Peace & Stability Journal Volume 5, Issue 3 | Page 36

First, Civil Affairs is a national strategic capability that must be preserved. CA is the major capability the nation has to transition to peace and bring together whole-of-nation elements to help mitigate conflict, to end and prevent wars. It is the most expedient and cost-effective means to execute U.S. political-military strategy and secure peace and stability on the ground. The low-tech solution to the low-tech problem, it engages and collaborates with partners from all walks of life to prevent or mitigate large-scale deployments of general purpose forces for low or high intensity combat operations. This unique strategic economy-of-force capability helps preserve combat forces for their core missions. In that regard, Civil Affairs is an essential instrument of America’s “strategic landpower.” “As I look to the future and think about the nature of future operations and the character of the environment in which we send the women and men of our Nation,” retired General Carter F. Ham, keynote at the Civil Affairs Roundtable, told an audience of Active, Reserve, and retired military, civilians, and cadets, “it becomes clearer to me the essential role of Civil Affairs.” Second, Civil Affairs like all major strategic capabilities, requires appropriate authorization, organization, and resourcing. Given the growing and not diminishing need of the Joint Force to deal with complex peace and security environments and security cooperation, conflict prevention, and peacebuilding in coordination with an even greater array of civilian partners, Civil Affairs must evolve and adapt to these emerging imperatives which will require the CA force to work more collaboratively, multilaterally, with and through country teams. Citing his own experiences with Civil Affairs in the Balkans, Iraq, and Africa, General Ham noted how each time small numbers of Civil Affairs professionals had a “disproportionate effect” on leveraging “positive outcomes with relatively minor investment.” A rebalancing and overhaul of all of Civil Affairs along “DOTMLPF-P” (doctrine, organization, training, material, leadership, education, and policy) lines is no doubt in the offing. Army Reserve CA in particular has been far from ideally structured under DOTMLPF-P and is not integrated st