The Consequence of “NGO Multipliers”

Rod Nordland’s article “Killings of Afghan Aid Workers Stirs a Debate” is a solid summary of a longstanding debate about the relationship between humanitarian NGOs and military actors in combat zones.  I have personal recollection of this debate raging within NGOs since at least 1991, although it dates far further back in reality.  What is of note in this article is that it puts this debate on NYT’s front page, which gives it far wider exposure.

My personal connection to this debate dates to 1991’s “Operation Provide Comfort,” best known for establishing the principle that humanitarian emergencies trump the prerogatives of state sovereignty — at least when the international community agrees that it does.  That year, at the urging of humanitarian agencies backed by media images of Iraqi Kurdish civilians dying by the thousands in the frozen mountains on the Turkish-Iraqi border, the international community decided to intervene against the Iraqi government’s protestations about the inviolability of state sovereignty.  Most international support came in the form of NGOs like MSF (Medecins sans Frontieres), Oxfam, Save the Children, and CRS (Catholic Relief Services), or IGOs like ICRC (Red Cross) and various UN agencies.  Military assistance was largely logistical in nature, with the Pentagon using helicopters to drop relief supplies to the stranded populations on pallets — several of which killed Kurdish civilians whom they landed upon.  I worked with CRS in the course of this intervention.

The next “humanitarian circus” I had the honor to participate in was 1992-1993 Somalia — and this time the role of military assistance notably shifted in a situation where state sovereignty didn’t really exist in the chaos of post-Siad Barre Somalia.  This time, as George H.W. Bush’s poison pill gift to the incoming Clinton administration, the Pentagon and other international military leaders decided to provide direct military escorts to humanitarian aid efforts.  I saw the transition from the already controversial private (militia-approved)  security details for NGOs to the international military escorts, and the mixed realities that often characterized the situation on the ground.   In this case, I worked with CRS prior to the intervention, and MSF after the intervention.

In the next major conflict, the 1992-1995 Yugoslavia war, humanitarian assistance was used as an excuse for not providing security assistance to victims of the war, along with the doctrine of state sovereignty (which still mattered, albeit far less after the precedence of the Kurdistan interventions of 1991).

In 1995 Rwanda, the international community refrained from serious action in the face of “incidents of genocide,” thus demonstrating the capricious nature of the doctrine of “humanitarian intervention.”

In Kosovo 1999, NATO decided to use this same doctrine of “humanitarian intervention” to justify a nearly month long bombing campaign of Serbia and Kosovo in order to force the Serbian government of the day to allow the return of Kosovars from their refugee camps in Albania and Macedonia.  I was active in this relief effort as well, working with MSF in Albania.

At the same time that “humanitarian intervention” became a justification for bombing, relief work became an activity entered into directly by military actors.  I first saw this trend working with MSF after the 1999 Istanbul earthquake, when U.S. military assistance was given in the form of a 3 day dental clinic for earthquake victims which was set up primarily to provide a photo op for (then) First Lady Hillary Clinton.  Since that time, the U.S. military has done far more ambitious direct assistance endeavors in the wake of the 2006 Tsunami, 2007 Pakistan earthquake, 2010 Haiti earthquake, and 2010 Pakistan floods.  In the Haiti assistance, U.S. forces commandeered the Port au Prince airport — and decided which aid flights would be allowed in.  Over a 20 year period, the U.S. military went from supporting humanitarian assistance to directing it.

By 2002 the doctrine of humanitarian intervention had come full circle, as it had morphed into just another weapon in the Bush administration’s arsenal.  Citing this doctrine, the Bush administration argued that an invasion of Iraq was necessary to save Iraq from itself.  While this wasn’t the primary argument given for the invasion, it was one of the top 3-4 arguments given along with that of Iraq’s WMD threat.  In the same period, Secretary of State Colin Powell openly stated that international NGOs should be thought of as a “force multiplier” when they act in concert with U.S. forces in interventions around the world.  That was the statement, and the turn in intervention logic, that led directly to the situation found in today’s Afghanistan, described in the article below.

Apparently, in today’s Afghanistan some relief work sanctioned by the U.S. military as part of its counterinsurgency operations is being carried out by for-profit relief companies.  Is it then surprising that NGO workers are being killed by the dozens (mostly local, not international — although international relief workers are also being killed enough to make the news)?  Equally, is it surprising that non-affiliated NGO relief workers are being killed less frequently than affiliated relief workers (private contractors, USAID staff, PRT staff)?

Over the past 20 years, relief work has changed so much that it has become unrecognizable.

Here’s the article text:

December 13, 2010

Killings of Afghan Aid Workers Stir a Debate

By ROD NORDLAND

KABUL, Afghanistan — At least 100 relief workers in Afghanistan have been killed so far this year, far more than in any previous year, prompting a debate within humanitarian organizations about whether American military strategy is putting them and the Afghans they serve at unnecessary risk.

Most of the victims worked for aid contractors employed by NATO countries, with fewer victims among traditional nonprofit aid groups.

The difference in the body counts of the two groups is at the heart of a question troubling the aid community: Has American counterinsurgency strategy militarized the delivery of aid?

That doctrine calls for making civilian development aid a major adjunct to the military push. To do that there are Provincial Reconstruction Teams in 33 of 34 provinces, staffed by civilians from coalition countries to deliver aid projects. The effort is enormous, dominated by the Americans; the United States Agency for International Development alone is spending $4 billion this year, most of it through the teams.

The so-called P.R.T.’s work from heavily guarded military compounds and are generally escorted by troops from the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force.

Traditional aid workers worry that the P.R.T.’s and the development companies working for them are compromising their neutrality. Oxfam and 28 other charitable groups signed a report last month, “Nowhere to Turn,” that contends the practice puts civilians at greater risk.

“In many instances, where P.R.T. projects have been implemented in insecure areas in an effort to win ‘hearts and minds,’ they put individuals and communities at risk,” the report said.

Michiel Hofman, the head of Doctors Without Borders in Afghanistan, said, “This assistance forces the beneficiaries to choose sides, and many people in the disputed areas do not want to choose sides.”

The military and its NATO civilian partners disagree. Earl Gast, the mission director for U.S.A.I.D. in Afghanistan, said the United Nations and the International Security Assistance Force had agreed on a clear distinction and clear rules regarding humanitarian aid — “that it can’t be militarized and it can’t be politicized.”

“Those are rules that we follow,” Mr. Gast said.

Part of the problem is the definition of humanitarian aid. Traditionally it means life-saving emergency assistance, but the distinction is often unclear. Providing medical care for disaster victims, for instance, is clearly humanitarian, but building a medical clinic for war victims could be considered either humanitarian or developmental aid, properly within the scope of the civil-military effort.

Further complicating matters, many traditional relief groups have expanded their efforts into development work, although they take pains to ensure that their projects are not connected to the government or the military.

The military and its supporters say, however, that traditional aid groups have neither the capacity nor the willingness to bring large-scale aid programs to conflict areas. This has resulted in a reliance on private development companies, most of them profit-making, to deliver the aid programs paid for by NATO countries.

“Someone has to go into the areas where the war is being fought,” Mr. Gast said. “We recognize that some N.G.O.’s don’t have the capacity and some of them don’t want to, but there are other willing partners who can go,” he said, using the abbreviation for nongovernmental organizations.

A Dec. 1 report by Refugees International was highly critical. “U.S.A.I.D.’s use of development contractors and frequent embeds with the military have dangerously blurred humanitarian principles by associating such programs with a party to the conflict,” the group wrote.

Among the contracted aid groups working for coalition government programs, which nearly always employ armed guards and work in fortified compounds or from military bases, the body count has been particularly severe. Eighty aid contractors employed by the United States Agency for International Development were killed and 220 wounded from January through early November of this year. (In the same period, 410 American soldiers and Marines died.)

The aid contractors were attacked on average 55 times a month — a sevenfold increase over 2009, Mr. Gast said. By contrast, 20 people employed by charitable and humanitarian groups, which refuse to use armed guards or work with the military, were killed during the first nine months of this year.

Sixty-four charitable aid workers were kidnapped by insurgents this year. All were released unharmed, usually after negotiations involving local community leaders who vouched for them, according to the Afghanistan NGO Safety Office.

One U.S.A.I.D. contractor who was kidnapped, Linda Norgrove, was killed during a botched rescue attempt by American Special Forces troops.

The military and its supporters say the difference in body counts only reflects the fact that the aid contractors work in dangerous areas where many nongovernmental organizations are unwilling to operate.

Nongovernmental organizations vigorously disagree. “We are in 26 provinces,” said Ashley Jackson of Oxfam, “and in Arghandab there are four N.G.O.’s working on health care and education.” Arghandab is one of the most dangerous areas in Kandahar, with a district-level team from the Provincial Reconstruction Team running more than 50 aid projects. “The P.R.T.’s’ presence makes it more dangerous to work there,” Ms. Jackson said.

NATO officials contend that insurgents do not distinguish between aid workers. “Insurgents have made clear both in their rhetoric and their actions that they target N.G.O.’s and aid workers,” said Mark Jacobson, the deputy senior civilian representative of NATO in Afghanistan.

But aid officials counter that the very difference in casualties between private contractors and charitable ones shows that the Taliban do make a distinction.

“It’s quite easy,” said Mr. Hofman of Doctors Without Borders. “We don’t use armed guards, we don’t have barbed wire on our gates, there’s a clear logo on our cars, and we are not associated with any program strengthening government. The government is just one of many warring parties.”

Doctors Without Borders has offices in Lashkar Gah, the capital of Helmand Province, where it runs a hospital. Those offices have never been attacked, while a private development company, DAI, just down the same street, has a fortified compound that has been attacked twice by insurgents, Mr. Hofman said.

Many of the traditional aid groups are particularly critical of the United Nations, which they accuse of failing in its responsibility to make sure aid efforts are not militarized. The United Nations recognizes the Afghan government and is politically committed to it, but many of its agencies, including Unicef and the World Food Program, are expected to deliver humanitarian aid.

The conflict inherent in those two roles is typified by Robert Watson, who serves both as the deputy special representative of the secretary general, a political role, and as the head of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in Kabul.

Mr. Watson agrees that the lines are often blurred. “It makes it difficult for us in the humanitarian community to demonstrate to those on the other side of the conflict that we strive to be neutral intermediaries,” he said.

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