Monday, December 7, 2009 - 8:02 PM
By Dov Zakheim
Kabul is a city at war. There are green zones and red zones, and roadblocks
everywhere. The city is awash with a host of uniforms -- those of NATO states, as
well as others, from Australia to Mongolia. Americans in uniform walk the streets fully equipped and armed. American government civilians wear body armor, as I did
when making the short twenty minute walk from Camp Eggars to the U.S. Embassy.
In much of our government, however, the war is nowhere to be seen. Civil servants go
about their business as if it were peacetime. There is still a serious shortage of U.S. government civilians here
in Afghanistan, although their numbers are increasing. Many of those who do indeed
serve here do not venture out of Kabul. This is so not because they are less
dedicated to their mission. The sorry fact is that all too often they have
little to offer in the field. Their expertise tends to be bureaucratic -- they are only equipped to manage and
document projects and activities -- rather than technical.
The contrast with life back home could not be more striking. It is not just
that most U.S. citizens go about their daily business unaffected by war, (unless they
have a loved one serving in the military). Our executive branch does the same,
with the notable exceptions of pockets in State, Treasury, and even smaller
elements of other agencies.
And Congress is not much better. To be sure, it votes big supplemental
budgets. But it has not done enough to lift restrictions on government
activities that apply more to
peacetime than to war zones.
As
an example, while
here I was told of the tragic story of a U.S. military couple deployed to Afghanistan and based at Bagram Air Base that had been bunking in a
plywood structure with a tin roof called a B hut. The hut took a direct hit
from a 107mm rocket; the wife was taking a shower outside the hut. When she
returned she found her husband a victim of the hit.
Why were they in such a flimsy structure? Because of arcane Congressional
spending limitations on what is called "minor military construction."
There was no money to build the brick structures that might have saved the
soldier's, and those of others like him.
The restrictions, and, more generally, the behaviors that make good sense in peace time
are not appropriate in wartime. We cannot pretend to be a nation at peace even
as we have the better part of 100,000 troops in Afghanistan, and a virtually
like amount in Iraq, still very much at war. If we continue to do so, we will
undermine the effectiveness of any troop increases, and make success -- already a
challenging proposition -- even more difficult to achieve.
SHAH MARAI/AFP/Getty Images
Only the rich don't know we are at war. Any American wage-earner knows, and has known it since our government became a major borrower and debtor. We who are not in the US elite of corporate executives and their lackeys know that any service we may have gotten from local, state or federal sources has either disappeared or diminished in quantity and quality; and that includes hidden services such as environmental protection, testing by FDA, inspections by bridge and highway departments, consumer protection agencies and, very significantly, local police services.
We know, in spite of the false statistics from the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the Commerce Department, altered to favor adminstration propaganda, that our dollars buy less and less.
We know, too, that there is nothing that we can do about it, because this is not a government by consent of the governed; it is a government up for auction to the higher corporate bidders.
So don't tell us that we don't know we are at war. It is the publishers of FP who don't know. They don't know because they don't feel the pinch.
Exactly what would you suggest be done? It's all very well to say that the nation doesn't feel much sense of warfare, but unless you have some way to relight civic interest it doesn't matter.
The Mis-matched Civilian Surge
I'm glad that finally someone is talking about the fact that the USG civilians being sent over do not have the proper skills to be most useful. Unfortunately, the USG (USAID and State in particular) are not hiring for the newly required skill sets.
As you correctly point out, they are still hiring bureaucrats to manage activities (and obviously they still need these people to fulfill the much needed oversight functions) rather than technical experts to provide actual technical advise.
Also, what happens to all these people when the civilian surge is over?
Just asking!
The private contractor civilians as well who are in Kabul gobbling up even more government dollars and doing less than USAID/DoS/DoD. Do we really need all of them?
And do we really need all those people working at the Pizza Hut, Green Bean Coffee Shops, Burger King, PXs, Popeye's...Orange Julius!!!!?....Dairy Queen?
Are we even at war everywhere in Afghanistan and Iraq??? Being in Bagram, Kabul, and Kandahar makes one feel at home.
We've TRIED to build civilian capacity
www.CivilianResponseCorps.gov
Unfortunately, inadequate Bush Administration support and Congressional fecklessness means we are 4 years behind in doing it.
If it is...then by all means we should mobilize the masses and ensure that they realize what it truly means to be "at war". Were we anymore at war 5 years ago when you were at DoD?
I agree with your points; however, we have "flimsy structures" because we are not permanently establishing bases. We do have them in many places in AFG, but trailers are cheaper to bring in and wooden structures are cheaper to build so that the contractors doing the work put more in their pockets.
And I laughed at the couple of points raised with regards to the "military couple" affected by the rocket strike. This bit fits perfect with something Tom Ricks has on his blog regarding sex in military. Couples shacking up together should be a BIG no no in country unless we ring back the whore houses/MWR. Talk about lowering morale and opening up the doors for discipline issues. Only her husband's morale will be high, unless she is raising a couple other soldiers/Marines' morale as well.
Where were you for the last 8 years? This critique would have been accurate the entire time, yet amazingly I only see it now. Funny how a change in the party in charge results in such major changes in attitude...
This was my immediate reaction. The Bush Administration never asked Americans for any sacrifice and instead passed tax cuts and told Americans that going shopping was patriotic. I could go on but you all know the bill of particulars. As for the crack about civilians in govt, an Administration, party, and "movement" that denigrates government, discourages government service (andy card you know what I mean!), and tries to starve the beast should not be surprised when the government isn't able to do all the citizens require of it.
That is one of the cornerstones of USAID recruiting requirements: four years overseas experience with a contractor. You can't work with them unless you already were a contractor. Go figure?
Not quite the kind of requirement for an organization that wants to change by hiring technical people instead of journeyman contract administrators.
I have a friend with Arabic language skills and technical skills of the appropriate kind---but only one year with DoS. Can't get past the first screen-out from USAID.
Maybe they will start changing in a few years...
We were told by Bush to "not worry about terrorism... that's my job" and to go shopping and buy duct tape. Meanwhile there has been torture, innocent deaths of our brave troops and Afghan villagers, bombings of civilian towns, and plundering of US treasury all for what? Oil pipelines? Poppy fields? To line the pockets of the military industrial complex? Does the average US citizen know that atrocities that were committed in Afghanistan by NATO forces?
...for if we want lasting peace, then the words of the international community must mean something. Those regimes that break the rules must be held accountable. Sanctions must exact a real price. Intransigence must be met with increased pressure -- and such pressure exists only when the world stands together as one. (Words of OBAMA on receiving Noble peace award. I wonder why US does not think same way when UN adopt a unanimous resolution against Isreal.
Shadow Government is a blog about U.S. foreign policy under the Obama administration, written by experienced policy makers from the loyal opposition and curated by Peter D. Feaver and William Inboden.
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