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Diplomacy for the real world by Max Boot


http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-boot22feb22,0,7672623.column?coll=la-news-comment-opinions

MAX BOOT
Diplomacy for the real world
Without changes, the State Department isn't ready to meet today's
challenges.


February 22, 2006

MUCH OF OUR national security and foreign policy bureaucracy has been
designed to confront an enemy that no longer exists. Today, many of our
biggest threats come not from other strong states but from subnational
groups such as Al Qaeda or from failing states that create fertile ground
from which they operate.

The Pentagon has reacted to the post-9/11 world by enlarging the Special
Operations Command and placing greater emphasis on language and cultural
education. It's not enough, but it's a beginning - and it's more than the
State Department has done so far. The Foreign Service remains trapped in a
framework straight out of the 19th century, producing diplomats whose
primary skill is liaison work with other diplomats. That leaves Foggy Bottom
woefully ill-equipped to deal with two particularly pressing challenges:
public diplomacy and nation-building.

Public diplomacy - the fancy name for speaking to the populace of foreign
countries, not just to their leaders - is more than ever necessary because
of the spread of democracy. Long gone are the days when autocrats such as
Otto von Bismarck and Prince Klemens von Metternich could determine their
countries' foreign policy pretty much on their own. Nowadays, getting the
support of foreign leaders usually requires getting the support of their
voters. But, as the run-up to the invasion of Iraq proved, that's not
something we're very adept at. Nor, as the aftermath of the invasion showed,
are we very good at nation-building. We need a new bureaucracy devoted to
this area so that the entire burden doesn't fall on the overstretched armed
forces.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has unveiled a number of
"transformational diplomacy" initiatives designed to address such
shortcomings. Noting that there are nearly as many State Department staffers
in Germany (population 82 million) as in India (population 1 billion), she
announced transfers from cushy Western embassies to more hardscrabble
outposts in the developing world. This will include opening a number of
one-person missions in cities of over 1 million people where the U.S.
currently has no representation at all. Foreign Service officers will be
required to serve in hardship posts in order to get promoted. The State
Department is also opening a regional public diplomacy center for the Middle
East, staffed by Arabic-speakers, and an Office of Reconstruction and
Stabilization, staffed by nation-building experts.

All good moves, but they don't go far enough. Public diplomacy, for one, has
suffered since the U.S. Information Agency was folded into the State
Department in 1999 in a misguided deal cooked up by the unlikely alliance of
then-Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and Sen. Jesse Helms (R-N.C.).
This led to a closing of American libraries all over the world and to a
downgrading of public communications in the overall scheme of things.
However much Rice or her successors may stress public diplomacy, it is
likely to remain a bastard stepchild in a bureaucracy run by Foreign Service
officers with other specialties. Why not reopen the USIA as a separate
agency with its own staff and a big boost in funding?

And why not set up a new nation-building department built, perhaps, on the
foundation of the Agency for International Development? The new Office of
Reconstruction and Stabilization is doing good work, but it is unlikely to
get sufficient support from Congress or its own department as long as it's
subsumed in a larger bureaucracy.

In any case, the skills needed for nation-building are more akin to those of
the old British Colonial Office than to those inculcated by the State
Department. We should open up our own version of the Colonial Office at
USAID. Instead, the trend seems to be toward more closely integrating USAID
into the State Department, repeating the mistake that was made with the
USIA.

Don't nod off. Diplomacy may not be sexy stuff, but it is vitally important
if we are to deal with looming problems before they turn into a crisis
requiring tens of thousands of U.S. troops to fix. We actually need to spend
more and hire more people to tackle these issues. The entire international
affairs budget - which includes funding not only for the State Department
and other agencies but also for foreign aid - is just $35 billion, compared
with about $500 billion in defense spending. And the State Department has
just 13,000 employees, not enough to fill one Army division.

But before making a bigger commitment to diplomacy and related disciplines,
we need to make sure we have the right structure in place to address the
challenges of the 21st century.




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