In the latest Stratfor article Scott Stewart discusses, in light of the withdrawal of US combat forces in Iraq, security considerations for the American embassy in Baghdad.
He begins by discussing the concentric physical steps taken to secure an embassy, starting from the outer walls and moving in to the safe rooms in the interior of the compound.
There are also concentric levels of forces to guard an embassy. At the outer level the host government in supposed to provide security while the embassy hires a large number of security contractors to provide security to the embassy's grounds as well as detachments to guard personnel traveling outside of the embassy. 
There is also a contingent of Marines to provide security to the embassy's most secure areas. Stewart ends his discussion by looking at the forces staged out-of-country, but who might be called upon to support the embassy if it were to come under attack and some of the challenges such a mission would present.
For the article's Hot Stratfor Babe I turned to the short-lived American TV series The American Embassy and selected its lead Arija Bareikis for the honor.
The American Embassy looks like it was originally planned to be a show about the romantic and whacky adventures of a young, independent woman in an exotic setting -- in this case the U.S. embassy in London. However, 9/11 forced it to be reworked to take into account terrorism, and so the show mixed in an embassy bombing along with her romantic adventures. Regardless, the show was a flop, getting canceled after its third episode and only airing 4 of the 6 episodes that got made.
As for Ms Bareikis, I confess to knowing nothing about her. Looking at her film and TV credits, it appears that she is an actress who works on a regular basis. Her female lead status the series The American Embassy promised was derailed for a while, but she has since 2009 worked regularly as a main character in the TV show Southland.  
Sorry, no bonus video clip this article. I couldn't find a decent one.
U.S. Diplomatic Security in Iraq After the Withdrawal
By Scott Stewart, December 22,2011
The completion of the U.S. military withdrawal from Iraq  on Dec. 16 opens a new chapter in the relationship between the United  States and Iraq. One of this chapter’s key features will be the efforts  of the United States and its regional allies to limit Iranian influence  inside Iraq during the post-Saddam, post-U.S. occupation era.
From the 1970s until the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003, Iranian power  in the Persian Gulf was balanced by Iraq’s powerful military. With  Iraqi military might weakened in 1991 and shattered in 2003, the  responsibility for countering Iranian power fell to the U.S. military.  With that military now gone from Iraq, the task of countering Iranian  power falls to diplomatic, foreign-aid and intelligence functions  conducted by a host of U.S. agencies stationed at the U.S. Embassy in  Baghdad and consulates in Basra, Kirkuk and Arbil.
Following the invasion of Iraq, the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad became  the largest embassy in the world. Ensuring the safety of as many as  11,000 people working out of the embassy and consulates in such a  potentially hostile environment will pose a huge challenge to the U.S.  State Department’s Diplomatic Security Service (DSS), the agency with  primary responsibility for keeping diplomatic facilities and personnel  secure. The CIA’s Office of Security (OS) will also play a substantial,  though less obvious, role in keeping CIA case officers safe as they  conduct their duties.
Both the DSS and the OS are familiar with operating in hostile  environments. They have done so for decades in places such as Beirut  and, for the better part of a decade now, in Afghanistan, Pakistan and  Iraq. However, they have never before had to protect such a large number  of people in such a hostile environment without direct U.S. military  assistance. The sheer scope of the security programs in Iraq will bring  about not only operational challenges but also budgetary battles that  may prove as deadly to U.S. personnel in Iraq as the militant threat.
Scope
The U.S. Embassy in Baghdad sits on a 104-acre compound in Baghdad’s  Green Zone. The size of the compound provides significant standoff  distance from the perimeter to the interior buildings. The chancery  itself, like the consulate buildings, was constructed in accordance with  security specifications laid out by the U.S. State Department’s  Standard Embassy Design program, standards first established by the Inman Commission  in 1985 in the wake of the U.S. Embassy bombings in Beirut. This means  that the building was constructed using a design intended to withstand a  terrorist attack and to provide concentric rings of security. In  addition to an advanced concrete structure and blast-resistant windows,  such facilities also feature a substantial perimeter wall intended to  protect the facility and to provide a standoff distance of at least 100  feet from any potential explosive device.
 
  
Standoff distance is a crucial factor in defending against large  vehicle-borne improvised explosive devices (VBIEDs) because such devices  can cause catastrophic damage to even well-designed structures if they  are allowed to get close before detonation. When combined, a heavy  perimeter wall, sufficient standoff distance and advanced structural  design have proved successful in withstanding even large VBIED attacks.
Working inside the heavily fortified embassy and consulates in Iraq  are some 16,000 personnel, 5,000 of whom are security contractors. The  remaining 11,000 include diplomats, intelligence officers and analysts,  defense attaches, military liaison personnel and aid and development  personnel. There also are many contractors who perform support functions  such as maintaining the facilities and vehicles and providing needed  services such as cooking and cleaning.
When considering the 5,000 security contractors, it is important to  remember that there are two different classes of contractors who work  under separate contracts (there are contracts for perimeter guards and  personal security details in Baghdad as well as for security personnel  at the consulates in Basra, Erbil and Kirkuk). The vast majority of  security contractors are third-country nationals who are responsible for  providing perimeter security for the embassy and consulates. The  second, smaller group of contract security guards (from 500 to 700, many  of whom are Americans) is responsible for providing personal security  to diplomats, aid workers and other embassy or consulate personnel when  they leave the compound. A parallel team of OS contract security  officers, funded under the CIA’s budget, provides security for CIA  officers when they leave the compound. [continued after the jump]
In Iraq, a team of some 200 DSS special agents now oversees U.S.  security operations (by contrast, a typical U.S. Embassy has two or  three DSS special agents assigned to it). These agents are charged with  implementing all the security programs at the embassy and consulates,  from physical security and counterintelligence to cyber security, visa  fraud and the investigation of crimes that occur on official premises.  (With 16,000 full-time personnel assigned to these posts in Iraq, there  are bound to be fights, thefts and sexual assaults.) DSS special agents  also provide close oversight of the contract guard programs and directly  supervise protective details during moves off the compound.
U.S. embassies are designed to incorporate concentric rings of  security. The outermost ring is provided by host-country security forces  that are charged, under the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations,  with keeping foreign diplomats safe. Inside that ring is the local guard  force, contract security guards who protect the outer perimeter of the  facility. They also screen vehicles and pedestrians entering the  compound.
The chancery itself is also designed to have concentric rings of  security. Inside the outside walls of the building there is an  additional ring of physical security measures called the “hardline,”  which serves to protect the most sensitive areas of the embassy. The  integrity of the hardline is protected by a security detachment of U.S.  Marines, which in Baghdad is a company-sized element. Inside the  hardline there is also an additional layer of physical security measures  intended to provide a safe haven area, the final fallback defensive  position for embassy personnel. 
Threats and Challenges
Because of the size and construction of the chancery and the  consulate buildings, there is very little chance of an armed assault or  IED attack succeeding against these facilities. While an indirect-fire  attack using mortars or artillery rockets could get lucky and kill an  American diplomat outside of the building, the biggest threat posed to  American personnel is probably when they travel away from the compound.  The large number of people assigned to these posts means there are many  movements of personnel to and from the facilities (we’re hearing  approximately 20 to 30 per day from the embassy alone).
Baghdad’s Green Zone only has three exits, and there are multiple  chokepoints such as bridges and security checkpoints throughout the  city. These geographic constraints can be even more heavily exploited in  planning an attack if a militant actor can also narrow the time factor  by developing a source inside the embassy who can warn of an impending  move. The time factor can also be narrowed if militants are allowed to  operate freely by host-country security forces due to incompetence or  collusion.
Of course, the most dire physical threat to a hardened diplomatic facility is  mob violence.  If a large mob storms an embassy and the host-country security forces  either cannot or refuse to act to stop it, there is no facility in the  world that can withstand a prolonged assault by a determined crowd  equipped with even primitive hand tools. The high-security doors on the  exterior of a U.S. embassy and at the interior hardline can withstand an  assault with a sledgehammer for 30 or 40 minutes, but the doors will  eventually be defeated. Crowds armed with incendiary devices or  explosives pose an even greater threat. During the November 1979 assault on the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad,  the mob that stormed the embassy compound lit a fire in the chancery  that nearly burned the embassy staff alive as they hid in the building’s  safe haven.
So the real key for security of American diplomatic facilities in  Iraq, as in any country, is in the hands of the Iraqi government.  Currently, there is a Brigade Combat Team from the U.S. Army’s 1st  Cavalry Division on station in Kuwait, and a Marine Expeditionary Unit  will likely be stationed in the region for the foreseeable future.  However, if the security environment in Iraq degrades significantly, it  might prove quite difficult to get those forces to a besieged diplomatic  facility in time, even if the United States is able to maintain a  secure area at the Baghdad International Airport it can use to fly  troops into Baghdad and evacuees out. (Getting 16,000 personnel out of  Baghdad is no small task, and the number needing to leave would likely  be augmented by non-official Americans in country.)
While much ado is being made in the news over the use of contract  security guards in Iraq, it must be remembered that the DSS has used  contract security guards to provide local guard services on the  perimeter of almost every U.S. embassy and consulate in the world for  decades. Even small embassies have dozens of contract guards who provide  24/7 perimeter security. In many cases, contract guards provide  residential security for diplomats and their families. The DSS also has  decades of experience operating in countries where the governments and  populace are hostile to their security programs. The anti-contractor  sentiment in Iraq in the wake of the 2009 Blackwater shooting incident  is not unique, and U.S. embassies operate in many places where  anti-American sentiment is quite high.
The concept of a diplomatic facility where diplomats cannot go off  embassy grounds unless they have a security escort is also not new. The  U.S. Embassy in Beirut has operated that way since the 1980s. In Beirut,  DSS agents supervise these security details, but the security personnel  manning the details are contractors. However, while such measures have  long been in effect in Lebanon, the size of the U.S. Embassy there is  quite small. In Iraq, such measures have been applied to a far larger  number of people. The sheer scale of this security effort means that the  budget to pay for it will have to be immense. The State Department has  estimated that it will cost some $3.8 billion to get the system running  the first year, and it is then projected to cost roughly $3.5 billion  per year. And that number represents just the operating costs; it does  not include pre-deployment training for personnel assigned to the  mission and other important measures.
Over the many years that the DSS has been overseeing guard contracts,  the service has learned many lessons (some the hard way). One  instructional incident was the September 2007 shooting of civilians in  Nisoor Square in Baghdad by Blackwater contractors. Indeed, that  incident spurred the DSS to mandate that a DSS agent be present to  oversee every motorcade move. This is a big reason why there are now 200  DSS agents in Iraq. Since the DSS only has 2,000 agents to cover its  global responsibilities, the mission in Iraq is placing a lot of strain  on the organization.
The presence of these agents on motorcades will undoubtedly assist  the DSS in monitoring the performance of its contractors, but experience  has shown that wherever there are guard contracts there will inevitably  be instances of guard company managers attempting to pad profits by  claiming compensation for services they did not render or skimping on  services. Such problems tend to be relatively small in the case of, say,  a 72-man local guard force in Guatemala, although it is not unusual to  see a company lose its guard contract due to irregularities or  incompetence. When you are talking about billions of dollars worth of  guard contracts in Iraq covering thousands of security personnel,  however, the potential for contract issues and the size of those issues  is magnified. Because of this, the DSS, the State Department Inspector  General and the Government Accounting Office will undoubtedly pay very  close attention to ensure that contracts are properly fulfilled. The  DSS, like many other government agencies, has been heavily criticized  for its contract oversight in Iraq and Afghanistan over the past several  years and has instituted new controls. Today the service is far better  at overseeing such massive contracts than it was at the beginning of its  operations in Iraq.
With a total budget of only about $50 billion for the State  Department and U.S. Agency of International Development, and with only  $14 billion of that total going to fund operations worldwide, the  billions earmarked for security in Iraq will certainly appear as a  tempting pot of money for someone to raid — much like the funding  provided to security programs in the 1980s following the recommendations  of the Inman Commission.
As STRATFOR has previously discussed, spending for diplomatic security often follows a discernable boom-and-bust cycle.  During the boom, there is plenty of money to cover security expenses,  but during the bust times, security programs often suffer death by a  thousand cuts. Following the infusion of funding for diplomatic security  programs in the 1980s, the 1990s saw a period of prolonged program  cuts. Indeed, in the wake of the 1998 bombing attacks against the U.S.  embassies in Nairobi and Dar Es Salaam, the Crowe Commission,  tasked with investigating the matter, concluded in its final report  that its members “were especially disturbed by the collective failure of  the U.S. government over the past decade to provide adequate resources  to reduce the vulnerability of U.S. diplomatic missions to terrorist  attacks in most countries around the world.”
As the United States moves further from 9/11 with no significant  attacks taking place, and as a mood of fiscal austerity takes hold in  Washington, it is likely that budgets for foreign affairs and diplomatic  security will be cut and a new security bust cycle will occur. In the  long term, budget cuts and unsustainable DSS staffing levels will  dictate that diplomatic security programs in Iraq will have to be  reduced. Such reductions will also require cuts in the overall size of  the diplomatic mission in Iraq unless there is a dramatic change in the  security environment.
U.S. Diplomatic Security in Iraq After the Withdrawal is republished with permission of STRATFOR.

No comments:
Post a Comment