Addressing State Failure: Stephen D. Krasner and Carlos Pascual
Addressing State Failure: Stephen D. Krasner and Carlos Pascual
Addressing State Failure: Stephen D. Krasner and Carlos Pascual
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Krasner_Pascual.qxd 6/8/05 12:56 PM Page 154
understanding transformation
Even with investments in prevention, violence will still erupt and
demand attention. To manage postconflict engagements eªectively,
the international community must understand the nature of the
changes that need to occur to transform the aªected states into ones
in which further conflict will be unlikely.The international community
must also commit the necessary resources. Although real life is more
complex than any model of postconflict transition, dividing the transition
into four phases can help guide future responses. These phases are not
necessarily sequential—some may proceed concurrently, and they may
not progress consistently.
The first phase is stabilization—the stage that generally garners
the most international attention. Stabilization requires taking imme-
diate action: enforcing order, feeding people, restarting basic services,
initiating a political transition process, generating local employment,
and reintegrating returning refugees and internally displaced persons.
The international community often plays a dominant role in this
phase, directly delivering services rather than building local capabilities,
in order to avert chaos. Even if necessary in the short run, such eªorts
cannot be sustained indefinitely. Hence, outsiders must at some point
stop “doing” and begin “enabling” local involvement and ownership.
The faster the international community responds initially, the easier
it will be to make sure this transition takes place. Stabilization must
lead to conditions that help economic, political, and social develop-
ment—perhaps most crucially by engendering local leadership and
providing incentives and means for local parties to take action. This
first period is critical to a country’s future success.
innovation
If prevention fails, the fundamental challenge of s /crs is to
make sure that the United States is ready and able to manage all four
postconflict stages. No single government o⁄ce can take on this sizable
task alone. But the nation now has a focal point to lead and coordinate
rebuilding eªorts with other U.S. agencies and with the rest of the
world. The Bush administration is using s /crs to develop a new set
of tools for conflict response. These tools fall into six basic categories.
global rewards
If approved, the $124.1 million requested by the Bush administration
in the 2006 budget would launch the conflict-response fund, initiate
the development of a response corps, and provide the resources to
train personnel and prepare operations for rapid deployment. Some
may question why the United States should invest resources before
crises emerge. But consider that a faster and more eªective postconflict
response could create better prospects for success and, in the case of U.S.
military involvement, an earlier withdrawal of U.S. forces. For example,
bringing one U.S. military division home from Iraq just one month early
would save about $1.2 billion—and remove soldiers from harm’s way.
The broader payoª is security. Today, stability requires more than
maintaining a balance of power among strong states. Safety both here
and abroad now depends on the ability of the United States and the
international community to make sovereignty work—to establish
democracies that improve the lives of ordinary individuals rather than
of the ruling elite. The first step in this process must be to prevent
conflict if possible, or to ensure a meaningful peace when conflict
does occur. The world can do more to help those countries at risk of
unrest or recovering from war. If successful, then over the longer term
the United States will have enabled more people to enjoy the benefits
of peace, democracy, and market economies. That can only be in
everyone’s best interest.∂