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Who's Watching Karzai?

by Evelyn Farkas Info

Evelyn Farkas
 
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Hamid Karzai Rahmat Gul / AP Photo The 30,000 extra troops headed to Afghanistan may be accompanied by nearly 60,000 contractors. But Evelyn Farkas says a civilian surge will be useless if no one’s keeping track of it—and Karzai.

Up to 56,000 contractors will accompany the troop surge to Afghanistan, bringing the total Pentagon contractor force up to as high as 160,000, according to a recent report by the Congressional Research Service. Civilian contractors are already about 62 percent of the Department of Defense force total in Afghanistan. Yet according to the CRS, the Pentagon does not have a full picture of where all these contractors are, what they are doing, and how they fit into the overall strategy.

Analysts argue that the Department of Defense needs to “establish and commit to a strategic approach that defines how contractors should be used to achieve operational success.” Great idea. Now what about the State Department and U.S. Agency for International Development contractors? How about all the U.S. civilians working in Afghanistan? And let’s not stop there—who is coordinating the civilian efforts of the 42 troop-contributing countries in Afghanistan?

For the last eight years, the civilian efforts have not had the desired effect because they have not been properly coordinated. There needs to be one person to coordinate with—and put pressure on—President Hamid Karzai.

In his standard command briefing, Gen. Stanley McChrystal points out that he has no civilian counterpart. While he is working to coordinate the military efforts of NATO and non-NATO countries, to ensure unity of command and unity of effort, there is no civilian doing the same for the critical political and economic work being conducted by the countries participating in the stability operation in Afghanistan.

Why does this matter? For the last eight years, as several U.N. and U.S. officials told a visiting NATO delegation to Afghanistan in the fall, civilian efforts have not had the desired effect because they have not been properly coordinated. The funding and projects were devised and implemented with national interests or perspectives in mind, and have had less impact than they might have had together. Like raindrops, they drizzled, scattered, and left little mark; had they been channeled, they might have added up to a stream. Worse, of course, is the possibility that some efforts operated at cross purposes.

A strong leader in charge of international civilian efforts in Afghanistan could ensure that discrete contributions are brought together to create a “force multiplying” effect. He or she could also set objectives and speak to the Afghan government with one voice. Translation: There needs to be one person to coordinate with—and put pressure on—President Hamid Karzai.

There is of course, precedent for this in Bosnia and in Kosovo. In the former, the key international countries, the so-called Contact Group members—the U.S., Russia, U.K, France, Italy—established an Office of the High Representative as part of the Dayton Peace Agreement. OHR’s mandate is to oversee the implementation of the civilian effort in Bosnia. It has done so, exercising remarkable powers vis-à-vis the government of Bosnia, including the ability to remove recalcitrant Bosnian leaders acting counter to the requirements of the Dayton Agreement. In the first few years of the international intervention, the high representative used his powers to enforce freedom of movement by requiring a common license plate and also pushed through the adoption of a common currency. The high representative was also the civilian equivalent of, or counterpart to, the NATO military commander.

In Kosovo, the international community established the U.N. Mission in Kosovo, a transitional U.N. administration led by a special representative of the secretary general. UNMIK established a shadow government, but one linked to the Kosovar administrators and operating in tandem with them. The U.N. mission was responsible for coordinating all civilian efforts pertaining to four areas, or “pillars”: 1) humanitarian assistance; 2) civil administration; 3) democratization and institution-building, and; 4) reconstruction and economic development. Not only was the entire international civilian effort coordinated and ultimately the responsibility of one leader, but civil-military coordination also was fostered consciously. The head of UNMIK, starting in 1999, and the commander of NATO’s forces in Kosovo, learning from civil-military coordination shortfalls in Bosnia, established a close daily relationship.

December 17, 2009 | 12:10am
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Comments ()

Martyz42

The bottom line here is really simple... We are killing & thousands of non Americans & thousands of Americans are being killed & for what.... The truth is there are only a few people who should be eliminated from power & the Caped Wonder is the first....

If we started backing the right people when dealing with these governments very few people would die. Bush killed & due to his mismanagement caused the death of thousands of Americans when we really only needed to kill a few people...

Iran is really in the same place... Kill maybe a hundred zealots at the top of the religious government & the nation becomes democratic & would be lead by the young who are eager to be part of the world..

Many years ago a movie about World War One had a few troopers in a fox hole saying why not put the two leaders in a ring & let them fight to the finish & not kill millions... These wars where thousands, hundreds of thousands die need to stop, somehow the people on this planet need to figure out a way to stop killing masses of innocent people while the leaders like Bush & Cheney sit back & get rich...





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9:37 am, Dec 17, 2009

khepri

Marty: there are no "right people" to back. The whole doctrine "winning hearts and minds" tells us that our efforts are uphill, unwanted, unappreciated--except by those who are direct beneficiaries of American cash.

I am appalled at your statement regarding Iran, that all the US needs to do is "kill maybe a hundred zealots at the top...and the nation becomes democratic."

I guess you are using the US as a model of your vomity word "democratic." Marty, go back to the drawing board. Examine your own country. Ask yourself whether America is really democratic--or whether it is run by lobbyists, the Pentagon, and a wide array of corporate interests. Health care comes to mind, for example.

Your arrogant comment assumes that the Iranians should not be left to work out their own destiny. Sometimes this is a messy process. But they will do so. And someday, America will revolt against its own Ayatollahs--the monied interests, the terror-industrial complex, the campaign contributions that turn legislators into slaves. Maybe if we sit back and watch events in Iran unfold, we can also learn how to rise up--nonviolently--and turn the power balance in our own nation right-side up.

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9:59 pm, Dec 17, 2009

khepri

Re-reading your post, I now realize how monstrous it is. Are you advocating, therefore, the work of any agent who dislikes a nation's leadership to go ahead and plot to assassinate them? That sounds something like Mohammed Atta or Al Qaeda might say. Is that what you wish for? All international policy disagreements to be settled by assassination?

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10:12 pm, Dec 17, 2009
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