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Viewing cable 07ANKARA1686, Mission Turkey: FAST Forward

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
07ANKARA1686 2007-07-02 05:55 2011-08-24 01:00 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Ankara
null
Dianne Wampler  07/02/2007 07:03:07 PM  From  DB/Inbox:  Dianne Wampler

Cable 
Text:                                                                      
                                                                           
      
UNCLAS        ANKARA 01686

SIPDIS
CX:
    ACTION: PA
    INFO:   DCM CONS MGT ECON AMB POL PMA

DISSEMINATION: PAO /1
CHARGE: PROG

APPROVED: DCM: NMCELDOWNEY
DRAFTED: ACAO: BBALL
CLEARED: FAST

VZCZCAYI905
RR RUEHC RUEHIT RUEHDA RUEHZL
DE RUEHAK #1686/01 1830555
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 020555Z JUL 07
FM AMEMBASSY ANKARA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 2811
INFO RUEHIT/AMCONSUL ISTANBUL 2961
RUEHDA/AMCONSUL ADANA 2090
RUEHZL/EUROPEAN POLITICAL COLLECTIVE
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 ANKARA 001686 
 
SIPDIS 
 
STATE FOR HR/ELO from Mission Turkey FAST Officers 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: AMGT APER KSPR TU
SUBJECT: Mission Turkey: FAST Forward 
 
 
1. (U) Mission Turkey's First and Second Tour (FAST) contingent is 
comprised of twenty-four generalists and fifteen specialists, 
assigned to Ankara, Istanbul, and Adana.  The Mission's FAST program 
of professional development culminates each year in a day-long 
conference dedicated to discussion and debate of both policy and 
personnel issues.  This year's conference featured presentations by 
the Director of the Turkish Diplomatic Training Institute, a 
prominent Turkish columnist, and a DVC discussion with the Senior 
Fellow coordinating SAIC's Embassy of the Future project. 
 
2.  (U) Mission Turkey's FAST officers are proud to serve in this 
dynamic, fast-paced mission.  We are honored to work in a place and 
time where our jobs have a real impact on American foreign policy. 
In the course of the conference and in on-going exchanges, several 
professional concerns and programmatic suggestions have emerged. 
These concerns and suggestions - not a consensus view but a general 
snapshot - are outlined below. They are offered as constructive 
input for Department decision-makers to consider as we proceed 
together to improve the quality of life and work in today's Foreign 
Service. 
 
Personnel Practices: Greater Equity and Substantive Breadth 
 
3.  (U) We understand the premier role of the Foreign Service in 
advancing the President's objectives in Iraq and Afghanistan.  As 
committed public servants, we understand that government service 
requires personal sacrifice under difficult circumstances, and we 
are prepared to play our part.  However, as we do so, it is 
essential that the personnel system operate in an equitable and 
integral fashion.  In this regard, we find the recent introduction 
of retroactive measures on hardship criteria and length of domestic 
assignments to be inconsistent and unfair.  We suggest that the 
retroactive component of this initiative be withdrawn. 
 
4. (U) As entry level professionals, we face the dual demands of 
acquiring specific expertise while also exploring the breadth of USG 
foreign affairs activities.  While short-term informal rotations are 
a part of the Mission's FAST program, we believe a more structured 
approach is necessary.  We were troubled to learn that one of the 
few formal rotational positions in Turkey (an Econ-Con rotation) was 
recently eliminated by HR and we suggest that this position be 
reinstated and others be created. 
 
5. (U) We also believe that some consideration should be given to 
first tours inside the Department.  Some colleagues believe that 
going directly into the field after A-100 left them ill-prepared for 
the kind of policy work they faced at post.  Gaining perspectives on 
the culture and flow of information in Washington as a first tour 
would make second-tour work in the field more effective. 
 
Family Issues: Getting the Work/Life Balance Right 
 
6. (U) Foreign Service life imposes unique and at times considerable 
demands on families.  In our judgment, the Department needs to give 
additional consideration to employment opportunities for spouses and 
adult family members.  Other foreign affairs agencies appear to have 
both greater flexibility and funding for this key concern.  The 
creation of a para-professional corps that maximizes spouses' skill 
bases across geographic assignments would be a major step beyond the 
limited consular assistant opportunities currently available. 
 
7. (U) We also believe the Department needs to do more to address 
the needs of non-traditional families, unmarried partners, and same 
sex partners.  The addition of partners to government travel orders, 
with full EFM status, would bring the Department on a par with other 
European Diplomatic Services. 
 
8. (U) Additional training, on substantive issues, security matters, 
and cultural adjustment, for family members would help create a more 
cohesive overseas community. Our family members are too often 
treated as an after thought, with training only being offered on a 
space available basis at the last minute.  This approach needs to 
change if we are to remain a high morale and tightly knit foreign 
service family. 
 
Resources: World Class Diplomacy Requires Funding 
 
9. (U) A consistent theme of our FAST discussion is the Department's 
inadequate resource base.  The Embassy's Chancery compound is 
extremely old and woefully inadequate for the USG personnel it 
currently houses. Cramped conditions, with double and sometime 
triple occupancy in offices, degrade efficiency and productivity. 
 
10. (U) Another substantial problem is the lack of adequate 
communication and IT systems.  We are a generation that understands 
information technology, and we require systems that will maximize 
our effectiveness.  Firstly, this means faster internet connections 
(especially on classified systems).  The software used on these 
systems (such as ACS Plus, Post EVDB, and Cable Express) is for the 
most part functionally inferior, user unfriendly, and more expensive 
to create and maintain than commercially produced products which 
could easily be adapted to Department use at little cost.  (The 
adaptation of wiki software for use in Intellipedia is a good 
example of this.)  Providing remote devices that include 
job-specific applications (such as consular applications) that allow 
us to enter data on the move would be helpful. 
 
11. (U) We also find the current vouchering system to be slow, 
paperwork-heavy, and, financially burdensome on the individual.  We 
suggest that government credit cards be issued to all staff -- 
regardless of rank -- for use in professional travel, or that travel 
advances be made available for all professional travel, both 
international and in-country. 
 
12. (U) We realize that resources are constrained throughout the 
government.  At the same time, we believe that trying to conduct 
diplomacy on the cheap undermines our effectiveness and disserves 
American foreign policy.  In budget submissions to Congress, the 
White House needs to make greater funding for diplomacy a priority 
and our advocacy on the Hill needs to be intensive and sustained. 
 
Training: Providing Skills Essential for Success 
 
13. (U) While individual effort, tenacity and dedication can 
compensate for much, we believe one of the most crucial factors in 
professional success is adequate and targeted training.  As a 
general point, we believe that more and better quality training 
should be offered.  We also suggest consideration of an A-100 module 
on the history of US foreign policy as well as the process or 
component parts of effective policy execution. 
 
14. (U) Many of us have watched colleagues "coast" through long-term 
language training and we believe that disincentives for poor 
performance should be considered. 
 
15. (U) Specialist colleagues are particularly concerned about the 
lack of opportunities for substantive and language training. 
Specialist positions, including OMS and IMS, should be language 
designated.  The current policy of sending most specialists to post 
without language training undercuts effectiveness. 
 
WILSON