August 27, 2010
QDDR | Eye to the Future: Refocusing State Department Policy Planning
Since 1947, the State Department has retained a Policy Planning Staff (S/P), regularly led by renowned foreign policy thinkers and operators. Charged with looking beyond the immediate time horizon and engaging in high-level thinking about future policy directions, the staff would seem to be positioned to play an important and even critical role. Given the pace of global change and the increasing salience of transnational issues that defy traditional categorization and cut across multiple bureaucratic jurisdictions (to include such examples as terrorism and crime, climate change and the spread of technologies that empower non-state actors), a staff that can identify multiple trends and tie them to policy decisions is an imperative.
Linking plans to actions in an era of rapid change constitute the key challenges to effective planning at the Department of State. As the ongoing Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review (QDDR) process weighs whether State possesses the capabilities necessary to maximize American influence in the 21st-century diplomatic environment, S/P should also come under scrutiny. The Policy Planning staff has itself taken responsibility for coordinating the QDDR process, and it should take the opportunity to examine closely its own role during and after this review. This policy brief aims to offer several tentative conclusions and recommendations aimed at enhancing S/P’s effectiveness.
More from CNAS
-
PodcastLoren DeJonge Schulman on The Smell of Victory Podcast
On The Smell of Victory Podcast, Bob Hein and Phil Walter sat down with Loren DeJonge Schulman of the Center for a New American Security to discuss the draft. Listen to the f...
By Loren DeJonge Schulman
-
CommentaryTrump Gets NATO Backwards
Returning from the World War I armistice commemoration in Paris, President Trump reemphasized his view of America’s European allies. “We pay for large portions of other countr...
By Richard Fontaine
-
VideoAmb. Nuland on N. Korea: The U.S. 'needs to get back into real diplomacy'
Amb. Victoria Nuland, CEO of the Center for a New American Security and former Assistant Secretary of State, joins Ali Velshi to discuss reports that North Korea is moving ahe...
By Victoria Nuland
-
CommentaryUS midterm elections 2018: Democrats abroad in the Indo-Pacific
A partial "blue wave" crested over the US House of Representatives this week, ushering in a Democratic majority there for the first time in eight years. With Republicans stren...
By Richard Fontaine