Our Afghanistan strategy – play it by ear
Official papers reveal our new strategy – or lack of it – for military involvement, civilian aid and international diplomacy in war-torn
Foreign Affairs Minister Murray McCully and Defence Minister Wayne Mapp agree. In an overview of the ARG report, they say:
“Our engagement has expanded piecemeal in response to circumstances, rather than within a time-bound strategy which had clear objectives.”
Official papers on the ARG review and subsequent Cabinet decisions have just been obtained in response to an Official Information Act request.
They show that key government agencies involved in providing military, security, and development assistance in Afghanistan are still calling for “a national objective as the basis of an overarching strategy” to coordinate their efforts. Their own effort to produce one will not set the
“The Government of
However, the ARG review identifies significant deficiencies in
Maintaining the military Provincial Reconstruction Team in Bamyan along with other sustained offshore commitments in Timor Leste and
“The PRT commitment has been reviewed and reconfirmed on an annual basis but on each occasion questions have been raised about the length of time a small defence force can sustain it alongside other demanding deployments. This remains a live issue.”
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The response from Cabinet has been to direct officials to develop a road map for exiting the PRT in the medium term, or up to five years. However, ministers also want options developed for “smaller, more focused military contributions beyond the PRT commitment.”
According to the ARG, a separate review of the NZAID development programme finds that:
“The PRT was not expert in development. It required, and had received, guidance from NZAID, but this had not been sufficient to meet the needs. Opportunities were being missed to collect and share information about assistance from a variety of sources being channeled through the PRT and to coordinate and improve the coherence of its delivery.”
Ministers rejected the ARG’s recommendation to place the Bamyan PRT under civilian leadership during the transition to its exit. Cabinet approved another option instead: the appointment of a civilian development adviser to the team who “might serve concurrently as the PRT’s civilian co-leader.”
The new development adviser will have a bigger budget to draw on. For the past three years,
Another significant deficiency identified by the review resulted from the initial decision to maintain diplomatic relations with
“In recent times, this has not been as effective as we would like as a vehicle for monitoring the situation in Afghanistan, for protecting and promoting New Zealand interests, or for influence on Afghan or international agencies or coalition partners. Communications between
Cabinet has approved the appointment of an Ambassador to be stationed in
All this, of course, is predicated on a number of suppositions. Such as, that President Obama can gain support for implementing the new US surge to destroy any bases for international terrorism remaining in Afghanistan; that Hamid Karzai can rescue some semblance of legitimacy from the country’s corruption-riddled presidential election; and that the planned United Nations summit in Kabul early next year maintains the current thrust of international assistance to build Afghan self-reliance.
Somehow, I’m still missing that simple, compelling statement of a