Even after U.S. forces have left Afghanistan, an army of U.S. civilians will remain to help the country build its democratic institutions and restore its agricultural economy, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton told the U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee this week. Civilian assistance programs are also part of the administration’s strategy in Pakistan.
In her testimony on December 2, Clinton said US contributions of “more civilians and more assistance to Afghanistan, and significantly expanding our civilian efforts in Pakistan,” will continue. Clinton termed it a “significant civilian commitment that will endure long after combat forces leave.”
Clinton said civilian efforts are already yielding results, with experts and advisers helping to craft policy inside government ministries, providing development assistance in the field, and working in scores of other roles. (Photo above: USAID supported greenhouses allow farmers in Afganistan like Mola Shah Goel to grow fruits and vegetables for sale year round.)
The civilian component includes State Department personnel with expertise in the rule of law and governance, and experts from the U.S. Department of Agriculture with 40 years of experience who are helping the country restore its agricultural sector, the traditional core of Afghanistan’s economy.
“This will create jobs, reduce the funding that the Taliban receives from poppy cultivation, and draw insurgents off of the battlefield,” she said.


























