The Fate of the Civilian Surge in a Changing Environment | Page 18

Another result of all this turmoil was that S/CRS and its successor, the CSO Bureau, were unable to engage effectively in nations that were of key interest to the United States – the exception being Afghanistan from 2007 to 2013, albeit in a limited fashion and with wavering enthusiasm from the country team.37 Most notably, S/CRS mobilized several dozen CRC-A advisors from the DOS, USAID, and other civilian agencies to remote areas of what is now South Sudan in 2010. The mission of the advisors was to support the efforts of local leaders to resolve conflicts between different ethnic and religious communities during the tense months leading up to that country’s independence the following year. S/CRS and CSO also contributed to R&S activities in Kenya, Honduras, Burma, Nigeria, and most recently, Syria.38 However, in all cases, the office’s role has been to support the efforts of the relevant U.S. embassy country team, rather than leading a whole-of-government response from Washington.39 Although CRS and its successor failed to achieve the coordination role envisioned for it in NSPD-44, a parallel reform undertaken at roughly the same time took a step in the right direction. In 2006, the George W. Bush administration created the Office of the Director for Foreign Assistance, also known by its DOS acronym “F,” to unify budget formulation, execution, and reporting across the foreign assistance portfolios of the DOS and USAID. In the ensuing years, F developed a new programming and budgeting framework, as well as common performance measurements, in order to facilitate reporting to Congress and the public on the range and scope of spending and the impacts of foreign assistance activities across dozens of lines of effort.40 An additional by-product of F and its foreign assistance framework was the articulation of a broad 11