Expanding Chief of Mission Authority to Produce Unity of Effort

Abstract

Both President Obama and Congress recognize that the chief executive needs help integrating the diverse departments and agencies, but their past attempts to improve interagency cooperation have generally failed because they paid insufficient attention to the difficult problem of authority. New positions or organizations are often created with great fanfare and directed to ensure a coordinated response to some particular national security issue -- intelligence, war fighting, reconstruction, or counterterrorism -- only to fail because they lack sufficient authority. Ultimately, the departments and agencies in the national security system see little reason to follow the new organization or individual's lead. At the heart of the problem is the inability to reconcile a desire for a clear chain of command from the President down through the heads of the departments and agencies with the need to empower new mechanisms (individuals or organizational constructs) with sufficient authority to integrate efforts across the departments and agencies in pursuit of specified national missions. "Unity of command" down through the functional departments and agencies seems to preclude "unity of effort" for missions that are intrinsically interagency in nature and cut across those same departments and agencies. In this article we argue that the interagency integration problem can be rectified by expanding the President's power to delegate a modified chief of mission authority similar to that granted ambassadors to oversee and direct the activities of employees from diverse government organizations working in a foreign country. The chief of mission model requires modification to work well beyond the bilateral setting of a U.S. embassy, but it does point a way forward to escape the dilemma the current system imposes on Presidents who want unity of effort without sacrificing unified command.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
May 01, 2011
Accession Number
ADA551187

Entities

People

  • Christopher Lamb
  • Edward Marks

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Autonomy
  • Energy and Power Technologies
  • Human Systems

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Congress
  • Counterterrorism
  • Department Of Defense
  • Department Of State
  • Governments
  • Intelligence Community (United States)
  • Interagency Coordination
  • International Organizations
  • Law
  • National Security
  • Personnel Management
  • President (United States)
  • Public Administration
  • Security
  • United States Africa Command
  • United States Government
  • Weapons Of Mass Destruction

Readers

  • Defense Financial Management and Audit.
  • International Relations and European Studies
  • Joint Military Operations and Doctrine.