==
As U.S. troops leave Iraq, State Department ramps up 



U.S. soldiers patrol outside Contingency Operating Site Taji, north of Baghdad. 
(Maya Alleruzzo/ASSOCIATED PRESS) 

Mary Beth Sheridan and Dan Zak 
Friday, Oct 7, 2011

The State Department is racing against an end-of-year deadline to take over 
Iraq operations from the U.S. military, throwing up buildings and marshalling 
contractors in its biggest overseas operation since the effort to rebuild 
Europe after World War II. 

While attention in Washington and Baghdad has centered on the number of U.S. 
troops that may remain in Iraq, they will be dwarfed by an estimated 16,000 
civilians under the American ambassador — the size of an Army division. 

The scale of the operation has raised concerns among lawmakers and government 
watchdogs, who fear the State Department will be overwhelmed by overseeing so 
many people, about 80 percent of them contractors. There is a risk, they say, 
of millions of dollars in waste and limited supervision of bodyguards. 

“We’re very, very worried,” said Christopher H. Shays, a former Republican 
member of Congress who served on the Commission on Wartime Contracting, at a 
House hearing on Tuesday. “I don’t know how they’re going to do it.” 

State Department officials say they are working flat-out to finish their 
preparations, adding contracting professionals to prevent fraud and focusing on 
ensuring U.S. personnel will be protected. 

“We’ve spent too much money and lost too many kids’ lives, not to do this thing 
right,” said Deputy Secretary of State Tom Nides. 

But officials acknowledge they have never done anything quite like this. “Make 
no mistake, this is hard,” said Nides. 

There are currently 43,000 U.S. servicemembers in Iraq. Under an agreement 
negotiated by the George W. Bush administration, they are to leave by the end 
of 2011. 

Iraqi leaders Tuesday said they wanted a small contingent of U.S. military 
trainers to remain, but without immunity from local prosecution, a condition 
the Obama administration has said it cannot accept. The administration has been 
planning to keep 3,000 to 5,000 military trainers if the two sides can hammer 
out an agreement. 

The list of responsibilities the State Department will pick up from the 
military is daunting. It will have to provide security for the roughly 1,750 
traditional embassy personnel — diplomats, aid workers, Treasury employees and 
so on — in a country that is still rocked by daily bombings and assassinations. 

To do so, State is contracting a security force of about 5,000. They will not 
only protect the Baghdad embassy but two consulates, a pair of support sites at 
Iraqi airports and three police-training facilities. 

The State Department will operate its own air service — the 46-aircraft Embassy 
Air Iraq — and its own hospitals, functions the U.S. military has been 
performing. About 4,600 contractors, mostly non-American, will provide cooking, 
cleaning, medical care and other services. Rounding out the civilian presence 
are about 4,600 people scattered over 10 or 11 sites where Iraqis will be 
instructed on how to use U.S. military equipment they’ve purchased. 

“This is not what State Department people train for, to run an operation of 
this size. Ever since 2003, they’ve been heavily reliant on U.S. military 
support,” said Max Boot, a national security expert at the Council on Foreign 
Relations. 

In its final report issued last month, the bipartisan Commission on Wartime 
Contracting said that billions of U.S. taxpayer dollars had been squandered in 
Iraq and Afghanistan, and charged that the State Department hadn’t made the 
necessary reforms in its contracting operation. 

“Therefore, significant additional waste — and mission degradation to the point 
of failure — can be expected as State continues with the daunting task of 
transition in Iraq,” it warned. 

State Department officials dispute that conclusion, saying they have hired 
dozens of extra contracting personnel and have gained experience in managing 
contractors in Iraq. 

Shays said he also worried that the State Department’s small security force 
will be stretched too thin to supervise armed contractors. He told the hearing 
he feared a repeat of the 2007 incident in which guards from the security firm 
then known as Blackwater opened fire at a Baghdad traffic circle, killing 17 
Iraqi civilians. 

Stuart Bowen, the inspector general for Iraq reconstruction, said in an 
interview that the transition would have other costs. Without the military 
protection, U.S. government personnel will have limited reach throughout Iraq, 
he said. Already, the 1,200 personnel in the consulate in the southern city of 
Basra can’t adequately move around that region, he said. 

“In between this area and Baghdad, there will be a void” of diplomatic 
coverage, Bowen said. 

Nides emphasized that the State Department wasn’t trying to duplicate the 
military mission. 

“That’s not what the Iraqis want. Frankly that’s not what was agreed to” with 
the government in Baghdad, he said. Instead, the department was trying to 
transition to a diplomatic presence, he said. 

While the Iraq operation will be huge by State Department standards, it will 
still represent a significant scaling down from the military-led mission, which 
currently involves 50,000 defense contractors. And State Department officials 
say their use of contractors is expected to drop sharply over the next three 
years, as security improves in Iraq. 

Nides noted that the State Department planned to spend less than $6 billion in 
Iraq in 2012, compared to an outlay of about $50 billion by the military this 
year. 

“That’s a pretty good transition dividend,” he said. 

The State Department had originally planned a more ambitious network of 
consulates and police training sites, but cut back after failing to get enough 
funding from Congress. 

Its smaller footprint will be evident in the police training program, which 
will be run out of three locations in Iraq. In contrast, the U.S. military had 
training programs in every one of the country’s 18 provinces, said Maj. Gen. 
Jeffrey S. Buchanan, chief spokesman for U.S. forces in Iraq. 

“We had a partnership at a much lower level but I think [State will] bring a 
very needed expertise at a higher level, a more strategic level,” he said. 

The department’s inspector-general reported in May that there was a risk that 
some of the new embassy facilities — such as hospitals and housing — wouldn’t 
be ready by year’s end. 

A State Department official acknowledged housing construction will probably 
extend into 2012. But at least temporary accommodations will be ready by year’s 
end for 10,000 people at the Baghdad embassy, said the official, who was not 
authorized to comment on the record. There will be no need — as initially 
feared — to make people use beds in shifts. 

“We will have the basics for everyone,” he said. 

[email protected] 

[email protected] 

Zak reported from Baghdad. 
Thanks,
Bagya
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