AFGHANISTAN
Documents & Texts from America.gov
26 October 2009
United States to Triple Number of Civilian Experts
in Afghanistan
By Stephen E. Kaufman
Staff Writer
Washington — The Obama administration has nearly doubled the number
of U.S. civilian experts working in Afghanistan since assuming office and plans
to bring the number up to 974 by the end of 2009, according to Deputy Secretary
of State Jacob Lew.
Lew told reporters at the State Department October 26 that the U.S. civilian
personnel are concentrating on “improving Afghan governance; providing
security, justice, jobs and services; and giving the Afghan people a meaningful
alternative, as much as possible, to the Taliban’s recruiting.”
Civilian experts, including those assigned to provincial reconstruction teams
(PRTs), have been deployed outside the capital Kabul and have helped local
Afghan authorities increase their governing capabilities through projects such
as training local officials and improving communications.
Lew said the experts are introducing sub-national governance “in places
that have not known it before.”
“These are lawyers, agronomists, diplomats, development specialists
and others,” he said.
At the beginning of the Obama administration, there were 320 American civilian
personnel on the ground in Afghanistan. “Today we have 603. We also have
282 candidates who are currently in process,” and are currently recruiting
for an additional 89 positions, he said.
There are also plans to expand the number of pilot projects in the country
from six to 20, and 388 of the civilian personnel will be permanently stationed
outside of Kabul, he said.
“The idea of getting our foreign assistance as directly to the people
who are going to use it as efficiently as possible is central to the way we’re
thinking about foreign assistance and development generally,” Lew said.
While U.S. personnel are providing “expert counseling and advising” on
local governance and other programs, they are also working with their Afghan
counterparts to enable them to move forward on their own, he said.
“The challenge is to build up the local capacity and to the greatest
extent possible have Afghans taking the leadership because that’s really
when you get the tipping point, where there’s change that’s structural
and sustainable,” he said.
The ultimate goal is to transfer as much responsibility as possible directly
to Afghans at both the national and local or provincial levels “and to
reduce the need for U.S. presence,” Lew said.
In additional to sub-national governance, the experts are also working with
Afghan farmers to encourage the growth and sale of a “meaningful alternative” to
opium poppies.
For example, in Helmand province where roads are difficult to navigate, they
built an airstrip to help local agricultural produce reach more markets. They
are also distributing seeds for legal crops, he said.
“It’s going to take some time. It’s not going to happen
in one growing season,” Lew said. “But there’s already evidence
in some pretty difficult environments of both reduced poppy cultivation and
increased cultivation of legal crops.”
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