I was a primary instructor at the Firing Battery Branch, Cannon Division, Weapons Dept., U.S. Army Field Artillery School, Ft. Sill in the early eighties. Groovy assignment that really positioned me to understand the fundamentals of my craft.
We taught new army, marine, and foreign officers. A LOT of Yemeni, Qatari, U.A.E., Kuwaiti, and a few Saudi officers, Lebanese, Malaysians, and Singaporeans. Gotta say, the guys from the gulf thoroughly sucked. They were completely dis-oriented by their western experience. BLEW most of their minds. Language skills really hindered their progress and fell behind their foreign peers quickly. Malaysians and Singaporeans were totally top-notch. Maybe cause they hate each other.
Our advance course had the interesting moment of two colonels from the Egyptian and Israeli armies. This was 1981 so the discussions were interesting, off-topic constantly, and occasionally lively. In my building alone, we had German, Australian, and Dutch liaison officers with others throughout the post-some serving as instructors. All professional artillerymen.
No Indians. No Pakistanis. Neither as students nor instructors. Like the Egyptian and Israeli colonels, there are environements that foster sub-national level meetings between professionals that promote greater understanding and contact.
Remains a goal of mine that there'd be a joint Indo-Pak Mountain Corps of two divisions serving in Afghanistan...under American command.
Always thought that might be fun joint training for everybody concerned.
Can have the Americans, of course, because we're already there. Can't have one of the others, though, without both.
Only seems fair, right?