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It Isn't About Will or Resources

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From Max Boot:

Commentary » Blog Archive » The Need for Getting Good at Nation Building

Problem is, the U.S. government still lacks the right resources and structures to tackle effectively the difficult task of state-building (or, as it is popularly known, “nation building”) in the Third World.

I find this sort of essay tremendously disheartening. Boot seems to feel the challenge is one of will and resources. And unfortunately, this sentiment is widely shared by many others, including numerous prominent supporters of our escalation in Afghanistan. But the reality is that I don’t think most people who propose this sort of thing have actually done much research on the issue. Anyone with even a passing familiarity with the issue would acknowledge that the issue isn’t just of will and resources, it is more profoundly that we simply don’t know how to nation build. Some of the component issues include:

(1) There is no consensus on what constitutes an effective economic development program. The history of development assistance is pretty bleak, and while every few years a new fad emerges, none have panned out as a systematic answer to poverty and underdevelopment. We’ve gone through at least a half-dozen major cycles since the 1950s — we’ve focused in turn on capital formation, infrastructure development, educational improvements, good governance, public-private partnerships, the role of women, micro-finance initiatives. All with, at best, mixed success. In short, we simply don’t know how to do economic development in any consistent manner.

(2) We don’t know how to build responsive governance structures. We just don’t. The literature on this is even bleaker. What we do is largely negative. We know that democratization is likely counter-productive in the short-run, as it leads to political mobilization along religious, ethnic, tribal, clan lines. We do know that a strong civil society is an important impetus to good governance, by providing a “lobby” for good governance as well as an external check on government authority, but we have little idea of how to build civil society. Indeed, it isn’t even clear to me that our efforts to engage and encourage emergent civil society movements do any good. Yes, responsive, effective government seems like a great idea. Unfortunately, we don’t know how to get there.

(3) The history of anti-corruption initiatives is a history of almost 100% failure. There is simply put, no empirically validated model to support the notion that we can eliminate corruption.

(4) The history of counter-drug efforts is actually probably worse than anti-corruption initiatives.

That is the problem with Afghanistan and Yemen. The military elements of our counter-insurgency doctrine, as ahistorical and overly-optimistic as they are, are actually the most solid part of the plan. The notion that a “civilian surge” is either possible or that it would accomplish anything is a flight of fancy unfortunately. And it isn’t because of a lack of will or resources. The problem is that we just have no idea how to “build” a nation or a state. And the sooner we acknowledge this fact, the sooner we can move on to the development of sound mitigation strategies for places like Yemen.