National Urban Training Center

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The National Urban Training Center, known as Baladia City or MALI (its Hebrew acronym), is a military training centre located at the Tze’elim training base in southern Israel. It is used by the Israel Defence Forces to plan assaults on Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon and Syria. The facility, which was built by the Army Corps of Engineers and funded largely from US military aid, is a 7.4-square-mile model city consisting of 1,100 basic modules that can be reconfigured by mission planners to represent specific towns. [1] The Marine Corps Times website reported in June 2007 that:

NUTC features 472 structures, 1,200 doorways, 2,500 windows, multiple elevator shafts, and four miles of paved streets and semi-paved roads. For added realism, charred automobiles and burned tires litter the roadways. In the near future, planners will add donkeys, sheep, dogs and other live animals that often provide early warning of approaching Israeli troops.[2]

The author and journalist Matt Carr writes in Race & Class that the Centre is 'fitted out with explosive devices and snipers, and populated by Israeli military graduates of Arabic language and culture programmes posing as civilians and enemy fighters.' [3]

Steven Blum of the US National Guard visited the Center in 2008 and said: 'I’d like to see Soldiers go through a facility like this somewhere before they deploy to counterinsurgency missions abroad. You get the advantage of the identical climate, the same geography, topography. ... It’s a first-rate place. It couldn’t be more realistic unless you let people actually live there.' [4]

Notes

  1. Barbara Opall-Rome, 'Marines to train at new Israeli combat center', marinecorpstimes, 25 June 2007.
  2. Barbara Opall-Rome, 'Marines to train at new Israeli combat center', marinecorpstimes, 25 June 2007.
  3. Matt Carr, 'Slouching towards dystopia: the new military futurism', Race & Class, 2010; 51; 13.
  4. Jim Greenhill, 'Israeli training facility model for National Guard', The On Guard, Volume 37 Issue 2, February 2008; p.10.