Considering the amount of vetrans already in law enforcement I have a hard time believing that more task forces, more grants, more cooperation between local police forces and the military is a net benefit. Also, huge lol that some local yokel is going to be informing SOP for the military in a war zone.
1) you can "lol" at the completely hypothetical details, but it's ridiculous to think police couldn't learn something from military, and vice versa. I mean, you acknowledge police are "yokels", but at the same time say they pretty much know all they need to because so many of them are vets? Sure, collaboration and sharing of knowledge may not be necessary, but being afraid of potential collaboration is tin foil hat territory.
2) The rest of your post I basically agree with, other than it seems like you would like law enforcement to do what they are asked to do less effectively. What needs to change is what they are asked to do, perhaps.
I am not afraid of potential collaboration because I view it as a conspiracy. I think it is laughable that the half of a trillion dollar (+) military would be asking locally funded police for advice. Even if RCPD was ready share its wealth of knowledge on setting up DUI checkpoints or how bicycle cops can save on gas money, the military is never going to ask for it.
As for police, nearly every department of any size has a hand full of veterans in its force. Some of them may even have been, and I know I am blowing your mind here, military police. I fail to see what productive end could be served by providing military training to civilian officers who are, again, not in a warzone. A lot of police have an enormous hard on for guns and power and have several incredibly strong layers that protect them from facing any consequences when they abuse their power. Emboldening them to further militarize (with weapons, tactics, even a militaristic mindset) is precisely the wrong direction.
2) Yeah pretty much both of those if you view SWAT teams and military armored vehicles and flashbangs etc as police being effective.