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The War On Poverty
   Next Article → PARAMILITARY: Literacy And Victory
March 25, 2010: Peacekeeping in Afghanistan is supposed to include a lot of economic development. This has proved difficult. That's because Afghanistan is the poorest and least developed nation in Eurasia. Most of the population lives in the barren (of economic development) countryside. No roads, no railroads, no electricity and not much of anything. People out there live from harvest to harvest, or move herds around the countryside in search of water and grass. Most Afghans are illiterate. And then there's the corruption, which is made worse by all the other problems.

Thus only about 23 percent of the $36 billion in aid money spent over the last five years, was handled by the government. A lot of it just disappeared. More of it got spent on projects that simply did not work. There are not a lot of engineers, construction specialists and planners in Afghanistan. Just building a dirt road can be a major undertaking for the locals. With no railroads and few navigable rivers, bringing anything in from the outside (usually by truck via Pakistan) is expensive and time consuming.

Some 42 percent of the $36 billion was spent by military commanders. The U.S. quickly realized (and were reminded by the U.S. Army Special Forces) that commanders of combat units could use development money very effectively, both for the economy, and military situation. This led to the development of PRTs (Provincial Reconstruction Teams), who put much of the remaining aid money to work, along with some of the money local American military commanders have.

About half the development money was spent on security items (mainly the police and army.) Rural development (especially roads and agriculture) got 18 percent, education got nine percent, health got six percent and a bunch of other stuff got the rest. Most of the money was spent where the Taliban was not (the central and northern provinces.) 

While a good idea in theory, the PRTs ran into some unique problems. These teams of military and civilian experts, were used to speed up, and organize, the use of American resources (cash, equipment and materials) for reconstruction in Iraq and Afghanistan. In the beginning, the U.S. assembled the teams in Afghanistan and Iraq, letting them get acquainted and learn their jobs. Four years ago, a training program for the senior people, lasting up to 45 days, was established in the United States. By giving the key people in a PRT training, together, before they ship out, problems can be discovered and worked out. The training also gets everyone familiar with their team members, and enables the team to get working sooner, and more effectively.

The United States has had great success with its PRTs in Afghanistan. These evolved from the JRTs (Joint Reconstruction Teams) established by U.S. Army Special Forces in 2002. By 2006, there were seventeen PRTs run by U.S. troops (including five in Iraq), with another eleven operated by NATO forces. The program kept expanding in Afghanistan, until, now, there are 27 PRTs there. The program began in Afghanistan, and was later set up in Iraq as well. But the main PRT effort remains in Afghanistan.

The typical PRT has 60-100 people (depending on local needs). Most (80 percent) of these are military personnel. The rest are civilian specialists, including a police officer from the Afghan Interior Ministry. American PRTs are commanded by an  army lieutenant colonel, who is actually leading two civil affairs teams, an Army Reserve military police unit, plus intelligence and psychological operations teams. The civilians usually consist of officials from the State Department, USAID, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The rest of the troops are assigned to security duties, which can be pretty tense in areas where Taliban gunmen are operating, but is basically police work (against bandits and unruly warlord militias) elsewhere. These security troops often end up assisting in reconstruction as well. The Afghans urged for an expansion of the PRT system, not just to get more reconstruction expertise to all areas of the country, but to provide some protection for reconstruction staff (including the many NGOs that are not a part of the PRT system.)

PRTs have had problems with bureaucratic roadblocks created by different Department of Defense, State Department and USAID agendas. The State Department, when told to send people to work with PRTs, responded by providing very junior folks, with little experience in anything. The Department of Defense has people there to provide security and is, technically, not involved in nation building. But the troops can take over in an emergency, because they are, after all, in charge of security. But in active areas like Iraq and Afghanistan, the military is really running the show. Combat needs come first, and everything else, including nation building, is support. When it comes to nation building, the Department of Defense wants power, but not responsibility. Same thing with the State Department, and neither Defense or State wants to take orders from USAID.

Many Iraqi and Afghan politicians want to get rid of the PRTs, so there can be more unfettered opportunities for corruption and stealing U.S. aid money. The corruption is so pervasive in Iraq and Afghanistan that even some American officials, especially outside the Department of Defense, would like to dump the PRTs in order to keep the corruption out of the headlines. Dealing with the corruption head on is messy, and the State Department, for example, would prefer to get out of the way.

 

Next Article → PARAMILITARY: Literacy And Victory
  

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blkfoot    The Game Plan   3/25/2010 9:28:02 PM
Ok, here's the Game Plan.
 
We will send 1,000,000 shovels and 1,000,000 picks to Afghanastan.
 
We will pay any Afghani $15.00 a day,  to operate a Shovel or a pick for 8 hours a day.
 
They will have to dig a trench 4 feet wide, by 4 feet deep by 20 feet long in a straight line, and it will have to be inspected by a Official and it must meet the tight specifications listed above before they recieve their $15.00.
 
This will do several things for the Afghanistan People:
1) Provide jobs and good pay to unemployed Afghani men (Who might seek work from the Taliban)
2) After a hard days work like this, those same men will not want to go out and cause trouble because they are too tired and all they will want to do is go home and rest up before going back the next day to make another $15.00 a day.
3) With in a month, a once unemployed Afghani male will now have earned around $450.00 a month to provide food shelter and clothing for his family, he will feel good about himself and that he has a good job.
4) The Taliban will have lost their available pool of "grunts" to cause problems with the Government and Locals.
5) The local communities will prosper because there is now more money being spent in the community by these hired men and their wives (for shopping purposes), thus spuring on the economy for growth in that community, new business will develope to take advantage of the economic boom that is happening and then it will start feeding upon itself and develope even faster. New services will be created, thus creating new jobs (ie: cafe's, clothing and shoe stores, fruit and vegitable markets, animals for meals and milk, barber shops, convience stores with cooking utincels and luxuries like radios and Tv's and fans and maybe ice making machines) and then all the people needed to service these things.
6) And then schools will be needed to train  these people and then education wouldn't be looked down upon like it was.
7) And the United States will have invested only $5475.00 a year per Afghani Male x 2,000,000 (picks and shovels) for a grand total of $10,950,000,000.00 or $10.95 Billion dollars .
 
Way much cheaper than the wasted $36 Billion dollars lost to corruption.
 
Oh, and somebody could be creative and actually plan out just how those 4'x4'x20' trenches could interconnect and be used for irrigation canals from the rivers for the farmers. And use the dirt from those hole to make the foundation for a rail line or road.
 
See, it isn't really that hard, all ya need is some picks and shovels and some men willing to work for an honest wage...
 
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Photon       3/25/2010 9:29:35 PM
There is a way of dealing with corruption:  Everybody gets nothing.  In order for corruption to work its magic, there has to be something worth stealing.  In addition, corruption becomes more pervasive the more freebies flowing in but not backed by sufficient administrative infrastructure to keep this inflow from excessively concentrating into a few hands.  People go about in their corrupt ways, because: a) They have been getting away with it for so long, b) They expect to get away with it in the future, c) Their world and economic outlooks consist of a bundle of zero-sum games.  It will take a massive amount of culture shock coupled with getting repetitively tramped and humiliated before enough people come to the conclusion that either they fix themselves or will become irrelevant.
 
Insofar as fighting corruption is concerned, the Westerners should not self-congratulate themselves too much.  We have had our own share of corruption in the past, and we still have a plenty of them today.  It just happens that our version does not involve outright violence.
 
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WarNerd       3/26/2010 12:52:48 PM

Oh, and somebody could be creative and actually plan out just how those 4'x4'x20' trenches could interconnect and be used for irrigation canals from the rivers for the farmers. And use the dirt from those hole to make the foundation for a rail line or road.

Afghanistan already has an extensive irrigation system underground called Qanats.  They were also used extensively to hide in by the guerrillas during the Soviet invasion.
How about building Roman style roads instead.  Some of those are still useful after 2000 years.
 
 
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blkfoot       3/27/2010 7:04:33 AM
What ever works...just keep em busy....and employed.
 
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