Ordinary Afghans need good food,
clean water, sewage treatment improvements, rural health care and
education; instead these aid groups primarily generate reports, surveys
and hold meetings with each other in Kabul. The following is a recent
summary of how Afghan aid funds are being expended by the United States.
Earlier
this month, Democracy International finalized its “Survey of
Afghanistan Parliament.” It posed 38 questions to 176 members of the two
houses of Parliament and published the results. This project was paid
for by USAID and its findings are worthless. The members of Parliament
largely supported election reforms, most thought the Afghan President
had too much power, a bare majority supported the general concept of
talks with the Taliban etc. Whether their public positions have any
credibility is questionable. This is a classic NGO-crafted aid effort.
It was conducted safely in Kabul, undoubtedly in air-conditioned
offices, with proper breaks for lunch and refreshments. This effort and
its results are detached from reality and no one will ever bother
reading this survey (except this author), but that apparently bothers
none of the groups involved.
Another ongoing program is AERCA
(the Afghan Electoral Reform and Civil Advocacy Project). U.S. taxpayer
funds are being expended for the nebulous goals of “fostering
innovation” and “building capacity within CSOs” (Civil Capacity
Organizations) in order to “strengthen Afghan democracy.” What this
fluff means is that the consultants conduct an endless string of meeting
in Kabul with senior officials, politicians and groups, all of which
are always successful.
These governance, democracy and
anti-corruption projects have no objective metrics attached to them to
measure success, therefore they are always described as producing
“progress,” which then leads to follow-on contracts to build on that
real or imagined progress. The fact is that money is being wasted in
Kabul on expensive lunches, meetings, travel, hotels and in the
preparation of endless reports, while Afghans in the countryside go
without basic necessities.
Another ongoing USAID project in
Afghanistan is the Community Cohesion Initiative (CCI). Its vague goal
is to “create an environment for sustainable peace” by improving ties
between local actors and by “empowering community-based resiliencies” in
order to “mitigate sources of instability.” This apparently is part of
its ASI (Afghanistan Stabilization Initiative) which commenced in July
2009 with the equally vague goal of “building confidence and trust”
between the Afghan Government and local communities.
Then there
is the $120 million USAID-funded Kabul City Initiative (KCI). Its goal
is to create an “effective, responsive, transparent and accountable
municipal government” in Kabul. The funding is all being paid to another
U.S. favorite, Tetra Tech ARD.
This author served in the State
Department for a short time in 2008. The Department remains oblivious to
budget realities and to concepts of efficiency. It is addicted and
literally runs on a diet of publicity. In order to fuel the constant
need for press releases, the State Department and USAID fund thousands
of boutique development efforts that produce nothing of substance,
except for an attractive press release heralding an impressive-sounding
project (and of course the project is always a success).
President
Obama should immediately channel all U.S. foreign aid into humanitarian
relief programs (i.e., food, clean water, emergency shelter and health
care), ending all these wasteful and ineffective development programs.
Without
adult supervision from the White House over the State Department,
without accountability and without a drastic shift in how the U.S.
Government’s “country team” functions, the U.S. effort in Afghanistan is
doomed to failure.