Reading: Enhancing U.S. Diplomatic Engagement with Nonstate Armed Groups
A CPA Working Paper
by Payton L. Knopf, International Affairs Fellow in Residence, 2010-2011
OVERVIEW
In this CPA Working Paper, Payton L. Knopf, a
former Council on Foreign Relations fellow and current Foreign Service
officer, discusses the importance of developing innovative diplomatic
strategies for evaluating U.S. engagement with nonstate armed groups
(NSAGs). He argues that the administrations of both George W. Bush and
Barack Obama have sought to broaden the State Department's mission
beyond state-to-state diplomacy. However, little work has been done to
prepare U.S. diplomats for analyzing and engaging with NSAGs, often the
most influential nonstate actors. Taking into account the basic
challenges that confront U.S. engagement with these groups, Knopf calls
on the State Department to develop clear guidelines as to why, when, and
how its diplomats should conduct such outreach. His proposed framework
for this decision process has a three-phase process: developing a
profile of the NSAG, defining U.S. government objectives toward the
group, and conducting a cost-benefit analysis. The timing for
engagement, in Knopf's view, should be determined by when it is best
suited to achieve U.S. objectives rather than near-term timelines.
Finally, Knopf stresses that several bureaucratic and operational
reforms are necessary to allow the State Department to execute this
increasingly important mission.
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