The Fate of the Civilian Surge in a Changing Environment | Page 11

required a greater contribution from civilian agencies. The directive built upon an earlier action, taken in 2004 by then Secretary of State Colin Powell, to create the Office for the Coordinator for Reconstruction and Stabilization (S/CRS) within the DOS.7 The new structure reported directly to Secretary Powell, bypassing the normal DOS chain of command. NSPD-44 tasked S/CRS to lead the USG’s implementation of R&S policy and to organize the “development of a strong civilian response capability including necessary surge capabilities.”8 The White House directive reflected the perceived need for cabinet-level oversight; as overall coordinator of U.S. foreign policy, the secretary of state would presumably ensure that civilian agencies, including the DOS itself, followed the lead of S/CRS. The decision also reflected the DOS mandate to ensure proper security for civilian diplomatic and development officials conducting operations overseas. Across the Potomac River, senior DOD officials endorsed NSPD-44’s aims, hoping to shift some of the R&S burden to civilian agencies. On 28 November 2005, just days before the White House released its directive, the Office of the Secretary of Defense issued DOD Instruction (DODI) 3000.05, giving stability operations a “priority comparable to combat operations.” 9 The instruction stated that “integrated civilian and military efforts are key to successful stability operations”10 and pledged the DOD “to lead and support the development of military-civilian teams… as a critical U.S. Government stability operations tool.”11 The DOD also worked alongside the DOS and the White House to negotiate authorities to transfer $100 million of its own funds to the DOS, via Section 1207 of the Fiscal Year 2006 National Defense Authorization Act,12 with the intent of jump-starting S/CRS operations. Subse- 4