support Operation Iraqi Freedom stability missions. Launched in January 2005, GSSOP was also designed to help solidify the progress made during the
Georgia Train and Equip Program (GTEP) of 2002–2004 and continue to assist in the implementation of
western standards in the Georgian armed forces. The first phase of the program (GSSOP-I) lasted about 18 months and cost approximately $60 million. It ended in October 2006 to be succeeded by GSSOP-II, which lasted until June 2007. The training was conducted, primarily at the
Krtsanisi National Training Centre near
Tbilisi, by the
United States Army Special Forces and
United States Marine Corps Forces, Europe. The beneficiaries were the 22nd, 23rd, 32nd and 33rd Light Infantry Battalions, logistic battalions of the 1st, 2nd, Infantry Brigades, the reconnaissance companies of the 2nd and 3rd Infantry Brigades, and an independent military police company. On August 31, 2009, the U.S. and Georgia inaugurated the Georgia Deployment Program—International Security Assistance Force (GDP—ISAF) In order to prepare the Georgian units for deployment in
Afghanistan as part of the
International Security Assistance Force. Originally planned as a two-year engagement, the success of past missions has extended the pairing as the Georgia Deployment Program—
Resolute Support Mission (GDP—RSM) into 2020. == Casualties ==