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Did State Get the QDDR Right?

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03.24.2011 at 11:32pm

Center for a New American Security (CNAS) Experts: Did State Get the QDDR Right?

Washington, D.C., March 24, 2011 — The Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review (QDDR), released by the State Department last December, provides a road map for the future of U.S. diplomacy and development. But in a political climate dominated by fiscal and budgetary constraints, the QDDR focuses on the need for new investments in civilian power when it should have focused on trade-offs, according to a new article in The Washington Quarterly by CNAS Vice President and Director of Studies Dr. Kristin M. Lord and Bacevich Fellow Brian Burton.

Lord and Burton praise many of the initiatives set forth in the QDDR but suggest that if the QDDR does not help produce real change, it could create disillusionment with the broader effort to strengthen civilian power in support of U.S. national interests. The United States will risk entering a period of “smart power fatigue” that will only further sap the strength of the agencies upon which U.S. foreign policy relies.

Former State Department Director of Policy Planning and co-director of the QDDR Anne-Marie Slaughter agrees with the article’s call to set priorities in a resource-constrained environment, noting, “Leading through civilian power means directing and coordinating the resources of all America’s civilian agencies to prevent and resolve conflicts. In this constrained economic environment, we will have to make tradeoffs, but diplomacy and development cannot fall by the wayside.”

The Washington Quarterly article caps a year-long CNAS project on U.S. diplomacy and development designed to help inform the QDDR process.

Other CNAS publications in this series include:

Did the State Department Get the QDDR Right?, by CNAS Vice President and Director of Studies Dr. Kristin M. Lord and Bacevich Fellow Brian Burton, Spring 2011

Managing 21st-Century Diplomacy: Lessons from Global Corporations, by CNAS Vice President and Director of Studies Dr. Kristin M. Lord and Senior Fellow Richard Fontaine, December 2010

Beyond Borders: Developing Comprehensive National Security Policies to Address Complex Regional Challenges, by CNAS Senior Advisor Dr. Patrick Cronin and Bacevich Fellow Brian Burton, December 2010

Eye to the Future: Refocusing State Department Policy Planning, by CNAS Senior Fellow Richard Fontaine and Bacevich Fellow Brian Burton, August 2010

Planning Diplomacy and Development: Force Planning Applications for the State Department and USAID, by CNAS Bacevich Fellow Brian Burton, August 2010

Contractors in American Conflicts: Adapting to a New Reality, by CNAS Senior Fellow Richard Fontaine and President Dr. John A. Nagl, June 2010

Engaging the Private Sector for the Public Good: The Power of Network Diplomacy, by CNAS Vice President and Director of Studies Dr. Kristin M. Lord, January 2010

Learning from Experience: Lessons from the QDR for the QDDR, by CNAS Bacevich Fellow Brian Burton, January 2010

Non-CNAS publications and events related to the QDDR include:

Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review, U.S. Department of State QDDR web page

Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review, United States Agency for International Development web page

Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review, QDDR Facebook page

Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review, QDDR Wikipedia page

Secretary Clinton Releases the Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review, U.S. Department of State Town Hall video, December 2010

Clinton’s Remarks on the First Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review, Transcript, Center for Foreign Relations, December 2010

Leading Through Civilian Power: 2010 QDDR, U.S. Department of State briefing slides, Washington Post, December 2010

An Independent Commentary on the QDDR, by Sixteen former and retired senior career officials from the U.S. Department of State and the U.S. Agency for International Development, December 2010

Weighing an Ambitious QDDR, by Laurie Garrett, Yanzhong Huang, Isobel Coleman, and Paul B. Stares, Council on Foreign Relations, December 2010

Concepts Are Not Enough, by Anthony H. Cordesman, Center for Strategic and International Studies, December 2010

The QDDR: Does Quadrennial Stand for How Long it Will Take to Complete?,,by Matt Armstrong, MountainRunner, September 2010

State Department Launches Inaugural Review of Diplomacy and Development, by Sheila Herrling, Center for Global Development, July 2009

The Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review Highlights Many Themes Prevalent in PNSR Publications, Project for National Security Reform, March 2011

Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review: Our Assessment, by Gordon Adams, Rebecca Williams, and Matthew Leatherman, The Stimson Center, December 2010

Muddling Through: How Development’s Past Shapes Its Future, by David Ekbladh, The Belfer Center, November 2009

MFAN QDDR Blog Series: Time for Hard Questions, by George Ingram, Modernizing Foreign Assisstance Network, March 2010

The First Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review: Strengthening America’s Role in the 21st Century, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, seminar video, December 2010

Foreign Policy: Reversing Diplomacy’s Feedback Loop, by Daniel Drezner, National Public Radio, December 2010

Clinton Announces State Department Review Stressing Conflict Prevention, by Mary Beth Sheridan, Washington Post, December 2010

Clinton Pledges Bigger Role for Besieged State Department, by Mark Landler, New York Times, December 2010

State Department Pledges Major Reforms with New QDDR, by Josh Rogin, Foreign Policy, December 2010

QDDR: No Bull’s-eye, But Generally On-target, by Stephen Johnson, Foreign Policy, December 2010

NGO Community Likes State’s QDDR But Worried About Implementation, by Josh Rogin, Foreign Policy, December 2010

Hillary Clinton’s Vision for Foreign Policy on a Tight Budget, by Howard LaFranchi, Christian Science Monitor, December 2010

Clinton Speech Signals Transformation at State, by Spencer Ackerman, Washington Independent, July 2009

U.S. Considering Combining Military, International Affairs Budgets, by Kevin Baron, Stars and Stripes, November 2010

Pinstripes to Cargo Pants, Clinton Tailors New Vision for Diplomacy, by Elise Labott, CNN, October 2010

Diplomacy And Development Review, Voice of America editorial, January 2011

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