The Fate of the Civilian Surge in a Changing Environment | Page 15

bility operations.26 In the ensuing years, a significant drawdown of U.S. forces in both Iraq and Afghanistan has taken place despite the ongoing stabilization challenges in both countries. Because the Obama White House has not updated R&S policy guidance, much of the current organization, doctrine, authority, resourcing, and personnel architecture related to these tasks are legacies of the Bush second term. In personal interviews, analysts and practitioners described a sense of drift and attenuation during the intervening years, leading some to conclude that NSPD-44’s aims went entirely unfulfilled. However, the reality is more complicated. The rest of this paper picks up the story from 2009 to the present, taking stock of civilian agencies’ current R&S capabilities in terms of policy coherence, planning, civilian surge capacity, and civil-military coordination. Improving Policy Coherence in Civilian Agencies’ R&S Efforts NSPD-44 directed S/CRS to “[e]nsure program and policy coordination among Departments and Agencies of the United States Government… [and p] rovide United States Government decision makers with detailed options for an integrated United States Government response in connection with specific R&S operations.” It also directed other U.S. federal departments and agencies to “[c]oordinate with S/CRS during budget formulation for relevant R&S activities prior to submission to [the Office of Management and Budget] and the Congress or as required to coordinate reconstruction and stabilization activities.”27 8