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Viewing cable 05ROME1123, INDEPENDENT EXTERNAL EVALUATION OF FAO: STEADY

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
05ROME1123 2005-04-01 15:54 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Embassy Rome
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
UNCLAS  ROME 001123 
 
SIPDIS 
 
 
SENSITIVE 
 
STATE FOR IO DAS MILLER, IO/EDA, OES, E, EB; 
 
FROM THE U.S. MISSION TO THE UN AGENCIES IN ROME 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: AORC EAGR EAID KUNR FAO
SUBJECT:  INDEPENDENT EXTERNAL EVALUATION OF FAO: STEADY 
BUT MEASURED PROGRESS 
 
REF:  (A) 04 ROME 4624,  (B) 04 ROME 4297, 
      (C) ROME 0239,     (D) ROME 0327 
      (E) STATE 025999 
 
Sensitive but unclassified - please handle accordingly. 
 
1.  (U)  Summary:  In its February and March meetings, 
the Intersessional Working Group (ISWG) on the 
Independent External Evaluation (IEE) of FAO took 
significant steps to move the IEE process forward: 
(1) designation of a regionally balanced Bureau with a 
U.S. vice chair, (2) agreement on criteria and procedures 
for selection and hiring of experts to assist the ISWG, 
(3) concurrence on the purpose, scope and coverage of a 2- 
day ISWG seminar designed to give the experts clear 
guidance so that they can begin work on an IEE approach 
paper and a first draft of the IEE terms of reference 
(TOR), and (4) agreement on a notional timetable of 
meetings through mid May.  Progress has been slower than 
U.S. and other major donors had hoped, and the likelihood 
that the ISWG will accomplish its mandate in time for the 
June 2005 FAO Council is diminishing; but key USG 
objectives for the IEE process are being met, and the 
more measured pace has helped keep G-77 members on board. 
Contributions and pledges to the ISWG Trust Fund thus far 
amount to almost $88,500 from three donors, with several 
other countries poised to contribute.  Planned ISWG 
expenditures through May are estimated at $137,700.  End 
summary. 
 
BACKGROUND 
 
2.  (U)  In November 2004, the FAO Council agreed to 
begin work on an IEE of FAO -- the first truly 
independent evaluation with such scope and with such 
broad member buy-in of any major UN organization.  The 
Council created an ISWG to draft TOR for the IEE and to 
present proposals for the management of the IEE process, 
preferably by the next Council meeting (June 2005), but 
no later than the November 2005 Council.  Ref C reports 
on the first ISWG meeting, held on 14 January, and ref D 
recaps discussion of the IEE by the Geneva Group (top 
donors) on 28 January.  The ISWG met again on 21 February 
and 23 March, and made significant progress in organizing 
its own work, in setting criteria for experts, in 
establishing a mechanism (viz., an expert-facilitated 
ISWG seminar) to translate the expressed wishes and 
desires of FAO members into draft TOR, and in setting a 
timetable. 
 
ISWG BUREAU AND ISWG WORKING PROCEDURES 
 
3.  (U)  On 21 February, ISWG members agreed that the 
ISWG's work would be facilitated by a Bureau, which would 
consist of the ISWG Chair (Ambassador Flavio Perri, 
Permanent Representative of Brazil), and one 
representative from each of the seven regional groups. 
Designated Bureau members are Afghanistan, Australia, 
Dominican Republic, Egypt, Netherlands, Pakistan, and the 
U.S.  Other members are free to attend Bureau meetings as 
observers, and several have done so.  U.S. Alternate 
Permrep Willem Brakel was designated ISWG Vice Chair, ad 
personam.  It was agreed tacitly that the working 
language of the Bureau would be English. 
 
4.  (SBU)  The Bureau met several times between the 
February and March ISWG meetings, and proved to be an 
effective mechanism to move the IEE forward.  Chairman 
Perri kept a firm controlling hand on the Bureau's 
deliberations.  This slowed down some steps; but also had 
a positive effect: after Perri had been convinced on any 
given point by the more proactive OECD Bureau members, he 
was able to bring the more cautious and skeptical G-77 
members along.  The U.S. vice-chairmanship has given the 
Bureau leadership a desirable North-South balance, and 
has complemented Perri's blustery, broad-brush tendencies 
with a more practical and detail-oriented approach.  The 
OECD members of the Bureau have worked together smoothly, 
thanks in part to timely "Geneva Group" meetings hosted 
by the U.S. Mission. 
 
5.  (SBU)  Perri has readily turned to John Markie, Chief 
of the FAO Evaluation Service (PBEE), as an advisor on 
technical and logistical issues, as the first drafter of 
Bureau and ISWG minutes, and as the repository of ISWG 
documents.  This close cooperation with the Secretariat 
rightly raised some eyebrows, but the members who are 
 
 
most concerned about the independence of the IEE 
(including the U.S.) have ensured that PBEE's role is 
strictly a technical and supporting function, and that it 
is the member governments who call the shots on all 
matters of policy and substance.  (It should be 
recognized, too, that the FAO Secretariat is an important 
stakeholder in the IEE, and should consider itself so, in 
order to increase the organizations buy-in top IEE 
results and recommendations.) 
 
WORKING METHODS OF THE BUREAU AND THE ISWG 
 
6.  (SBU)  The Bureau was conceived as a clearing house 
to facilitate the work of the ISWG, but with all policy 
decisions to be referred to the full ISWG membership. 
Yet, given the relative efficiency of the Bureau 
mechanism and the good and improving chemistry among its 
members, there has been some tendency for the Bureau to 
begin to lead, rather than follow, the ISWG.  This 
process has served the OECD countries (whose Bureau 
representatives coordinate smoothly and closely with 
their regional group constituents) very well.  It has 
been more problematical for the African, Asian and Latin 
American Bureau members, who have more difficulty 
communicating and coordinating with their constituents, 
and who therefore risk getting ahead of them. 
 
7.  (SBU)  ISWG meetings themselves, attended by 30-40 
members, have proved to be cumbersome and time-consuming. 
Even a largely pre-cooked discussion based on texts 
previously agreed in the Bureau can take many hours to 
approve.  This is a particular concern since the ISWG 
requires simultaneous translation in four languages, 
costing nearly $15,000 per day.  At times, Chairman Perri 
seems in little hurry to move discussions forward to 
conclusion, but he makes skillful use of side-discussions 
during coffee and lunch breaks to cobble together 
solutions to potentially contentious issues.  At the end 
of the day, consensus is achieved, and political 
legitimacy established. 
 
EXPERT SUPPORT 
 
8.  (U)  From the inception of the ISWG, it was 
recognized that member governments would need independent 
expert advice to carry the IEE forward.  This idea was 
fleshed out in separate but complementary papers 
circulated in January by the European and North American 
regional groups.  The Bureau shaped the concept into a 
paper on "Expert Support to the ISWG" that was presented 
for approval at the 23 March meeting.  Key features 
include: 
 
-- Some experts (Category A) will be invited to provide 
specialized inputs at the ISWG preparatory seminar (see 
para. 10-12), including the Director General and his 
representatives; staff members of other agencies to share 
experience of evaluations of multilateral institutions; 
external experts on evaluation methodology and good 
practice; and external experts and stakeholders to give 
outside perspectives on the work of FAO and their 
expectations of the evaluation. 
 
-- A Panel of Experts (Category B experts) will be 
established to assist the ISWG in preparing the TOR for 
the IEE.  The panel will identify critical issues; 
provide inputs to the ISWG seminar; participate in and 
assist the deliberations of the ISWG; draft and present 
an approach paper on the scope, coverage and focus of the 
evaluation; and present draft TOR. 
 
-- In the Panel of Experts as a whole, the following 
competencies and skills will be sought: experience of 
complex evaluations, knowledge of evaluation methodology, 
knowledge of the UN and international system, knowledge 
of FAO's field of work, experience of working in/with 
developing countries, communication skills and linguistic 
ability, and internationally recognized achievements. 
 
-- Experts will be employed under applicable FAO rules, 
and remuneration for Category B experts will be $600 per 
day (the going rate for consultants of the desired 
caliber) for an estimated 22 days. 
 
-- The selection process will include the following 
steps: (1) nominations sent to the ISWG Bureau by the 
regional group coordinators, (2) the Bureau assesses, 
 
 
rates and shortlists the candidates, (3) the ISWG selects 
the Expert Panel, and (4) the experts are appointed by 
the Chief of PBEE in his capacity as budget holder of the 
IEE trust fund. 
 
9.  (SBU)  The ISWG in March eventually agreed to all the 
main points above, but lengthy discussions revealed a 
fundamental misunderstanding on the part of some G-77 
members about the nature of the Category B experts 
sought.  These members had come to see the experts as 
somehow representing or speaking for the interests of 
their respective regions, and they therefore wanted as 
many experts as possible (ideally for them, one per 
region).  Concerned that some regions might not be able 
to find suitable experts, these G-77 members also pressed 
the Chairman repeatedly to postpone the nomination 
deadline.  USdel made a forceful argument that, if the 
experts are qualified, their region of origin is 
immaterial, and that hiring more than 2-3 experts would 
be impractical and prohibitively expensive.  Moreover, we 
noted, if the nomination process lagged the ISWG would be 
unable to complete its work by the June 2005 FAO Council. 
The discussion seemed to achieve an important 
clarification for the G-77 reps present.  Nevertheless, 
Chairman Perri ended up moving back the deadline, 
settling on 20 April.  When it was ascertained that this 
last deadline was firm, OECD reps reluctantly acquiesced, 
recognizing that some delays might be necessary to give 
the G-77 a sense of comfort with the process. 
 
ISWG SEMINAR 
 
10. (U)  For the 23 March ISWG, the Bureau also prepared 
a paper outlining the purpose, scope, and coverage of the 
proposed ISWG seminar.  In the Bureau's proposal, the 
seminar: 
 
-- "should be designed to result in clear and agreed 
guidance for the consultant experts from the ISWG, giving 
them sufficient information to prepare an approach paper 
for ISWG decision on the basis of which IEE TOR will be 
drafted," 
 
-- would "identify and clarify issues and questions on 
(a) the purpose, focus and coverage of the evaluation, 
and (b) the methodology of the evaluation," and 
 
-- would include four sections: (a) information from 
stakeholders on vision for FAO and perceived issues to be 
examined through an evaluation, (b) briefings by invitees 
on evaluation experiences, (c) briefings by regional 
groups on their expectations from and issues for an 
evaluation, and (d) discussion between the ISWG and Panel 
of Experts on issues and lessons for evaluation approach 
and methodology. 
 
11.  (SBU)  The nature of the seminar was the subject of 
much discussion at ISWG and Bureau meetings in February- 
March.  The final Bureau paper captured the idea, first 
proposed in the U.S.-drafted North America group paper, 
that the seminar should be tightly focused and aimed at 
producing a concrete outcome.  Gaining broad acceptance 
of this concept required long, patient explanation by the 
U.S. and other like-minded countries.  African delegates, 
in particular, argued for more time and for more seminars 
that would educate ISWG members in depth on the role and 
work of FAO. 
 
12.  (SBU)  To streamline the process of getting from the 
ISWG to a first draft of the TOR, the U.S., Canada and 
Australia initially proposed that the Panel of Experts 
attending and facilitating discussions at the ISWG 
seminar would take on board the comments of all members, 
and turn these directly into draft TOR.  European 
delegates argued for interposing another step: 
immediately after the ISWG seminar, the hired experts 
would draft an approach paper that would outline in broad 
terms the purpose, coverage and scope of the IEE.  The 
approach paper would then be taken back to the ISWG for 
its approval at a subsequent meeting, and thereafter the 
drafting of the TOR would become a relatively 
straightforward technical exercise.  The Europeans argued 
persuasively that a scenario that includes an approach 
paper, while introducing an extra step, would in the long 
run save time and help maintain consensus.  The ISWG 
agreed, and adopted this idea on 23 March. 
 
 
TIMETABLE 
 
13.  (U)  The ISWG also agreed on the following notional 
timetable for the near term: 
 
  20 Apr     deadline for nominations of experts 
 
  04 May     ISWG meeting to confirm selection of the 
             Panel of Experts and seminar speakers 
 
  17-18 May  Seminar 
 
14.  (U)  This schedule allows for about one month after 
the seminar until the next FAO Council meeting (20-25 
June).  That an approach paper can be written/approved 
and IEE TOR drafted in that time is increasingly 
unlikely.  The U.S. and other like-minded countries have 
repeatedly and strongly urged that the ISWG continue to 
strive to meet the June 2005 target, if possible. 
 
FUNDING THE IEE 
 
15.  (U)  Thus far, voluntary contributions and formal 
pledges to the IEE process (from Switzerland, U.S. and 
New Zealand) have totaled $88,489.  As of the end of 
March, about $57,000 has been spent.  Estimated future 
expenditures in the near term, including the 4 May 
meeting of the ISWG, the hiring of 3 experts, and the 
seminar, come to about $138,000.  Taking into account 
existing donor contributions and commitments, another 
$106,000 is urgently needed to continue the ISWG's work. 
 
16.  (SBU)  The USG demarche to potential donor capitals 
(ref E) has helped mobilize support for the IEE.  A 
letter to all FAO members from Aziz Mekouar, Independent 
Chair of the FAO Council, which went out in late March, 
also helped generate interest.  U.S. Mission has learned 
that the following countries are poised to make pledges 
or contributions to the IEE startup in the near term: 
Canada, Finland, UK, and possibly Sweden.  Many of these 
contributions would be on the order of the U.S. $25,000 
startup pledge.  Other potential donors say they are 
likely to contribute, but may not make a final decision 
for several months (Italy), or plan to wait and see that 
the TOR are satisfactory before making a commitment 
(Germany, Belgium).  Still others are still considering 
whether or when to contribute (Netherlands, Spain). 
 
COMMENT 
 
17. (SBU)  Progress on the IEE has been significant, and 
it has been particularly noteworthy that consensus has 
been maintained among the entire ISWG membership. 
Maintaining broad buy-in and support has required steady, 
patient, persuasive diplomacy.  We have sought to push 
the process as much as we can, but recognize that too 
much pressure could be counterproductive.  Although the 
tone and spirit in the Bureau and the ISWG have remained 
cooperative and positive, it is clear that some members, 
particularly among African and some other Q 
delegations, continue to feel somewhat threatened by the 
complexity of the IEE.  Therefore, although the pace of 
progress has been somewhat slower than we had hoped, the 
added time has allowed us to retain and build support for 
the IEE.  Such buy-in is essential if the IEE is to be 
completed and its recommendations accepted and adopted. 
 
CLEVERLEY 
 
 
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	2005ROME01123 - Classification: UNCLASSIFIED