When the Pentagon decided to deploy senior civilian advisers to Afghanistan's Ministry of Defense last May, it turned to the expertise at the United States Institute of Peace (USIP).

April 7, 2011

When the Pentagon decided to deploy senior civilian advisers to Afghanistan's Ministry of Defense last May, it turned to the expertise at the United States Institute of Peace (USIP).

Working with the Pentagon, USIP developed curriculum for the Ministry of Defense Advisers (MoDA) Training Program, which provides Department of Defense (DoD) civilian experts with tools and approaches for effective mentoring and capacity building. DoD considers MoDA training one of the most comprehensive and effective pre-deployment training programs for senior advisers headed to work within Afghanistan's Ministries of Defense and Interior.

"MoDA prepares advisers to make informed and educated decisions in an environment which needs the solutions only their expertise can offer," says Nadia Gerspacher, MoDA's lead instructor for the portion of the program to which USIP contributes. Gerspacher says the coursework gives students the knowledge to support the Afghan security ministries while allowing Afghans to come up with their own solutions to build a better-performing government.

"The program allows them to assess, analyze and evaluate the continually changing environment and thus identify expertise to share with Afghan counterparts," she says.

This spring, USIP's Academy will contribute to the third iteration of MoDA training. The program is broken into two parts: a five-week series of classroom lectures and exercises in Washington, DC, and a two-week, immersive practical application training phase at a National Guard site in Indiana. USIP conducts about two weeks of training during the five-week training period in Washington.

The job of a senior adviser to an Afghan ministry is one of the most nuanced roles that Americans play in Afghanistan. Advisers have to be part mediator, part mentor, part expert - but can't force their know-how. Experts say advisers can't necessarily project their own views on how to develop a young ministry, but they can give their counterparts the tools they need to build one on their own. And, as instructors and former graduates of the program are quick to note, the results of the advising wouldn't likely resemble anything they'd see in the U.S. anyway.

Take a hypothetical example of a need for a ministry to develop its own process for accepting military equipment donated from foreign nations. It's a capacity that many developing nations lack, but makes it harder for a fledgling military to accept new trucks or helicopter parts, for examples. Experts like Gerspacher say it's not the job of the American adviser to tell the Afghans how to duplicate such a process - that would be unrealistic, politically foolhardy and wouldn't likely work - but the goal is to give the Afghans the tools to create their own policy on how to do it. The USIP portion of the MoDA program's coursework on "forging coordination" or "organizational development" helps fill in those gaps.

"It's a question of creating a strategic plan to get buy-in," says Gerspacher.

The program also includes discussion and training on the role of the ministerial adviser, analyzing conflict and policy and how to set realistic expectations. Classes are also taught on "fostering reform" within the ministry as well as "cultural adaptability" and "engaging counterparts." In addition to giving students the tools they need to help build the ministry, the idea is to train the American advisers on how to eventually sit back and let the Afghans do it on their own, she says.

"The MoDA advisers deploy with a keen understanding that their mission rests on Afghan-led reform efforts and tools to provide the support and knowledge to fill a gap," says Gerspacher. "This awareness allows them to perform effectively by having impact, eliciting buy-in by local actors, and facilitate sustainable and viable reform efforts."

The USIP portion includes areas such as language and culture, ministry capacity building, policing, mediation, negotiation and a session on gender roles.

"What we're helping the DoD personnel do is make a mind-set shift from a practitioner to an adviser, says Gerspacher. An independent, third party evaluation of the MoDA program indicated that 70 percent of the students believed the USIP portion of training was above average or outstanding.

According to the evaluation, former students say the training is unlike anything else they would have gotten elsewhere. Former students commended other training workshops such as the guest speakers program, a class on tribal dynamics, and another one on the ministerial development process. Students also benefited from the class on personal security and another on politics and governance in Afghanistan.


Related Publications

How to Support Female Entrepreneurs in Afghanistan

How to Support Female Entrepreneurs in Afghanistan

Tuesday, June 25, 2024

Potential areas of cooperation between the Taliban and the international community, such as private sector development and alternative livelihoods to now-banned opium poppy cultivation, will be on the agenda at a meeting of international envoys for Afghanistan hosted by the United Nations in Doha from June 30 to July 1. Discussions on women’s rights are not included, as the Taliban consider it an internal matter. This is ironic, given that the private sector is one area where the Taliban allow limited women’s participation.

Type: Analysis

EconomicsGender

As Taliban Poppy Ban Continues, Afghan Poverty Deepens

As Taliban Poppy Ban Continues, Afghan Poverty Deepens

Thursday, June 20, 2024

Afghanistan, historically the leading source of the world’s illegal opium, is on-track for an unprecedented second year of dramatically reduced poppy cultivation, reflecting the Taliban regime’s continuing prohibition against growing the raw material for opiates. The crackdown has won plaudits in international circles, but its full implications call for clear-eyed analysis and well considered responses by the U.S. and others. The ban has deepened the poverty of millions of rural Afghans who depended on the crop for their livelihoods, yet done nothing to diminish opiate exports, as wealthier landowners sell off inventories. The unfortunate reality is that any aid mobilized to offset harm from the ban will be grossly insufficient and ultimately wasted unless it fosters broad-based rural and agricultural development that benefits the most affected poorer households. 

Type: Analysis

Economics

View All Publications