Feral Jundi

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Industry Talk: DoD Takes Over Afghan Police Training After IG Cites DoS Failures

   Late last year, I brought this story up during the time that DynCorp was protesting the whole deal.  Now it is official that DoD is taking over the project. Which is probably good, because of how much infantry related activities are involved with war time policing. That, and getting the training standardized so that police forces could be more utilitarian.  The standardization process will also allow for more accurate assessments of the program, and more input from folks who are all implementing the same training.  That means a more efficient learning organization, which is good. –Matt

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DoD takes over Afghan Police training after IG cites State Dept. failures

By Lisa M. NovakThursday, February 25, 2010

NAPLES, Italy — The Defense Department is taking over training of the Afghan National Police because State Department-hired trainers failed to keep pace with the growing instability in Afghanistan or address the security needs of the civilian population, according to a joint State and DOD Inspector General report released late last week.

“The ANP training program that is in place does not provide the ANP with the necessary skills to successfully fight the insurgency, and therefore, hampers the ability of DOD to fulfill its role in the emerging national strategy,” according to the report.

The report, initiated by members of the Senate Appropriations Committee last year, said the State Department failed on a number of fronts, mainly in its ability to provide training that adequately reflected the security needs of the country.

A Clinton administration-era directive gave the State Department responsibility for training civilian police forces around the world. Under that directive, the DOD transferred $1.04 billion to the State Department’s Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs to support training programs for the ANP.

At the time, according to the IG report, “the security situation in Afghanistan was more stable and suitable for a civilian police force whose sole mission is to enforce the rule of law.”

But as average monthly fatality rates for members of the ANP soared from 24 in 2006 to 123 last year, contractors hired by the State Department failed to provide the level of combat training needed to battle the escalating insurgency, the report said.

The report described the training contract as “ambiguous” and said task orders within the contract included no specific information on the type of training required and provided no way to measure its efficacy. DynCorp International, the company that holds the contract, filed a protest with the Government Accountability Office in December, arguing that the DOD takeover of training effectively shut the company out of the bidding process for new contracts.

The current contract, which expired last month, was extended to July pending the outcome of a GAO review.

While the DOD will take over the Americans’ part in ANP training, many other countries are also involved. However, a lack of standardization throughout the country is slowing progress, the IG report states.

That’s something NATO is looking to change.

“Right now you’ve got … the International Narcotics and Law Enforcement, run by the [U.S.] Embassy here [in Afghanistan],” said Lt. Col. David S. Hylton, a spokesman for NATO Training Mission-Afghanistan. “At the same time you have several countries that have bi-lateral agreements with Afghanistan that conduct police training.

“We want to set a common standard, so if you’re getting trained to be a uniformed policeman up in Herat, you’re getting the same standard of training as you do in Kandahar, or Jalalabad or Kabul,” Hylton said.

Other issues raised in the report included ensuring there were enough women on the force and maintaining fiscal oversight for supply purchases.

Efforts to train women have fallen woefully short — even taking into account the cultural mores that make training female police officers difficult in a male-dominated career field and country, the report said.

While more than 172,000 Afghans completed basic and advanced training courses, only 131 are women.

The report also was critical of contracting officers who failed to maintain sufficient invoices for millions of dollars worth of supplies. Nor did they ensure that orders for equipment purchased were considered allowable expenses or that items paid for were actually received.

The State Department took exception to the report’s claim that $80 million was unaccounted for and should be returned to the Defense Department, according to Susan Pittman, a State spokeswoman.

“The money in question has been appropriated for the tasks at hand but has not yet been expended,” Pittman wrote in an e-mail.

The shift in responsibility doesn’t paint the State Department completely out of the picture. The report recommends the department’s law enforcement bureau continue in areas such as criminal investigation and professional development.

Story here.

 

2 Comments

  1. Something to consider is that the National Police are not a Military unit however they are being used as such. It is not that the trainers have failed is that what is expected of the ANP is beyond what they were trained for. Policing are a civil function. A partnership between DOD and DOS in the training and material support of the ANP is what is needed to develop the ANP.

    Comment by SoChuck — Saturday, February 27, 2010 @ 2:02 PM

  2. SoChuck,

    Thanks for your input. Excellent points, and I wonder if we will see something like that? Or is rivalry between the two Departments too great for them to ignore. Or maybe the difference in missions and attitudes between the two groups, is just too vast in order to mix the peanut butter with the chocolate on this? Who knows.

    One interesting point, is that individual police trainers that were DoS, might enjoy a cross over to the DoD side of things. Or basically changing t-shirts. The police missions are a little out of my lane, and it would be cool to hear more from that side of the industry. Take care. -matt

    Comment by headjundi — Saturday, February 27, 2010 @ 5:56 PM

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