Ten years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, the military and economic instruments of American power have benefited from renewed attention and resources. However, the forward edge of American national security policy, the Department of State, is in a profound state of disrepair, suffering from long-term mismanagement, antiquated equipment, and dilapidated and insecure facilities.These deficits are not only a disservice to the high-caliber men and women who serve as part of the Department of State. They also handicap the ability of the United States to shape and respond to the opportunities and challenges of the 21st century. If the deterioration continues, the ability of the United States to rely on statecraft to avoid, mangage, and resolve crises and to deter aggression will decline, increasing the likelihood that America will have to use military force to protect its interests abroad.The Task Force's purpose was unique. It did not attempt to reinvent the many constructive findings and recommendations of the numerous blue-ribbon commissions that have studied the Department of State. Instead, the Task Force synthesized these findings and recommendations into two crisp memos, one to the president and one to the secretary of state, that articulate a "resources-for-reform" strategy of concrete steps to redress the department's shortcomings in infrastructure, human-resources policies, and budgetary management, and to recharge the department's role in the interagency process that makes and implements U.S. national security policy. The proposed strategy rests on the assumption that, although resources will be neccessary to reform the Department of State, reform from within the department will be necessary to obtain those resources from the U.S. Congress.
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This report by a high-level, independent Task Force finds the Department of State to be " in a serious state of disrepair" and suffering from " long-term mismanagement, antiquated equipment, and dilapidated and insecure facilities." To correct this, the Task Force recommends a strategy of reforms for the State Department and discusses the resources needed from Congress for those reforms. The heart of the Task Force plan is a " resources-for-reform" grand bargain between Congress and the president. The president and the secretary of state would pledge themselves to work with Congress for a thoroughgoing and needed reform of the State Department. In return, Congress would commit itself to providing the necessary and substantial additional resources needed to carry out those reforms. The pledge for reforms would provide the president with the leverage to gain support in the Congress for the new resources, and the resources would provide the necessary leverage to bring about the reforms. The Task Force Report demonstrates that one cannot exist without the other, and that both the executive branch and the legislative branch have powerful reasons to conclude this grand bargain in America's national interest. The report offers the new president and secretary of state a strong rationale for reforming the all-important Department of State. It also suggests a strategy for getting the job done and provides an action plan that shows the path and the stones along the way. Cosponsored by The Council on Foreign Relations and The Center for Strategic and International Studies
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Librería: Revaluation Books, Exeter, Reino Unido
Paperback. Condición: Brand New. 45 pages. 8.25x5.25x0.25 inches. In Stock. Nº de ref. del artículo: zk0876092784
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