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Operating Concept for Integrated Response to Complex Emergencies

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Title: Operating Concept for Integrated Response to Complex Emergencies


1
Operating Concept for Integrated Response to
Complex Emergencies
  • Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense
  • for Global Security Affairs

2
Problem
  • Ineffective management of aid and relief programs
    delay recovery, create instability, and undermine
    the legitimacy of the host nation government and
    donor nations.
  • Assessments, resources, and response of
    Humanitarian Relief Organizations are rarely
    coordinated nor sequenced (no Unity of Effort)
  • Activities of Non-Governmental Humanitarian
    Agencies (NGHAs) and Donor Nation pledges create
    expectations that are not met or are delayed
  • Host Nation government at the local and national
    levels usually lack the capacity for effective
    program management or public administration
  • NGOs frequently lack effective program management
    capabilities

3
Broad Recognition of the Problem
  • Statements by UN Envoys
  • Red Cross Movement Code of Conduct for NGOs
  • UN Cluster Approach
  • National Defense Strategy
  • Army Universal Task List
  • Humanitarian Assistance Coordination Center
  • Professional literature
  • Nonetheless, the problem persists

4
Department of Defense Interest
  • International disasters and humanitarian crises
    create conditions that lead to international
    conflict
  • US government sends military forces to respond to
    disasters and crises
  • Effective and cooperative disaster management can
    reduce burden on US military forces
  • Focus on serious, imminent, life saving measures
  • Facilitates rapid exit of military forces after
    initial response

5
No Military Solution
  • Military response to disaster can create problems
  • Military lacks situational awareness of NGO and
    other civilian activity
  • Military capabilities displace civilian solutions
  • Can undermine restoration of effective governance
  • Creates dependencies that create gaps when
    military withdraws
  • Only effective solution is a cooperative approach
  • Whole of Government US and partner governments
  • International and Inter-Governmental Agencies
  • Non-Governmental Humanitarian Relief Agencies
  • Host Nation Government

6
Recommendation
  • Functioning mechanism associated with each
    combatant command to coordinate and synchronize
    private sector and public sector disaster
    planning, response, recovery, and mitigation
  • Information sharing enhances the quality of
    information and shared situational awareness
    Shared situational awareness enables
    collaboration, self-synchronization, security,
    and enhances sustainability and speed of
    implementation
  • Program management to synchronize the delivery of
    aid, monitor aid distribution, and assess and
    report on the impact of disaster assistance
  • Civil-Military Relations de-conflicts military
    and NGHA activity and enhances security for
    humanitarian relief
  • The Team NGHAs IGOs US Military and
    interagency partners other donor, and supported
    government agencies private sector donors and
    commercial enterprises

7
Intent
  • Facilitates achieving requirements of Code of
    Conduct for Red Cross/Red Crescent Movement and
    NGOs in Disaster Relief
  • Meets requirements of AUTL tasks 6.14.1 and
    6.14.7
  • (Negotiation and Liaison between US Military,
    other governmental, local governmental, and
    non-governmental organizations.)
  • Interoperable with UN Cluster Approach and SPHERE
    standards
  • Framework for Action consistent with Millennium
    Development Program
  • Builds on principles of the National Response
    Framework
  • Supports, does not replicate, compete, or
    parallel other coordination efforts

element taken from or directly supports
RCM Code of Conduct
8
Functions
Governments should seek to provide a coordinated
disaster information and planning service
  • Situational Awareness
  • Program Coordination
  • Project Synchronization
  • Project Monitoring
  • Donor Accountability
  • Resource Distribution Management
  • Capacity Building
  • Security Management
  • Liaison
  • Communications
  • Public Outreach
  • Beneficiary Accountability
  • Donor Appeals

9
Functional Analysis
This concept provides capabilities across the
following phases of Disaster Response and
Humanitarian Assistance
PREPARATION
  • Preparation
  • Response
  • Recovery
  • Mitigation

RESPONSE
MITIGATION
RECOVERY
10
Incident Management System Model
  • International Standard
  • Common Terms and Procedures
  • Civilian, rather than Military Organization
  • Staffed by civilians
  • USG
  • HNG
  • Contractors
  • NGHA representatives
  • Scalable, flexible, adaptable

11
Necessary Capabilities
To be effective, coordination center must have
the following minimal capabilities
  • Situational Awareness
  • Capability to collect, analyze and disseminate
    information about regional and local political,
    military, social, and environmental issues
  • Knowledge base about aid providers (public,
    private commercial, and humanitarian)
  • Program management Expertise in complex project
    and integrated program management with special
    emphasis on disaster management
  • Logistics Inherent capability for effective
    supply chain management
  • Security
  • Capability to analyze situations that impact the
    safety and integrity of aid personnel, equipment
    and projects.
  • Ability to access security related information
    from multiple sources and share information with
    multiple sources
  • Ability to access and contract with security
    resources to meet the needs of particular
    situations

12
Capabilities (Continued)
  • Civil-Military Relations. Ability to work with
    military planners and operators at all levels and
    the ability to act as credible liaison between
    military and NGHAs
  • Independence
  • Organization must appear as independent from
    military and government command structures
  • Freedom to operate in accordance with the RCM
    Code of Conduct
  • Donor access
  • Inherent capabilities to reach out to donors
    throughout all phases
  • Grant writing capability
  • Communications
  • Ability to generate reports
  • Ability to engage the public through written,
    electronic, and personal contact

13
Notional Organization
Unified Management
Director (JTF) USEMB USAID/OFDA UNHC/IGO HNG NGO
Lead
CMOC
Safety/ Security
Public Information
Liaison
Legal
Planning
Logistics
Admin/ Finance
Identify, Request, and Track Resources
  • Accountability
  • Reports
  • Fund Raising

Situation Unit Sector Leads
14
Challenges
  • Acceptance
  • Combatant Commanders
  • Other USG Agencies
  • NGHAs
  • Participation
  • Planning
  • Exercises
  • Response
  • Funding
  • A good idea is one with a fund site attached to
    it.

15
Concept Coherence with Humanitarian Principles
  • Humanity Concept should facilitate NGHA access
    to populations anywhere in affected region and
    not just in support of mandate
  • Impartiality NGHA aid will be rendered without
    consideration of political, ethnic, or religious
    basis
  • Independence Coordination does NOT direct the
    employment of NGHA resources or operations
  • Information sharing and situational awareness
    will promote self-synchronization
  • NGHA accountability is to beneficiaries and
    donors, not US or supported nation military
  • Neutrality NGHA aid will not have the direct
    intent to further government policy or mandate
  • NGHA information will not be used for operational
    military intelligence
  • NGHA operations will not be used for government
    propaganda or publicity campaigns
  • NGHA aid may work to achieve humanitarian ends
    that coincide with mandate requirements or policy

16
Principles and Perceptions
Despite an operational concept that supports RCM
Humanitarian Principles, NGHA participation may
still appear to compromise NGHAs. To mitigate
this perception
  • Planning center should be separate from JTF
    Civil-Military Operations Center (CMOC)
  • Staff should not include military personnel
  • Mix of USG civilians, contractors, and NGOs
  • Possibility that Director nominated by an
    independent foundation and approved by Combatant
    Commander.
  • Military personnel should not be used to guard
    MACS except in extremis

17
Participating NGHA Responsibilities
To participate in this process, Non-Governmental
Humanitarian Assistance Agencies must
  • Commit to the Red Cross movements Code of
    Conduct for NGOs in Disaster Relief
  • Agree to include their individual projects,
    requirements, and needs assessments into an
    integrated Framework for Action
  • Come to agreement among themselves regarding
    identified needs and requirements
  • Within their capabilities and organizational
    mission, assume sponsorship for on-going or
    proposed projects to meet those needs
  • Participate and cooperate in preparation and
    distribution of project accountability reports
  • Cooperate with other participating NGHAs on
    projects
  • Not encroach upon or undermine other
    participating NGHAs for framework projects or
    funding.

18
Way Forward
  • Authorization to Proceed
  • Market Research
  • Donor Demand for Accountability
  • Commercial Sector Capability
  • NGHA Acceptability
  • Refine the Concept
  • Market the Concept
  • Combatant Commands
  • NGHAs
  • Inter-Governmental Organizations (e.g., UN, EU,
    OAS)
  • Concept Execution

19
Conclusion
  • Work in Progress
  • Invite and encourage participation by
  • Military commands
  • USG agencies
  • Partner governments and Inter-Governmental
    Organizations
  • Commercial Private Sector
  • Non-Governmental Humanitarian Agencies
  • Colonel Christopher Mayer, USA (OSD/GSA)
  • Christopher.mayer_at_osd.mil
  • Ms Teresa Gera (Global Reach)
  • Teresa.gera_at_globalreachpartnership.org

20
Back-Up Slides
21
Terms
  • Framework for Action A program management tool
    based on the UN Millennium Development Goals. The
    idea of a framework envisions all relief and
    development activities as interrelated. The
    framework places relief and recovery projects in
    the context of an objective end state and serves
    as a tool for rationalizing and logically
    sequencing humanitarian aid and economic
    development
  • Complex Emergency a humanitarian crisis in a
    country, region or society where there is total
    or considerable breakdown of authority resulting
    from internal or external conflict and which
    requires an international response that goes
    beyond the mandate or capacity of any single
    agency and/ or the ongoing United Nations country
    program
  • Multi-Agency Coordination System (MACS). MACS
    consists of a combination of elements personnel,
    procedures, protocols, business practices, and
    communications integrated into a common system.
    The primary function of MACS is to coordinate
    activities above the field level and to
    prioritize the incident demands for critical or
    competing resources, thereby assisting the
    coordination of the operations in the field. As
    this concepts develops, this term may be dropped
    for a more appropriate descriptor of this
    capability.

22
Terms
  • Non-Governmental Humanitarian Agencies (NGHAs)
    The components of the International Red Cross and
    Red Crescent Movement and Non-Governmental
    Organizations (NGOs) involved in disaster
    response.
  • Private Sector Philanthropists, private
    foundations, corporate donors, for-profit
    emergency management and development
    corporations, and non-profit humanitarian
    assistance and civil-society organizations (NGOs)
  • Public Sector Department of Defense/military
    commands, other US Government Agencies, supported
    government agencies, other donor or assisting
    governments, and intergovernmental organizations
    (e.g., UN, OAS, AU, EU, etc.)
  • Supported government/nation State affected by
    disaster and the recipient of emergency aid from
    the United States and the international community

23
Preparation
  • Regional needs assessments
  • USG, Supported Nation, NGHA and other sources
  • Potential supported nation response framework
  • Build on existing capacities
  • Supported nation may needs assistance in
    developing response framework
  • Identifying contingency end states, stakeholders,
    resources, and exit criteria
  • Pre-identification of resource requirements,
    potential sources of support, deployment aid and
    redeployment
  • Identification of USG assistance objectives that
    coincide with independent NGHA policy
  • Shared situational awareness of interest areas
  • Security considerations

24
Response
  • MACS deploys with or ahead of Humanitarian
    Assistance/Disaster Relief Task Force
  • Dual based, with forward and support elements
  • MACS forward element works in direct support of
    the supported government
  • National Response Framework Tasks

25
Response Activities
  • Situational Awareness
  • Identify relief and recovery activity
    requirements, focused on lifesaving activities,
    tracked against end-state objectives
  • Monitor project initiation, status, completion
    and effectiveness
  • Maintain and share information affecting the
    security of response agencies and activities
  • Facilitate the Deployment of Resources and
    Capabilities
  • Liaison with supported government, IGOs, and US
    military for access to population
  • Outreach to donors to meet resource gaps
  • Coordinates for delivery and deployment of
    humanitarian aid and recovery personnel and
    materiel
  • Facilitate Response Actions
  • Enables self-synchronization among NGHAs, IGOs,
    military and other government organizations
  • Deconflicts humanitarian space from military
    operations
  • Prepare and distribute reports and other
    information for general public, beneficiaries,
    and donors

26
Recovery
  • Once immediate lifesaving and containment
    activities are complete, focus shifts to meeting
    basic needs and restoring infrastructure
  • Public health and safety, essential services,
    transportation, food and shelter for displaced
    persons.
  • All activities begun in the Response phase
    continue
  • Recovery Planning/Framework of Action identify
    and orient on an end state
  • Standards based on objective criteria (e.g.,
    SPHERE)
  • NGHAs, government agencies, and IGOs accept
    specific projects, tasks, activities and
    functions identified in the Framework
  • Includes identification of criteria for MACS
    demobilization and transfer of functions to
    supported government or IGO
  • Objectives of emergency military assistance are
    met and military forces begin preparation for
    termination of operations and redeployment
  • Includes coordination to preclude critical
    resource gaps

27
Mitigation Aid must strive to reduce future
vulnerabilities to disaster as well as meet basic
needs
  • End-state is an environment in which the
    supported government can be self-sufficient in
    providing for the populations humanitarian
    needs, and no longer requires external assistance
  • Relief must not create dependency
  • Framework for action depicts a continuum of
    relief, recovery, and development
  • Projects must include activity addressing
    economic and environmental precursors of disaster
  • Host Nation participation will enable capacity
    building
  • Capacity development for supported governments
    through observation of and participation in MACS
    program management
  • Participation should include pre-disaster
    activity during preparation as well as active
    engagement in response
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