December 2009










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People of World Influence: Ambassador Ronald E. Neumann

Veteran U.S. Envoy: Bolster Diplomacy,
And Fight to Win in Afghanista


by John Shaw

Ronald E. Neumann, a veteran U.S. diplomat and president of the American Academy of Diplomacy, is convinced that U.S. foreign policy is at its most effective when skillful diplomacy is harnessed to strong military power. The former U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan also believes that careful implementation of policy by experienced diplomats and soldiers is nearly as important as the overall policy itself.

“The military and diplomatic efforts have got to work together. You can’t have a diplomatic lane and a military lane. The two are completely interwoven,” Neumann said in an interview with The Washington Diplomat.

A career U.S. diplomat who retired in 2007 after his Afghan assignment, Neumann has undergraduate and graduate degrees from the University of California at Riverside. After completing his studies, he enlisted in the U.S. Army during the Vietnam War, serving as an infantry officer who earned a Bronze Star and other combat awards.

“When President [Lyndon] Johnson enlarged the war in Vietnam, I decided to put my money where my mouth is and joined the army. I had been a supporter of the war and felt this was the right thing to do,” he said.

Neumann entered the U.S. Foreign Service in 1970 just weeks after returning from Vietnam. Following an initial posting in Senegal, most of his assignments pertained to the Middle East, especially the Persian Gulf. He served in Tabriz, Iran, in the early 1970s, was later posted to the United Arab Emirates and Yemen, and in 1991 headed up the Office of Northern Gulf Affairs, focusing on Iran and Iraq and working to assist Kurdish refugees.

Neumann served as the U.S. ambassador to three nations: Algeria (1994-97), Bahrain (2001-04) and most recently Afghanistan (2005-07). He also served in Iraq from 2004 to 2005, first working with the Coalition Provisional Authority and then in the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, where he was deeply involved in coordinating the political part of military.

In addition, he has held important State Department jobs in Washington, including as the Jordan desk officer, staff assistant in the Middle East Bureau, political officer in the Office of Southern European Affairs, and deputy assistant secretary in the Bureau of Near East Affairs.

In 2007, Neumann became president of the American Academy of Diplomacy, where his main goals have been to push for increased staffing at the State Department and U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID).

“Our niche at the academy is to support and strengthen diplomacy. All of our programs are oriented around explaining diplomacy. A lot of people talk about the need for more diplomacy, but very few have much notion of what that actually means,” Neumann said.

Founded in 1983, the American Academy of Diplomacy is a private, nonprofit, nonpartisan elected organization whose active membership of about 100 is reserved for people who have held senior positions of major responsibility in formulating and implementing U.S. foreign policy.

Its members include all living former secretaries of state, several former secretaries of defense, CIA directors, national security advisors and chairmen of the Senate Foreign Relations and House Foreign Affairs Committees. About two-thirds of the members are former career diplomats.

Initially, the academy offered assessments to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee about the quality of presidential ambassadorial nominations. It no longer does this, except in rare cases.

The academy pushes for adequate financial and other support to implement U.S. foreign policy and preserve the professionalism and attractiveness of the Foreign Service. It holds annual meetings on Capitol Hill, informal lunch seminars, and an annual awards luncheon to recognize important contributions in diplomacy.

Neumann noted that the academy also organizes programs to analyze issues that challenge U.S. diplomats: terrorism, democracy promotion, genocide prevention and conflicts in Africa.

He is particularly proud of an academy initiative that was begun under his predecessor, Ambassador Brandon Grove, to rigorously study national security funding. Organized in concert with the Henry L. Stimson Center and published in October 2008, the study concludes that the United States needs to roughly double the current number of diplomats, foreign assistance professionals and public diplomacy experts to achieve national objectives and fulfill the country’s international obligations.

The study further argues that important diplomatic work is migrating by default to the military, which has the staff and funding, but not sufficient experience or knowledge for tasks such as building civilian police forces, judicial systems and basic services following conflict or disaster.

Neumann agrees with the report’s central conclusions and is concerned that the militarization of U.S. diplomacy is accelerating. “We worked hard on this study and continue to push for its implementation. For us, writing the report was the end of the process. It was a way station. We continue to push it forward,” he said.

The academy helped to organize briefings about the study for the Obama and McCain presidential campaigns in 2008, the Obama transition team, and key leaders in the State Department and Congress. It also sponsored more than 20 public events across the country to explain the report’s findings.

“The State Department has never been resourced to carry out what people want it to do,” Neumann contends, noting there are only 6,500 Foreign Service officers and 2,200 USAID staff to cover a complex and dangerous world — compared to roughly 3 million people on the Pentagon’s payroll.

By some estimates, there are even as many military band members as there are American diplomats (also see “
Defense, Development and Diplomacy: Experts Want a Return to the Last Two” in the February 2009 issue of The Washington Diplomat).

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