Also
published on Newsmax. #TRUMPING
President
Trump’s budgetary assault on the Department of State and the U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID) is long overdue. He is forcing a rethinking that will benefit
America and the world.
The
State Department is one of the most bloated of federal bureaucracies. Front line consular officers, many just
starting their careers at State, actually help Americans abroad. However, there
are also countless “Hallway Ambassadors” who aimlessly roam from irrelevant
meeting to obscure policy forum killing time and our tax dollars.
Legions
of these taxpayer funded drones fill the State Department. Some are reemployed retirees who travel to
overseas missions conducting “inspections” to justify their additional
salaries.
The
American Foreign Service Association
(AFSA) is to the State Department what the Teacher Unions are to public
education. It exists to protect tenure
and to prevent any accountability or reduction among the State Department
drones.
The Bureau of
Arms Control, Verification and Compliance (AVC) is a uniquely harmful part of
State. This Bureau’s main mission has
been to create photo ops of treaty signings.
The arms control treaties have usually been unenforceable with sworn
enemies of America. The Bureau’s
agreements with the Soviet Union undermined U.S. security. The Bureau’s bureaucrats developed elaborate
procedures for justifying the minimizing or overlooking of blatant treaty
violations. They are using this same
play book for the Iranian Nuclear deal.
Headquarters waste and dysfunction are just the
beginning of State Department ineffectiveness.
In the mid-1980’s, I viewed State Department field operations personally
while serving as Director of the U.S. Peace Corps in Malawi.
The most egregious problem was the un-American
culture that permeates career Foreign Service Officers. Except for toasting America at the July 4th
Embassy party each year, being pro-American is viewed as unprofessional. Long
serving Americans would advise me that rising above nationalism and acting
“world wise” was the mark of a seasoned diplomat.
Not only did these U.S. foreign bureaucrats avoid
Americanism, they avoided the host country.
The Embassy team members spent their business and recreational time with
diplomats from the other Embassies and with European expatriates living in
Lilongwe, the capital city. Their only
sojourns outside the capital were to Salima, the lakeside resort, or to the
Ambassador’s vacation home on the Zomba Plateau.
As Country Director, I eliminated the chauffeur-driven luxury car used by my predecessor and reallocated the chauffeur to other duties. At the wheel of a
Nissan Patrol, I spent the majority of my time in the field with my
seventy-five volunteers. This meant
absorbing in depth knowledge of Malawi and its people.
State Department versus reality was proven many
times over. The most blatant was the 1985
fuel shortage. Malawi was
land-locked. The Mozambique Civil War
closed off its closest ports. A
problematic network of rail lines brought goods, including gasoline, to Malawi
via South Africa, Botswana, Zimbabwe, and Zambia. My volunteers told me a Zimbabwean labor dispute
was going to cause a five week disruption of fuel to Malawi. I dutifully reported this to the Embassy
Team. They scoffed, assuring me that
their British friend running Mobil-Malawi was telling them no disruption would
occur. I directed my staff to begin
stockpiling gasoline.
The disruption occurred. The Embassy team kept dismissing my reports
and telling themselves the disruption would be short-lived. By week four, the Embassy motor pool was
without fuel. Staff was delivering
messages via bicycle. By week five, the
Ambassador asked to purchase fuel from the Peace Corps, which had remained fully
operational.
The Embassy was blind-sided on an even more
important issue. Air Malawi announced it
was going to purchase a new fleet of passenger jets along with a comprehensive
parts and maintenance agreement. At this
point the State Department replaced the Embassy’s Commercial Attaché with a
Hispanic who could barely speak English.
Instead of sending this person to Spanish-speaking Equatorial Guinea,
they posted him to the most Anglophile country in Africa. He was miserable and totally ineffective.
Alternatively, the German Ambassador moved about
Malawi’s 28 regions, equaling my zeal for the field. When Boeing’s sales team arrived they were
given a proper, but cool reception. The
Fokker team arrived to a hero’s welcome and the multi-million dollar deal was
signed shortly thereafter. American
business lost a huge contract.
USAID has spent over $1 trillion on
overseas projects since its founding in 1961.
Empty buildings and rusting tractors are silent testaments to its
failures. What funds were not diverted
to corrupt government officials went for unsustainable efforts, driven more by
academic theories than practicality.
State Department and USAID need a
fundamental review and a day of reckoning. This is fertile territory for
President Trump and Secretary Tillerson to implant business principles and
common sense.
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