The Jerusalem Post

Language school IDF’s weapon against Iran

- • By ANNA AHRONHEIM

Israel’s military has a secret weapon as the war-betweenwar­s campaign against Hezbollah and Iran continues to expand: the Language Teaching Department at the Military Intelligen­ce and Cyber Instructio­n Unit (MICIU), a language school where soldiers become fluent in Arabic or Farsi in under two months.

In a nondescrip­t building on a base in the center of the country sits the largest intelligen­ce school in the entire Middle East. Thousands of soldiers and officers pass through its doors every year, training for positions in the IDF’s Military Intelligen­ce Division.

“It’s not like in a normal school where students are taught just a language,” Maj. V., head of the MICIU’s Language Teaching Department, told The Jerusalem Post. “We aren’t here just to learn a language; the language is a tool to get and understand the intelligen­ce we collect.”

The school, which has existed for over 50 years, uses innovative approaches and learning environmen­ts that within weeks have soldiers understand­ing both the language and culture of their enemies.

V.’s name can’t be divulged

for security reasons. The identity of R. and N. are similarly secret.

R. has been an instructor at the school for 47 years, and teaches spoken Arabic. Her daughter, Master Sgt. N., teaches written Arabic.

“It’s a challengin­g and hard role because we have the responsibi­lity of the state’s security on our shoulders,” R. said. “To work in this environmen­t is serving the country, on all levels.”

It’s not only conscripts who study at the MICIU, but officers in other security agencies whose operationa­l activity sees them interactin­g with Palestinia­ns or the Arab world on a regular basis.

V. explained that in recent years, fundamenta­list Islam and the Persian language have become a more central part of the school, which for decades focused on various Arabic dialects, as well as Hebrew.

The Hebrew language courses are “a growing trend” at the school, not only for new immigrants whose mother tongue isn’t Hebrew, but for Israelis who “don’t read or write enough and therefore whose Hebrew just isn’t good enough,” V. said.

While the IDF’s language school is the largest of its kind, there are several schools across the country teaching Arabic and one which teaches Farsi, giving students the opportunit­y to be selected to the Intelligen­ce Unit’s language tracks that opens the doors to the elite Unit 8200.

“It’s more challengin­g because [Persian] is not taught in Israeli schools,” V. said. “This is the only place in the country that researches and teaches the language so intensely. Because of the dynamic world of intelligen­ce and changes in the intelligen­ce, students are learning non-stop.”

Students learn from 8 a.m. until 11 p.m. daily for 10 weeks to get a matriculat­ion certificat­e. This is followed by another 10 weeks of advanced courses.

Despite the growing number of computeriz­ed language translatio­n tools available, there’s nothing better than the human mind.

“You still need people who don’t only know the language” but who can read between the lines and give the precise intelligen­ce the military needs, according to V.

“Time is not a luxury that we have,” V said. “The soldiers have only two years where they are serving, and I want them to be as effective as possible in their

work.” •

 ?? (IDF Spokespers­on’s Unit) ?? SOLDIERS STUDY for 15 hours per day and achieve fluency in Arabic or Farsi.
(IDF Spokespers­on’s Unit) SOLDIERS STUDY for 15 hours per day and achieve fluency in Arabic or Farsi.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel