http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/02/08/africa/web.0208diplo.php

Many U.S. diplomats refuse to work in Iraq
By Helene Cooper
Published: February 7, 2007

WASHINGTON: While the diplomats and Foreign Service employees of the 
State Department have always been expected to staff "hardship" postings, 
those jobs have not usually required that they wear flak jackets with 
their pinstriped suits.

But in the last five years, the Foreign Service landscape has shifted.

Now, thanks to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the White House is 
calling for more American civilians to head not only to those countries, 
but also to some of their most hostile regions — including Iraq's 
volatile Anbar Province — to try to establish democratic institutions 
and help in reconstruction. That plan is provoking unease and 
apprehension at the State Department and at other U.S. agencies.

Many U.S. employees have outright refused repeated requests that they go 
to Iraq, while others have demanded that they be assigned only to 
Baghdad and not be sent outside the more secure Green Zone, which 
includes the American Embassy and Iraqi government ministries. And while 
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice maintained Wednesday that State 
Department employees were "volunteering in large numbers" for difficult 
posts, including Iraq, several department employees said that those who 
had signed up tended to be younger, more entry-level types, and not 
experienced, seasoned diplomats.

The reluctance highlights a problem with the administration's new 
strategy for Iraq, which calls on American diplomats to take challenges 
on a scale unmatched anywhere else in the world, when the lack of 
security on the ground outside the Green Zone makes it one of the last 
places people, particularly those with families, want to go.

Steve Kashkett, vice president of the American Foreign Service 
Association, the professional organization that represents State 
Department employees, said that "our people continue to show great 
courage in volunteering for duty in Iraq." But Kashkett added, "there 
remain legitimate questions about the ability of unarmed civilian 
diplomats to carry out a reconstruction and democracy-building mission 
in the middle of an active war zone."

The issue flared this week when Defense Secretary Robert Gates testified 
at a Senate hearing that he shared the concerns of officers who 
complained about a request from Rice's office that military personnel 
temporarily fill more than one-third of 350 new jobs in Iraq that the 
State Department is supposed to be responsible for. The New York Times 
reported on Wednesday that senior military officials were upset at the 
request and told President George W. Bush and Gates that the new Iraq 
strategy could fail unless more civilian agencies stepped forward 
quickly to carry out plans for reconstruction and political development.

David Satterfield, the State Department's senior adviser for Iraq, told 
reporters during a teleconference that the State Department's request 
was only for temporary help and for non-State Department positions that 
would probably be filled by contractors anyway.

"The skill sets needed for the additional staff are not skill sets in 
which any foreign service in the world, including our own," are 
proficient, Satterfield said. While State Department employees would 
provide leadership, he said, most of the staffing required would involve 
specialists like agricultural technicians.

But many military officials remained angry at the request, saying that 
the military did not necessarily have people with those skill sets, 
either, and that it would have to go to the already strained National 
Guard to plug holes that would take advantage of their civilian, and not 
their military, strengths.

Admiral Edmund Giambastiani, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, 
said the military was used to working with State Department officials in 
Iraq, including Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad. But, in a telephone 
interview, Giambastiani went on to describe a kind of cultural clash.

"The problem, not surprising, is we're used to deploying over there," 
Giambastiani said. "We send out orders, we execute orders, we deploy our 
military, and guess what happens? They turn up and do their job."

He said that while it was acceptable for the State Department to ask for 
the National Guard, with its experts in civilian military affairs, to 
fill the positions temporarily, "you have to understand why people on 
the Defense side would come up with this frustration." He added, "We've 
got to get the mission done, but in the long term, we'd rather use our 
military personnel to fill the military functions."

Answering lawmakers' questions on Monday, Rice said the department had 
managed to fill 87 percent of the positions it needed in Iraq.

But that percentage does not readily show the people who are 
volunteering, a number of State Department officials and employees said.

"A number of lower-level people are willing to go, seeing this as a 
combination money-maker, adventure and career-builder," said one State 
Department employee who said he had been asked twice to go to Iraq in 
the past year and had said no both times, vehemently. "It's the midlevel 
people who don't want to go."

Department officials have offered incentives, including combat and 
danger pay, and have conveyed to employees that a stint in Iraq could 
lead to a more rapid career rise. They have also refused to fill 
openings in some plusher postings in Europe until Iraqi positions are 
filled, State Department employees said.

The complaints from the Pentagon are part of long-simmering tensions 
between the Pentagon and the State Department over who is responsible 
for what in Iraq, The differences go back to the months before the 
invasion, when State employees complained that they were being cut out 
of the postwar planning by a Pentagon bent on doing everything itself.

"There's some outrage that the collective capacity of American 
reconstruction capability was ignored prior to the war," said one State 
Department employee who is learning Arabic before deploying to the 
Middle East. "And now we are expected to clean up the mess."

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