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U.S.
Agency Cooperation Delivers Critical
Aid
to Afghan War Zone
PRT's
John Thomson
Army Lieutenant Colonel Jim Ruf takes a gulp of coffee
and says, almost unbelievably: “I don’t care where it
comes from. If it helps the mission, we’ll do it.”
Unbelievable because he clearly means it. Outgoing
chief of the Jalalabad Provincial Reconstruction Team,
Ruf has spent a year building a multi-agency aid team
that is an outstanding example of effective government
cooperation.
PRTs, created to speed delivery of reconstruction
assistance to war torn Afghanistan, are a mix of U.S.
Army, Air Force and Marine units, Agency for
International Development plus other U.S. government
agencies as required. The entirely new PRT concept, one
of several new post conflict approaches being applied in
Afghanistan, has proved singularly successful in
fulfilling its humanitarian mission. Contrary to the
legendary failure of America’s intelligence community to
cooperate prior to 9/11 and subsequently, PRTs have set
the pace for collaboration in effecting what Pentagon
planners term “civil affairs”.
CENTCOM chief of staff Colonel David Lamm notes, “We
must be something right. A year ago, AID Director
Patrick Fine asked us for three plans’ officers; then, a
few weeks later, for six.” AID’s Kabul-based PRT
Manager Nick Marinacci puts it directly: “Whatever
bureaucratic battles take place in Washington, the
different agencies work together in the field. We all
are here to get the job done.”
Operational throughout Afghanistan, PRTs have been
notably successful in the reconstruction of 23 of the
country’s 34 provinces -- often in dangerous
conditions. During May riots stimulated by
Newsweek’s spurious story about the Qur’an being
flushed down the toilet at Guantanamo, Jalalabad
demonstrators set fire to several U.S. identified
buildings and were marching on the PRT provincial
offices before being turned back by units of the Afghan
National Army. In mid- June, four U.S. soldiers were
injured in an attack on a PRT convoy outside
Afghanistan’s second city, Kandehar.
PRT units perform a spectrum of security and
humanitarian activities; replant fruit, almond and olive
orchards; and recondition government buildings, power
plants, schools, mosques and medical clinics. In
Jalalabad, capital of Nangarhar province, Jim Ruf’s
office has supported and supervised a project
administered by U.S. AID Program Officer Michelle Parker
to develop an alternative livelihoods project,
considered by President Hamid Karzai essential to
curtailing Afghanistan’s narcotics industry. AID
contractor, Development Alternatives, Inc., has
implemented 150 projects in less than four months,
providing employment for 12 thousand workers.
DAI’s Jalalabad chief, Steve Romanoff, believes the
daunting assignment of providing jobs for thousands of
former poppy planters is doable. “We will complete
200-250 projects by the end of the year, and have a hit
list of 3,000 that have been identified. Our contract
commits us to employ 50 thousand workers for 50 days per
year: we will exceed those targets, substantially.”
Romanoff agrees that the first phase has essentially
involved resuscitating public facilities, but stresses
that DAI’s work over four years will emphasize private
business development with little public sector activity.
The most immediate and largest area for private
business activity is agriculture, where 80 percent of
the population is employed. Providing the economic
basis for growing high yield crops, as well as
replenishing and improving the health of the country’s
livestock herds would be not only good business but also
a strong disincentive to grow poppies.
Fruit, nut and olive seedlings could be financed to
farmers on favorable loan terms, with cucumber, tomato,
eggplant and other garden vegetable seed supplied to
provide interim income during the years the high yield
trees are maturing.
Cattle, sheep and goat herding is central to Afghan
society, with more than 80 percent of farms having one
or more animals, contrasted with two percent in the
United States. Meat is the primary source of protein in
the Afghan diet, and the nation’s herds have dropped
from approximately 33 million beasts in 1979 to 20
million today. The current 28 million population should
have some 46 million animals to support it. The
enormous Afghan meat deficit requires daily imports of
from Pakistan 200-300 truckloads of animals, carrying an
estimated 70 thousand animals, which creates a critical
$1 billion annual capital outflow.
Afghan herds are riddled with hoof and mouth disease --
lamb herds alone suffer up to 90 percent loss annually –
and is widely prevalent in Pakistan [skeptics suggest
Pakistani brokers sell their Afghan counterparts the
least healthy animals in their herds]. A vaccination
program in Afghanistan and neighboring Pakistan at an
estimated cost of 5-6 dollars per beast per year could
sharply improve the situation and make herd development
investments attractive.
Veterinary expert, U.S. Army Colonel Lyle Jackson,
believes largescale vaccination would greatly improve
farmers’ incomes on both sides of the Afghan-Pakistan
border, simultaneously providing sharply increased
income for farmers and eliminating the huge cattle
import bill. Experts agree the foregoing estimates are
reasonably correct; if so, an internationally funded
program would prove to be a major dietary and income
supplement for millions of Afghans, an economically
viable replacement to poppy cultivation and, in the long
run, far less costly than the negative economic impact
of heroin consumption worldwide.
The current PRT challenge is to transfer leadership of
several provincial programs to other countries,
principally NATO members. The change is underway
primarily to free up badly needed U.S. military
personnel for other assignments, and involves U.S.
military team leaders and support troops handing over
control to other nations’ forces. American PRT
operatives profess the same dedication to keep things
moving, but express a fair dose of skepticism. One PRT
field officer notes, “The European approach to civil
affairs is very different from ours; there’ll need to be
a lot of modification on both sides if it is going to
work.”
Patrick Fine, outgoing U.S. AID Director for
Afghanistan, remains optimistic about the PRT mission,
as he does about the entire reconstruction effort in the
country: “Is the glass half full or half empty?
Unfortunately, most of the press have been committed to
telling it from the half empty angle, even if they have
to swim up through the good stuff.”
July 14,
2005
John R. Thomson will be writing an article, "A Tale
of Three Cities", on his recent visits to Kabul, Beirut
and Cairo, assessing the state of democratic development
in each. The Article will appear in the next issue
of The National Interest
Updated 7/14/05
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