Call for Feedback
Help Shape the Future of Civil Affairs
By Lieutenant Colonel Colin Blair
Article published on: November 13, 2025 in the 2025 e-Edition of Special Warfare
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Have you ever observed a capability gap and advocated for a change, only to see your thoughts and ideas go
nowhere? All too often, units develop important insights from training events and generate extensive
after-action reviews, only for these products to sit at the team or company level – of little to no use to the
broader enterprise.
The Civil Affairs Proponent at the U.S. Army Special Operations Center of Excellence is rebooting its lessons
learned program to better capture insights from the operational force! Your insights are critical to modernizing
Civil Affairs doctrine, training, and capabilities to meet the demands of large-scale combat operations.
By sharing your hard-won lessons and experiences, you can help identify capability gaps, update doctrine and
training, validate best practices, and help the Civil Affairs Proponent develop the branch as we adapt to an
evolving operational environment.
In the past, lessons learned have helped to inform and define capability gaps within the branch, eventually
leading to changes such as the introduction of the Civil Affairs task force unit of action, the transformation
of Civil Affairs’ core competencies, and the emphasis on the importance of civil knowledge over civil
information. These changes improved and clarified the capabilities which Civil Affairs provides to supported
units across the competition-crisis-conflict continuum.
What We’re Looking For
We want to hear about your experiences involving civil affairs forces, including
- Operational Lessons: Insights from deployments, exercises, or training events.
- Capability Gaps: Areas where Civil Affairs forces lacked tools, training, or resources.
- Best Practices: Techniques that improved Civil Affairs effectiveness.
- Emerging Trends: Observations on how Civil Affairs forces must adapt to evolving
environments.
How to Share Your Feedback
Submit directly to the Special Operations Center of Excellence Civil Affairs Proponent.
--or--
Submit applicable lessons learned either to the Quick-Fire Application or the Joint Lessons Learned Information
System (JLLIS).
The Civil Affairs Proponent’s efforts will eventually merge into a larger Special Operations Center of Excellence
lessons learned system to inform changes across doctrine, organization, training, materiel, leadership and
education, personnel, facilities, and policy. This may provide other opportunities for the operational force to
leverage their observations into improvements to the force.
Conclusion
Your voice matters. By sharing your lessons learned, you contribute to the readiness and effectiveness of Civil
Affairs forces in addressing the problems of today and preparing for the challenges of tomorrow. Help us build a
stronger, smarter, and more adaptable Civil Affairs force—submit your feedback today!
Author
Lieutenant Colonel Colin Blair is an Active Guard Reserve Civil
Affairs Officer leading the Doctrine Division of the Civil Affairs Proponent at the Special Operations
Center of Excellence. He is a native of Anchorage, Alaska with over 15 years of service in the active and
reserve components. The views, opinions, and analysis expressed do not represent the position of the U.S.
Army or the Department of War.