Monday, January 05, 2015

The Afghan President’s Overreach - THE EDITORIAL BOARD

President Ashraf Ghani of Afghanistan is known for occasionally being hot-tempered. But it was nonetheless baffling to Western diplomats when, in recent days, he abruptly demanded that the United Nations Development Program, the agency that manages hundreds of millions of dollars provided by Western donors to run the police force,relinquish responsibility for the fund within six months.

Mr. Ghani seems to think the Afghan government, despite its history of endemic corruption, could do a better job. He has complained that the agency spends too much on overhead managing the fund, and he seems intent on moving swiftly to establish himself as a bold, visionary leader. But transferring the fund, known as the Law and Order Trust Fund, would almost certainly make it vulnerable to the kind of theft that has been routine in Afghan ministries over that past decade of war.

American taxpayers have much at stake in controversies such as this, as the war enters a new phase. As tempting as it is to think of the Afghan war as receding in the rearview mirror, the United States remains deeply embroiled in the conflict. President Obama celebrated the nominal end of America’s combat mission last month, vowing, with unfounded optimism, that the country was “not going to be a source of terrorist attacks again.”

However, his administration opted to retain significant military operations in Afghanistan, where roughly 10,600 troops continue to serve. Washington has also committed to continue spending billions of dollars to keep Afghanistan’s fledgling security forces afloat.

The U.N.D.P. is not without critics. In September, the inspector general who oversees American reconstruction funding wrote a letter warning that the agency had failed to address suspected fraud committed by officials at the Afghan Interior Ministry who had taken “dubious” deductions from police salaries.

Since January 2011, the U.N.D.P. has paid out more than $1.62 billion that has been used largely to cover the salaries and pensions of Afghan police officers. The United States and its allies have contributed more than $3.1 billion to the fund since 2002.

Western diplomats say the United Nations agency has done a reasonably good job managing the money in a country where some level of misappropriation is seen as inevitable. Western donors agree that Afghan ministries should eventually assume more responsibility for managing international aid, but the six-month deadline Mr. Ghani has imposed appears unrealistic and arbitrary.

Mr. Ghani, a former World Bank executive, understands how donor funds are handled. He has spoken out candidly and forcefully about the need to battle corruption in Afghanistan. What he has yet to do, though, is propose a credible alternative to improve the delivery and spending of Western aid.

To accomplish that, Mr. Ghani, who assumed office in September, must first focus on getting a cabinet in place. Currently, the security ministries are without permanent, empowered leaders.  Read More at NYTimes

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