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Insights From Acting Administrator Alonzo Fulgham
FrontLines - May 2009
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On March 27, President Barack
Obama announced a comprehensive
new strategy for Afghanistan and
Pakistan—the culmination of a thorough,
60-day review that gave USAID
a prominent seat at the table with its interagency partners.
At the White House announcement, I was seated next to U.S.
Army Gen. David Petraeus, the head of U.S. Central Command, and
our new Ambassador to Afghanistan, Karl Eikenberry. This symbolically
reinforced the substance of the president’s remarks, which
called for enhanced roles for defense, diplomacy, and development
in carrying out the new strategy for Afghanistan and Pakistan—what
he called “two countries but one challenge.”
One of the major shifts in the strategy is to emphasize our diplomatic
and development efforts. This means resources to put more
civilian expertise on the ground and greater emphasis on regional
diplomacy—all backstopped by high-level focus in Washington. As
the president said, a “campaign against extremism will not succeed
with bullets or bombs alone.”
The Monday following the White House event, Jim Bever, director
of the Agency’s Afghanistan-Pakistan Task Force, and I traveled
with Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Deputy
Secretary Jack Lew to The Hague for the U.N. International
Conference on Afghanistan. There the delegation briefed over 80
countries and 20 international organizations on the new approach to
Afghanistan and Pakistan.
When Special Representative Richard Holbrooke led the U.S. delegation
to the Pakistan Donors’ Conference on April 17, USAID was
also prominently represented. I was pleased to join Ambassador
Holbrooke in announcing the U.S. government’s pledge of $1 billion
over two years—a down payment on the proposal by Sens. John
Kerry (D-Mass.) and Richard Lugar (R-Ind.) to provide $1.5 billion
a year in direct support to the Pakistani people over the next five
years. The conference resulted in over $5.2 billion in pledged assistance
for Pakistan’s economic development.
The Afghanistan-Pakistan strategy underscores the central importance
that development will play in the Obama administration. But the
confidence that is being placed in the Agency also requires that we
implement significant changes in the management of our resources.
With the appointment of Special Representative Holbrooke, the
administration has put one of the nation’s most seasoned diplomats
in charge of a reinvigorated engagement strategy with principals in
both countries as well as America’s allies. Moreover, where before
military assistance was privileged, Secretary Clinton has indicated
that three-quarters of the new funding requested for Afghanistan and
Pakistan will be managed by State and USAID. And this funding
will be more strategically programmed to deal with issues that better
answer to the needs of combating political extremism—alternatives
to poppy production in Afghanistan and more services provided to
the tribal areas of Pakistan.
At the field level, USAID’s staff ceiling in Pakistan was recently
increased by 81 positions, and we have pledged to provide an additional
150 staff for Afghanistan by the end of the fiscal year. USAID
will utilize its full range of hiring mechanisms (including the new
Civilian Reserve Corps) to meet these commitments. I appeal to all
of our staff to step forward and serve at this critical moment in our
nation’s history. As I have told our senior leadership, I am willing to
curtail assignments to ensure that we are meeting this challenge with
the greatest talent the Agency has to offer.
The Afghanistan-Pakistan strategy can be a showcase for the
“smart power” that the Obama administration is calling for and the
beginning of a new template for this nation’s foreign policy.
The new emphasis on development in the architecture of this
nation’s foreign policy will require all of us to meet the challenges
before us. We must and we will rise to the occasion. .
★
FrontLines is published
by the Bureau for Legislative and Public Affairs
U.S. Agency for International Development
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by FAX to 202-216-3035; or by e-mail to frontlines@usaid.gov
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