Author : Department of Department of Defense
Publisher :
ISBN 13 : 9781082787294
Total Pages : 298 pages
Book Rating : 4.7/5 (872 download)
Book Synopsis Stabilization: Lessons from the U. S. Experience in Afghanistan by : Department of Department of Defense
Download or read book Stabilization: Lessons from the U. S. Experience in Afghanistan written by Department of Department of Defense and published by . This book was released on 2019-07-26 with total page 298 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This lessons learned report draws important lessons from the U.S. experience with stabilization in Afghanistan from 2002-2017, with a special focus on the years after 2009 when most of the $4.7 billion in stabilization funds was spent. With the rise of the Islamic State and its affiliates, making poorly governed spaces inhospitable to transnational terrorist groups remains a vital U.S. national security priority. We anticipate U.S. government efforts to stabilize these areas by clearing them of terrorist groups and helping generate sufficient governance to keep them from returning will continue in fragile and conflict-affected states around the world. With U.S. stabilization efforts nascent in Syria and ramping up in Iraq, it is important that lessons from stabilizing Afghanistan inform these efforts.The term "stabilization" is frequently invoked in U.S. foreign policy circles and by other donor nations, yet it is not uniformly, precisely defined across relevant stakeholders. Definitions have varied by U.S. agency and even changed over time within agencies. In 2018, the U.S. government defined stabilization as:"A political endeavor involving an integrated civilian-military process to create conditions where locally legitimate authorities and systems can peaceably manage conflict and prevent a resurgence of violence. Transitional in nature, stabilization may include efforts to establish civil security, provide access to dispute resolution, and deliver targeted basic services, and establish a foundation for the return of displaced people and longer-term development."However, the concept of stabilization and notions about how it was to be implemented in Afghanistan took shape gradually and only coalesced as an explicit U.S. strategy in 2009.