| NDU 6004: REBUILDING WAR-TORN
COUNTRIES
COURSE DESCRIPTION
With the change in the strategic environment following the end of
the Cold War, the United States has participated more frequently
politically, financially, and militarily in aiding failed/failing
states. The United States conducts operations to prevent, contain,
or resolve regional conflicts that threaten its national interests.
U.S. participation, however, is not limited to military deployment,
but includes the diplomatic, economic, and informational instruments
of national power as well. In the current war on terrorism, mitigating
the threats that failed states present will continue to play an
important role in U.S. policy. The Bush administration has recognized
that to defeat international terrorism, we must defeat its political
and economic roots through military engagement, political development
and economic investment.
These operations have evolved over the last 50 years in response
to changes in the nature of conflict from that of interstate wars
to intrastate conflicts. Traditional peacekeeping, therefore, has
given way to more complex, multidimensional missions that combine
enforcement actions with rebuilding activities. Often, these operations
take place in conjunction with humanitarian emergencies and integrate
a multitude of civilian players from international and regional
organizations, nongovernmental organizations, and the U.S. interagency
community. Establishing and maintaining peace, the goal of any peace
operation, requires more than the military creating a safe and secure
environment. It also requires civil and political institutions that
respect good governance and human rights, justice and reconciliation,
economic and social well-being, and the rule of law. To achieve
these challenging goals, military and civilian organizations must
cooperate and coordinate effectively.
This course will examine the roles of the United Nations, the
United States, and nongovernmental organizations in rebuilding war-torn
societies—from peacekeeping to civil society development and
institution-building to good governance cultivation. The focus is
on developing a framework for analyzing the U.S’s approach
to and participation in dealing with failed/failing states. Building
on a foundation provided in the first two lessons, the course will
analyze the sources of failure in states, the nature of international
intervention, and civil-military coordination. A discussion on the
challenges of post-conflict reconstruction will highlight the difficult,
but fundamentally interdependent, relationships among the military,
political, humanitarian, and economic developmental aspects of capacity
building in war-torn nations. Ethical and legal issues in this regard
will also be examined. The class will conclude with a simulation
requiring students to apply lessons learned in class.
COURSE OBJECTIVES
- Examine current joint tactics, techniques, and procedures for
the planning and execution of operations aimed at regenerating
and rebuilding war-torn societies.
- Analyze the principles and policies that guide international
and U.S. participation in dealing with states experiencing “failure”
in terms of governance, security, societal welfare, and economic
solvency.
- Analyze the models of approach to and participation in mitigating
the threats from failed and failing states as they support national
security goals and objectives.
- Analyze the challenges of civil-military and political-military
coordination by examining the different roles, capabilities, characteristics,
and cultures of various actors (international and regional organizations,
nongovernmental organizations, interagency community, and military
players) active in peace operations.
- Analyze the complexity of problems facing a post-conflict society
that peace operations attempt to address and the interdependent
relationship of the military, political, humanitarian, and economic
elements of regenerating war-torn societies.
METHODOLOGY
The course will combine readings, lectures, interactive guest speaker
presentations, seminar discussions, case studies, and a simulation
exercise. It is the student’s responsibility to infuse knowledge
gained in this elective into the core curriculum seminar discussions
and to question guest lecturers about their views on peace operations,
stabilization and reconstruction, and failed/failing states. Readings
will mostly be found on Blackboard, but also might be found in the
assigned texts or the Internet.
COURSE REQUIREMENTS
- Students are required to prepare for and participate regularly
in class discussions. Thorough preparation is necessary for maximizing
the educational value of class discussions and guest lectures.
- Students are required to prepare for and participate in the
two-day simulation that will build a strategy for the post-conflict
reconstruction of Zimbabwe. Students will be assigned an organization
to represent throughout the simulation and grouped into functional
sectors (security, governance, humanitarian, and development).
Each sector is required to prepare and deliver a 5-7 minute presentation
on its goals, objectives, and strategy for the reconstruction
of Zimbabwe at the beginning of the simulation in Lesson 11. The
simulation will conclude with a briefing of the final strategy
through Power Point slides to a panel of experts.
- To prepare for the simulation, students are required to read
the background material provided by the faculty, research their
assigned organization, and write one three-page paper. The paper,
due during Lesson 5, will provide background on the assigned organization’s
policy, structure, mission, and culture as it relates to Zimbabwe.
STUDENT EVALUATION
The instructors, based on ICAF and NWC regulations, will conduct
student evaluations. Grades will be based on classroom and course
contributions (50%), as well as participation in the simulation.
In addition you will be required to write two papers, the first
is a two – three page information paper about the organization
you will play in the simulation (10%). The other paper you will
be required to analyze the problem in the simulation based on the
role you will play; that paper three-five page paper must identify
problems confronting your organization and develop course of actions
(COAs) to resolve the problem (s), that paper is 40% of your grade.
FACULTY
Dr. Michael Baranick
Dr. Charles Barry
RESEARCH ASSISTANT
Ms. G. Lauren Lee
Additional NDU faculty may be invited as their areas of expertise
are highlighted in class discussions. Senior guest speakers with
experience in peace operations, planning processes, and policy coordination
will augment the core instructional staff.
| Lesson |
Date |
Subject |
| 1 |
TUES SEPT 16 |
INTRODUCTION /OVERVIEW |
| 2 |
TUES SEPT 23 |
FAILED STATES I |
| 3 |
TUES SEPT 30 |
FAILED STATES II/ INTERVENTION |
| 4 |
TUES OCT 7 |
SECURITY |
| 5 |
TUES OCT 14 |
GOVERNANCE |
| 6 |
TUES OCT 21 |
RULE OF LAW/ JUSTICE & RECONCILIATION |
| 7 |
TUES OCT 28 |
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT |
| 8 |
TUES NOV 4 |
PEACE OPERATIONS |
| 9 |
TUES NOV 11 |
ROLE OF EXTERNAL ACTORS (UN, IMF, WB, ETC.) |
| 10 |
TUES NOV 18 |
CAPACITY BUILDING |
| 11 |
TUES NOV 25 |
SIMULATION EXERCISE |
| 12 |
TUES DEC 2 |
EXERCISE AND COURSE WRAP-UP |
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