1st step in COIN: Figure out the local governance system -- and work with it


Everybody's trashing
COIN
these days. Reminds me of the baseball player who fouls out and blames the bat.
I think a COIN approach remains a useful tactic, as part of a larger strategy
-- if done well. But as Little Jimmy Rushing used to advise, it takes patience and fortitude.



Here's a perspective
from remotest Afghanistan.



By "A Staff Guy in
Afghanistan"

Best Defense
department of salvaging COIN



From my perspective a large part of COIN
doctrine involves connecting the local population with the government.
Coalition forces in Afghanistan spend a great deal of time and effort
attempting to improve local governance and its relationship with the people. I
would suggest that this local governance already exists and that our
shortcoming, as coalition forces executing COIN operations, is our failure to
recognize this governance and how the existing governance interacts with and
within the larger governmental context. 



Take an average village. They have a village
governmental structure that interacts with other villages, with their district,
with local ministerial representatives, and with coalition and non-coalition
elements. The village makes something -- food, rugs, whatever -- and this
economic activity necessitates interaction with external actors. Basically,
they import and export. Our problem set, as a coalition force, is how to
understand both the immediate governance of the village and its interactions
with the external actors. [[BREAK]]



The business of our village here will
determine how much or little they support larger governance. If the external
governance supports predictability in economic activity and the costs are not
too onerous then, generally, they will. The business of the village will
determine their support of more government. Similarly, that external government
will want to be involved in the village if the village is a viable economic
entity. Everyone wants a piece of the pie.



A good first step would be our understanding
local, not national, governance and its economic impacts. Not just who, but
what are the laws and structures that constrain and support this local
governance. People are tied to their government when their livelihood depends
on said government, their business determines how much or little they will
support larger governance. It is not that everyone needs a government job or
handout, rather the governmental structures in place need to support,
predictably, the population's day-to-day economic activity.


'A Staff Guy in Afghanistan' is not a disgruntled
member of the AfPak Hands program. By the way, are there any gruntled members?



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Published on July 12, 2011 03:37
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