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Viewing cable 09ISLAMABAD2641, MANAGEMENT 2010 LOOKING FORWARD

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
09ISLAMABAD2641 2009-10-30 13:33 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Islamabad
VZCZCXRO4649
RR RUEHLH RUEHPW
DE RUEHIL #2641/01 3031333
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 301333Z OCT 09
FM AMEMBASSY ISLAMABAD
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 5767
INFO RUEHKP/AMCONSUL KARACHI 2447
RUEHPW/AMCONSUL PESHAWAR 7092
RUEHLH/AMCONSUL LAHORE 8046
RUEHBUL/AMEMBASSY KABUL 1064
RUEHRH/AMEMBASSY RIYADH 5972
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 04 ISLAMABAD 002641 
 
SIPDIS 
 
DEPARTMENT FOR SCA/EX AND M 
 
E.O. 12958:   N/A 
TAGS: AMGT KICA PK
SUBJECT:  MANAGEMENT 2010 LOOKING FORWARD 
 
Ref:  Islamabad 2080 
 
Sensitive But Unclassified 
 
1. (SBU) Summary. Mission Pakistan's Management Section evaluated 
its goals and objectives, to determine how best to direct its 
efforts over the coming year.  This cable summarizes the mission 
environment as it relates to management services, and lays out what 
we hope to achieve in the coming year.  To support the Mission's 
growing population, we are consolidating administrative support 
structures, reorganizing and expanding staffing to support our 
projected population in 2011, and implementing new approaches to 
share information and to manage critical constraints such as TDY 
lodging and armored vehicles.  End Summary. 
 
2. (SBU) Mission Pakistan has changed dramatically in the last few 
years with the President, Congress, and the Department position that 
Pakistan is key to stability in the region and success in our goals 
in Afghanistan.  The Kerry-Lugar Bill will ramp up non-military 
assistance to $7.5 billion over the next five years, expanding on 
our recent emphasis of military assistance.  Official Mission 
Pakistan personnel growth continues to be dramatic.  Once a large 
mission of about 250 US Direct Hires, we are now 657 US Direct Hire 
strong with hundreds of "permanent" TDY personnel.  Building plans, 
at various stages in all four cities, will exceed $1 billion. 
Management and ICASS needs to catch up its infrastructure growth to 
meet the demands of the increase in Mission size. 
 
-------------- 
Who We Support 
-------------- 
 
3. (SBU) The Mission supports a wide variety of DoD's military 
interests in both Pakistan and Afghanistan in its execution of $1 
billion in annual assistance funding to the Pakistani military for 
counter insurgency efforts.  We also support an average of 350 
MilAir lift transit flights through our corridor each day, and 
process about 1,800 containers each week through the port of Karachi 
and onward to Afghanistan overland.  The U.S. military's presence in 
Pakistan is approximately 225 long-term (over six months) personnel 
and growing. 
 
4. (U) USAID's developmental assistance program is now estimated to 
be $1.5 billion a year.  USAID's personnel numbers have grown 
accordingly, and now stand at about 136 employees and 30 long term 
TDYers.  All of these numbers continue to grow.  State's assistance 
funding is mostly provided through INL and DS funding.  It now 
totals $150 million, and is directed at increasing the capabilities 
of the Pakistani law enforcement activities.  NAS currently employs 
10 US Direct Hires and 30 contractors, and maintains an air wing in 
Quetta with 3 fixed wing assets and 14 helicopters. 
 
5. (SBU) State personnel resources have grown as well, with about 
368 fulltime personnel in the country.  This number includes 44 of 
the 126 additional State positions requested in the August 2009 
"Blue Skies Initiative" (reftel).  In addition, there are about 200 
State TDYers constantly in country. 
 
6. (U) We consistently brief visiting VIPs that while Pakistan is 
part of the "Big Three" (with Iraq and Afghanistan), there are huge 
contrasts in our operational environment.  The Government of 
Pakistan is a mature, functioning bureaucracy.  It limits many of 
the operational requirements of this Mission, a point of which they 
often remind us, in word and deed.   Diplomatic procedures are 
completely different than Iraq and Afghanistan.  We often find that 
people want to bring to us Iraq/Afghanistan-style solutions to 
challenges that do not exist, or at least have different solutions, 
here in Pakistan. 
 
---------------- 
Management Goals 
---------------- 
 
7. (U) With the Mission largely dependent on U.S. staff on one year 
assignments, good accountability suggests we establish goals for now 
through Summer 2010.  Our goals for fiscal year 2010 are: 
 
a. (U) Manage our growth.  Build management processes and an 
infrastructure by Summer 2010 that will support the Mission's 
expected population in Summer 2011. 
 
b. (U) Ensure that we maintain Mission Pakistan as "normal" as 
possible.  While we cannot change the security environment, we can 
control the quality of our clients' working and living conditions. 
We need to ensure that we keep conditions at the mission as "normal" 
as possible, so we can attract strong bidders and avoid the trap of 
managing to other war-footing missions' inescapable restrictions. 
 
ISLAMABAD 00002641  002 OF 004 
 
 
 
c. (U) Manage the message, to the Department, our VIP visitors, and 
our clients.  In such a dynamic and high visibility atmosphere, it 
is important that decision makers have an accurate picture of our 
situation and issues. 
 
d. (U) Overcome our continuity problem.  With a one year posting, we 
need to establish active methodologies to ensure arriving officers 
are well informed and not reinventing solutions and methods. 
 
--------------------- 
Management Strategies 
--------------------- 
 
8. (U) Management Workforce:  The Mission currently has 16 ICASS US 
Direct Hires and 7 program positions in Communications/Systems, 
roughly the same number as in 2006.  We will receive our first new 
ICASS USDH in late October 2009, and the Department is creating as 
many as 6 new US Direct Hire positions as a result of our "Blue 
Skies Initiative".  We have been more successful in increasing LES 
staff in the Management Section, adding 187 LES positions in late 
FY2009.  It generally takes six months to get an LES security 
clearance, so most of these positions remain unfilled.  We have 
about 1000 LES ICASS staff. 
 
a. (U) The Department has supplemented our strength with generous 
TDY support.  While very welcome, it underscores the need to 
increase permanent FTE to build a sustainable management 
infrastructure.  Our ratio of USDH service providers to Americans 
serviced in 2009 is the lowest in the SCA bureau at .037, fifty 
percent below the average ratio at SCA posts. 
 
b. (U) Our current ratio of LE ICASS staff to Americans serviced is 
1.5, 40 percent below the SCA average.  We already have plans to add 
187 LE staff, a 29 percent increase.  In September 2009, we 
undertook a complete, bottom-up review of our management 
organization to ensure that we place the added LE staff into 
organizational structures that make sense for the future.  We 
developed a new organizational chart for each management section. 
 
9. (U) Managing Growth:  The explosive growth in the last few years 
of DoD, USAID, and certain components of State occurred out of sync 
with the appropriate strengthening of the management platform.  We 
are working to shape the entire logistical format of this Mission in 
all four cities, and retrofit many of the management systems and 
structures so that the Mission grows appropriately.  This includes 
establishing furniture/appliance/generators pools, rightsizing 
dedicated vehicle allocations with corresponding growth in the 
shared (ICASS) motorpools, combining scattered procurement and 
position classification functions, and minimizing duplicative 
administrative support structures by closely reviewing the need for 
every non-ICASS administrative position addition (USDH and LES). 
 
10. (SBU) Armored Vehicles:  The GOP severely restricts the 
importation of Armored Vehicles (AVs), and has established an 
"authorization" of 1 AV for every 4 Direct Hires at post.  We are 
currently at about 3 times our "authorization", and over the past 3 
years the few vehicles that the GOP Customs allowed to be cleared 
has been as the result of a direct appeal by the Ambassador.  These 
appeals have often times not been successful and demurrage fees for 
vehicles awaiting clearance can exceed several hundred thousand 
dollars per year. 
 
a. (U) Individual agencies have purchased ARs, which stack up in 
Customs, without overall Mission planning.  Agencies have developed 
their own motorpool fleets rather than maximize the use of a shared 
service (ICASS motorpools).  The Mission now faces an increasingly 
difficult situation as each agency wants more vehicles. 
 
b. (U) We will continue to request that the GOP waive the 25% AR 
limit, as they have in practice for other diplomatic missions. 
 
c. (U) Barring a change in the importation limits, management is 
examining whether to assign each agency a set number of dedicated 
ARs for operational requirements that are not typical of pooled 
operations.  This will compel agencies to better utilize the 
motorpool for normal motorpool functions, thus maximizing the use of 
the limited number of vehicles the Mission is allowed to import. 
 
11. (U) Housing:  We have been able to keep up with the fast growing 
demands for housing.  It has required us to use group housing in 
many situations, such as for ODRP, SOCCE, contractors, and others 
coming as an operational group (OIG, OBO, DART, etc).  Between June 
1 and September 30, we turned over about 80% of our existing housing 
pool and obtained 45 new housing units.  We now have 315 housing 
units. 
 
 
ISLAMABAD 00002641  003 OF 004 
 
 
(U) We believe that we can continue to meet the Mission's housing 
needs in this manner.  We strongly believe that it is in the US 
Government's interests to do so, in order to keep the post 
differential relatively low, bid numbers high, and to offer some 
relief to personnel from the strain of work demands. 
 
12. (SBU) TDY Support:  The bombing of the Marriott Hotel in March 
2008 changed TDY management at post.  In August we had a "soft" 
opening of our Phase I TDY pods of 70 rooms, and have recently 
opened all 125 units.  This week, we hosted about 85 TDYer and press 
guests who came with the Secretary's visit together with about 70 
longer term residents.  These are allocated 75% to RAO for long term 
TDYers, and the remainder to ICASS for short term TDYers with State 
having preference.  The next phase (64 units) should break ground in 
November 2009.  We also maintain seven TDY houses in the community 
in Islamabad, and one in Lahore (adding two more in Lahore soon). 
Each averages 5 bedrooms.  Islamabad also has 2 "VIP" apartments on 
the compound.  To minimize the impact on ICASS resources, our 
employee association manages these units. 
 
(U) Last year we collected $450,000 in ICASS TDY invoices, thought 
to be the highest in the world.  This reflects our large TDY 
presence and over $500,000 in partial year invoices reflects our 
growth plane. 
 
13. (U) Building Projects:  Islamabad: OBO has an Islamabad Master 
Plan that includes the construction of temporary and permanent 
buildings estimated at $1 billion total, with a land purchase of 18 
acres.  To date, a 125 unit TDY trailer quarter and safehaven 
recreational center has been completed, a 50 person temporary USAID 
building has been initiated, and a contract has been let for a 
64-unit TDY trailer facility. 
 
a. (U) Peshawar: OBO intends to buy a property in Peshawar that will 
provide adequate, secure living and working space.  The recent plan 
to purchase the PC Hotel was terminated as the GOP would not allow 
us to buy this property.  There are several security projects 
underway for the current building. 
 
b. (U) Lahore:  OBO plans to purchase land to either increase the 
current location's footprint, or procure a site to build a new 
consulate building or to build a secondary egress from the current 
building. 
 
c. (U) Karachi:  A new NCC will be completed in Summer 2010.  We 
need to develop a new plan with OBO to meet growth demands for 
office space and beds not included in the NCC plan. 
 
14. (SBU) Managing the Outside:  A great deal of management effort 
is spent managing others.  This includes working with the MFA and 
Ministry of Interior on bilateral relations and support issues. 
Another key component is VIP Management, both in terms of their 
logistical support (for which a Mission Visitors Section was created 
in May 2009) as well as ensuring that visiting interlocutors 
understand Management perspective. 
 
15. (U) Managing Knowledge:  To strengthen our institutional memory 
and enhance our collaboration, we are launching a Team Pakistan 
Sharepoint site in Opennet and a Team Pakistan blog on Intelink.  To 
improve our communication with ICASS customers and better track our 
service performance, we are implementing eServices. 
 
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Conclusion 
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16.  (U) The Mission's growth, as often happens, has not been in 
lock step between the clients and the service providers.  The 
Management Section has a great deal of catching up to do in order to 
meet current requirements.  But given the long lead times in 
bringing US Direct Hires to Pakistan as well as the lead time to 
build and train LES staff, we must look two years down the line to 
see what structure and people we need now.  That effort has begun. 
Between now and Summer 2010 we hope to have the structure largely 
built.  In the meantime, we will continue to rely heavily on TDY 
support, as well as an extraordinary amount of overtime and 
commitment. 
 
17. (U) We will also make the hard decisions and implement the hard 
practices of actively avoiding the institution of multiple service 
providers and agency-specific administrative services. 
 
18. (U) We will continue to actively engage the Pakistanis to 
attempt to gain their cooperation on land and building issues, visa 
issues, armored vehicle importation, and other issues where lack of 
agreement hinders our mission. 
 
 
ISLAMABAD 00002641  004 OF 004 
 
 
19. (U) Our Mission in Pakistan has high visibility in the US 
Government.  The work we do is as rewarding as any that officers 
will do in their career.  Living conditions, while not easy, are far 
better than those offered by other such high-focus postings.  Our 
goal of making Islamabad an attractive posting will require that we 
maintain adequate housing, reduce overtime, and bring more normalcy 
and quality to our processes.  We will measure our success by the 
number of employees opting to stay for a second year. 
 
PATTERSON