10-20-30 Document
Civil-Military
Interaction Advice from Strong Angel
Eric Rasmussen, MD, FACP
Fleet Surgeon, Third Fleet
27 June 2000 Rim of the Pacific 2000
The summary thoughts below have been very
liberally borrowed from smart people. Some are previously published, some are
original statements from Strong Angel participants, and some are just our
discussed and considered opinion of a productive way to do things. Few are
likely to be innovative. We've found though interviews that lessons learned the
hard way tend to repeat themselves with no prompting.
For reference, there are three general
categories of civil-military interaction:
- conflict management (both intervention and
post-conflict rebuilding),
- natural disaster response
- complex emergency support
There are suggestions for each below.
Ten
Commandments:
1) The military should generally not be in overall
charge. The JTF Commander should be clearly subordinate to civilian authorities
whenever possible. This:
i) Sets a democratic process in place
that's reassuring to the population served
ii) Sets expectations for the levels
of responsibility
iii) Keeps the military footprint to
an absolute minimum
(1) With a transition requirement apparent daily
iv) Allows some mission drift (a
desirable flexibility) while minimizing mission creep
v) Maintains a coordinated Host
Nation Support mandate
(1) Establish the scope of that mandate early and
often
2) Technology
cannot substitute for personal interaction
i) Use all available modes of communication
(1)
Decide in common when and how to use technology
(2) Don’t assume face-to-face is ideal, but it’s
a good default
ii) Agree early on common definitions of
important terms
iii) Do not assume that each understands the
other. Cultural differences can be subtle, but profound
iv) Get out and talk with counterparts
frequently. Share food and drink, equipment and resources. It’s proven to save
lives.
3) Personalities are more important than Processes
i) Don't throw away the book;
thoughtful and experienced people wrote it, but be able to flex. You're the one
on the scene. Value your own leadership in context.
4) Know the cultures and issues that surround you.
i) Avoid imposing your standards and
beliefs, but remember that there are international declarations defining
fundamental human rights and we've subscribed to them.
ii) Avoidable misunderstandings can
cause distracting escalations
iii) Strive for impartiality to the
sides within the conflict
iv) Breadth of understanding fosters
a better recognition of the scope of your real task. Educate your people.
5) Work on building communications networks as you begin to
plan
i) Key people need to communicate
early across organizations. Make sure the Civ can talk to the Mil, the Mil to
the Civ, and that both need to frequently.
ii) Provide power where it's
needed. All forms
iii) Get a multi-pathway phone book
out and keep it updated
iv) If you can't communicate, you
can't coordinate
6) Centralize planning and de-centralize execution.
i) Trust your people, but be
thoughtful about whom you empower
7) Coordinate everything with everybody to the greatest
possible extent
i) Few issues will doom a
civil-military mission more quickly than the perception of arrogance on either
side. Both sides employ professionals. Both sides have agendas. Good work is
still possible.
ii) The troops need to know their
role in the larger picture. Again, educate your people.
8) Remember that the UN agencies are distinct, anarchic, and
highly effective
i) UN agencies agree through
collaboration and consensus. Don't try to impose force.
ii) UN agency technical
communications structure has often been the best in the area
iii) The UN is no monolith. It is
more than fifty agencies with various management structures, but a common theme
is that the management is often very flat; occasionally directly from highest
headquarters to a local representative in the field.
iv) UN agencies consider their
mandate to be externally focused while we often look at "self" and
"other", with an internal focus. Not necessarily wrong either way,
but very different. Worth remembering.
v) UN agencies were there
before, are there now, and will be there afterwards. They know a lot about the
neighborhood and they understand the situation. They know we're going to leave
as soon as we can and that affects our interaction.
vi) The UN agencies look to the
military to provide four areas: LISH
(a) Logistics support (particularly heavy lift)
(b) Information (particularly local conditions)
(c) Security (of UN and other non-governmental staff)
(d) Health (primary care for the UN staff)
vii) The key to success will be
coordinating and cooperating
9) Senior Commanders and Staffs need education and training
for non-traditional roles
i) Troops need awareness and
understanding. Push the situational awareness out as far as you can. Educate
your people (noted a third time...)
10) Even in a seemingly simple operation there WILL BE more
media and more politics than anticipated. Be fair and be consistent.
Twenty Recommendations:
1) Under-promise. Over-perform.
i) Repeat your intentions over and
over, doing everything possible to prevent false expectations
ii) Make sure you complete the task
you promised
iii) Build sustainable solutions that
can be effectively transitioned to national agency management.
iv) Make sure it's legal to make the
promises you choose to make
(1) Standards of Conduct and Rules of Engagement can be exceptionally
complicated for all concerned
(2) Keep the lawyers within your inner circle
2) The humanitarian intent should remain primary even against odds. Let it
drive the operation.
3) Ensure all planning is Joint.
i) Use your sister Services. Play to
everyone's strengths.
4) Synergy between the civilian and military arenas can be
found through an awareness of mutual advantage within the continuum of effort.
i) Help each party see the valuable reasons
for working together.
ii) Ensure they have those reasons.
5) A
i) Break down the razor-wire barriers.
Invite partners in. Choose neutral territory whenever possible. Avoid owning
the space.
(1) Co-location improves the cohesiveness of effort
(2) Problems can be solved in a common forum
(3) Issues discussed elsewhere can be voted upon collectively
6) Women in uniform can be a reassuring presence to an
affected population
i) Remember that 85% of recent affected
populations have been women and children
ii) May distinguish the image of our new
military presence over the local traditional military presence, increasing
acceptance and improving rapport quickly
7) Avoid compartmentalized planning.
i) Communication is hard enough.
Don't compound the problem.
8) The two components likely to fail most frequently are
communications and lift.
i) Expect it. Plan in parallel
layers.
ii) Keep a bedrock communications layer as
a lowest common denominator across all boundaries and use it daily. Make it
routine for everyone.
9) Readiness should not be confused with sustainability.
i) Be ready for high-end force projection
going in, with secure logistics to follow quickly. The sustainment force
composition is very different, is rarely on tap, and must be accounted early.
10) The psychological costs of sustainment are
disproportionately placed on the shoulders of the best talent. Protect them.
11) An afloat CMOC offers security, hygiene, and rest. While
imperfect, it's a proven asset for some situations.
i) Naval assets in a coastal region
provide presence, poise, and protection. Bringing meetings aboard can be a
welcome respite for all players, but it's not neutral and may be dangerous for
those who must avoid misperceptions.
ii) In some circumstances, early,
formative discussions between new partners (a Humanitarian Planning Team) can
take place afloat, then move ashore when ready.
12) Critical Incident Stress Response within the care
providers can prove disabling.
i) Ensure resources are available for
support. Most people have never seen what your personnel will have to endure
daily.
13) Establish liaisons with stakeholders at every possible
level, inserting full-time live bodies from coordinating agencies (e.g. the UN,
USAID, senior NGOs) whereever it seems valuable and where you can:
i) within the Host Nation
infrastructure
ii) within the local population
groups
iii) within the coalition partners
14) Establish pre-conditions for deployment wherever you can
within
i) Host nation agreements (through
the Embassy, a Country Team, or a UN agency)
ii) International participants in the
Theater
iii) UN agencies
iv) Donor nations and agencies
15) Establish a secure environment for the conduct of your
mandate
i) Establish freedom of movement
ii) Neutralize the effectiveness of
the belligerents in a fair and equitable manner across factions when possible
iii) Establish and maintain working
relationships with the Host Nation, most frequently through the Embassy with a
coordinating UN agency
iv) Be prepared to support
humanitarian operations. They are often the core of the solution
v) Be able to monitor, verify, and
report on (and to) your major stakeholders
16) Information Operations can improve safety and security
during transitions to sustainment
i) Conversely, in a digital age,
communication dependent upon data links is inherently fragile and temptingly
vulnerable. Expect failures. Plan multiple redundancies for critical paths.
ii) Use your PSYOPS and Civil Affairs
teams early. May save lives.
17) Situational awareness will be problematic.
i) Maps should be held in common and
briefed in common. They are a critical resource and an opportunity for early
rapport.
(1) Declassify information early and often to the greatest possible
extent
ii) Daily briefs across topic areas
should be held with all major stakeholders
(a) Safety and Protection
(b) Food
(c) Logistics transport
(d) Social services
(e) Domestic needs
(f) Health and nutrition
(g) Water and sanitation
(h) Education
(i) Shelter
(j) Income generation
(k) Environmental protection
(l) Agency operational support
(m) Public Information
(n) Budgets
(o) Exit Strategy
18) Information that needs to be tracked constantly:
(a) Deployment of Armed Forces
(b) Stock at a glance
(c) Stock position, location
(d) Market price of food grains
(e) Maps: storing places and ports
(f) Shipping Schedules
(g) Position of Ships
(h) Unloading details
(i) Food movement programs
(j) Internal Procurement
(k) Maps: Situation Maps of affected
areas (e.g. landmines...)
(l) Relief Activities
(m) Cash Allocated
(n) Damage Reports
(o) Foreign Relief arrivals
19) Key initial decisions to make:
i) Weapons status: consider the
absolute minimum level required.
ii) Host Nation ability to provide an
appropriate and adequate level of security
(1) Try to augment and build. Not replace and take over.
iii) Medical support and social
sensitivities
iv) Whether Civil Affairs teams are
to do humanitarian assessments using tools held in common with UN relief
agencies and NGOs
v) Means of communication
coordination: Chose lowest common denominator. Include all possible parties.
vi) Imaging is necessary. Get
the products to the people who really need it.
(1) Again, declassify quickly
vii) Determine how to get
information to the people who need the most support. Remember those 19
year olds in desert cammies on a streetcorner, implementing foreign policy with
no strategic or operational view. Keep their educational needs paramount.
20) Know the environment
a) Weather, dust, mud, insects,
diseases, and the impact each has on equipment and personnel
Thirty Advisories:
1) Decide on the image you want to portray and stick
to it.
2) Start and restart key institutions early
a) Medicine, education, water, telephone services,
electrical power, churches
b) Begin the restoration of normalcy in areas that can
transition early
c) Stay involved enough to ensure the re-start is
sustainable
3) Don't make enemies but, if you do, don't treat them
gently.
4) Encourage innovation and non-traditional
approaches. Then listen when you get them.
5) Plan early and include everyone. This can't be
stressed enough.
6) Determine the Commander's Intent, the Centers of
Gravity, a Mission Analysis from the Intent and those Centers, an
7) Remain aware of other operational commitments
elsewhere that may tax your resources and replenishment options. There have
been unwelcome historical surprises.
8) Initial and replenishment manning will fall short
in medical, dental, construction, port operations, and other specialist areas.
Few Services are deep in skilled personnel anywhere in this new millennium.
9) Avoid becoming the carrier of the United States
Checkbook. That can create a falsely inflated economy that is very hard on the
rest of the local population.
10) Medical facilities have historically been looted
and destroyed early.
11) Other skilled local staffs are often gone by the
time we get there. Construction, electrical, plumbing, teachers, doctors,
nurses, midwives, and so forth can be hard to find when you need them.
12) Be aware of the local anti-intervention PSYOPS
campaign that may be waged against you
13) Decide whether you need better maps and charts
early and get the surveys started
a) Don't forget
to share
14) Recognize that fear of the military will be a
constant impediment for many people at some level. It will be essential for you
to understand the conflict issues, parties, and history
15) Identify your budget and financial sponsors early,
and recognize that all players present have both
16) Also note that all participants have media
requirements to one degree or another. Don't fight a tidal wave. Assist each
other in the common goal of ensuring each is (and looks) useful to the
sponsoring agencies
17) Recognize that military priorities for early
self-sustainment may not be shared by all parties present. Offload and airlift
schedules will be controversial if transport logistics are difficult and
controlled by the military.
18) Investigations of events that may later be
evidence of war crimes will be an early requirement, often within the first 48
hours within the area. Be prepared to interview in the native language,
photograph sites and subjects, and then archive the developing documentation.
This has historically gone poorly and the guilty have gone free.
19) Be prepared to offer religious services to
affected populations. In many areas of the world such services are an
overriding concern and holding services can sometimes defuse significant
tension.
20) There is never enough scalable amphibious lift in
a coastal operation
21) Make early arrangements for a mobile public
address system and loan it to your partners when they need it.
22) Form an early RF communications link between the
military, USAID, and the UN agencies
23) There should be an area available for informal
discussions. Coffee, tea, a few chairs. Much gets accomplished in an informal
context, one-on-one, face-to-face.
24) The UN agencies need a separate area to work
together apart from the military. They will be there far longer than most
military staff and may well stay in better, long-term billeting. Avoid
resentment. Avoid mocking. They know they'll be there after we've gone.
25) Early formation of a Combined Logistics Cell that
incorporates everyone saves a lot of time, money, and frustration. WFP is
especially talented at logistics and is a useful resource.
26) Power fails. Have backup manual methods for
anything important that requires electricity. Many painful lessons on record.
27) Have a central area for posting decisions,
messages, and schedules
28) Remember that more than half of our recent
populations have been under age 15. We need preparation to handle children in
large numbers. Use UNICEF. They are prepared to manage many "vulnerable
population" issues, including child soldiers.
29) The UN agencies are very reluctant to depend on
the military for core services support. Our military priorities are altered on
short notice from authority outside of our control, potentially affecting UN
agency provisioning to an affected population with little warning and with no
recourse. They won't rest easily if we're the sole source for something
important.
30) Ensure all of your personnel understand their
Standards of Conduct and Rules of Engagement. The carrying of small laminated
cards has proved useful.