Rarebooksclub.com. Paperback. New. This item is printed on demand. Paperback. 52 pages. OCLC Number: (OCoLC)45442530 Excerpt: . . . 11 First, we are concerned that the Department of Pea… Mehr…
Rarebooksclub.com. Paperback. New. This item is printed on demand. Paperback. 52 pages. OCLC Number: (OCoLC)45442530 Excerpt: . . . 11 First, we are concerned that the Department of Peacekeeping Operations is stretched too thin. Secretary General Annan agrees and told the Security Council so at the end of February. We are working to help correct this shortfall. UN peace-keeping operations cannot succeed without sufficient personnel, both in New York and on the ground. There is no quick fix for this. We are actively supporting the Secretary Generals review of permanent DPKO staff and ways that they could be supplemented to pro-vide surge capacity and specific expertise. This is especially important in view of the internal nature of many conflicts and resultant tremendous increase in demand for civilian police ( CIVPOL ). To demonstrate the priority we place on this, in February the President signed Presidential Decision Directive 71 ( PDD - 71 ). PDD-71 directs the Administration to enhance U. S. CIVPOL capacities and help enhance the CIVPOL capacities of the UN and other member states. We look forward to working with the Congress as we move forward to implement this new directive. Another key issue is the use of experts-in-kind at the UN ( including civilians, not just military officers ). DPKO has paid a real penalty for the decision to curtail the experts-in-kind. Nowhere near as many UN slots have been made available to DPKO as were filled by gratis officials, while other Departments continue to enjoy overly generous staffing. We are working to get DPKO to utilize experts-in-kind where it currently has au-thority to do so. And we are seeking to reintroduce this on a basis acceptable to UN members, including the Non-Aligned Movement. Fortunately, Secretary General Annan is an ally in our reform efforts. He recently appointed a blue-ribbon panel to look closely at how the UN can improve its per-formance in peace operations. We are pleased that two Americans are members of the panel: former AID Administrator Brian Atwood and William Durch of the St. . . This item ships from La Vergne,TN., Rarebooksclub.com<
RareBooksClub. Paperback. New. This item is printed on demand. Paperback. 52 pages. OCLC Number: (OCoLC)45442530 Excerpt: . . . 11 First, we are concerned that the Department of Peaceke… Mehr…
RareBooksClub. Paperback. New. This item is printed on demand. Paperback. 52 pages. OCLC Number: (OCoLC)45442530 Excerpt: . . . 11 First, we are concerned that the Department of Peacekeeping Operations is stretched too thin. Secretary General Annan agrees and told the Security Council so at the end of February. We are working to help correct this shortfall. UN peace-keeping operations cannot succeed without sufficient personnel, both in New York and on the ground. There is no quick fix for this. We are actively supporting the Secretary Generals review of permanent DPKO staff and ways that they could be supplemented to pro-vide surge capacity and specific expertise. This is especially important in view of the internal nature of many conflicts and resultant tremendous increase in demand for civilian police ( CIVPOL ). To demonstrate the priority we place on this, in February the President signed Presidential Decision Directive 71 ( PDD - 71 ). PDD-71 directs the Administration to enhance U. S. CIVPOL capacities and help enhance the CIVPOL capacities of the UN and other member states. We look forward to working with the Congress as we move forward to implement this new directive. Another key issue is the use of experts-in-kind at the UN ( including civilians, not just military officers ). DPKO has paid a real penalty for the decision to curtail the experts-in-kind. Nowhere near as many UN slots have been made available to DPKO as were filled by gratis officials, while other Departments continue to enjoy overly generous staffing. We are working to get DPKO to utilize experts-in-kind where it currently has au-thority to do so. And we are seeking to reintroduce this on a basis acceptable to UN members, including the Non-Aligned Movement. Fortunately, Secretary General Annan is an ally in our reform efforts. He recently appointed a blue-ribbon panel to look closely at how the UN can improve its per-formance in peace operations. We are pleased that two Americans are members of the panel: former AID Administrator Brian Atwood and William Durch of the St. . . This item ships from La Vergne,TN., RareBooksClub<
Rarebooksclub.com. Paperback. New. This item is printed on demand. Paperback. 52 pages. OCLC Number: (OCoLC)45442530 Excerpt: . . . 11 First, we are concerned that the Department of Pea… Mehr…
Rarebooksclub.com. Paperback. New. This item is printed on demand. Paperback. 52 pages. OCLC Number: (OCoLC)45442530 Excerpt: . . . 11 First, we are concerned that the Department of Peacekeeping Operations is stretched too thin. Secretary General Annan agrees and told the Security Council so at the end of February. We are working to help correct this shortfall. UN peace-keeping operations cannot succeed without sufficient personnel, both in New York and on the ground. There is no quick fix for this. We are actively supporting the Secretary Generals review of permanent DPKO staff and ways that they could be supplemented to pro-vide surge capacity and specific expertise. This is especially important in view of the internal nature of many conflicts and resultant tremendous increase in demand for civilian police ( CIVPOL ). To demonstrate the priority we place on this, in February the President signed Presidential Decision Directive 71 ( PDD - 71 ). PDD-71 directs the Administration to enhance U. S. CIVPOL capacities and help enhance the CIVPOL capacities of the UN and other member states. We look forward to working with the Congress as we move forward to implement this new directive. Another key issue is the use of experts-in-kind at the UN ( including civilians, not just military officers ). DPKO has paid a real penalty for the decision to curtail the experts-in-kind. Nowhere near as many UN slots have been made available to DPKO as were filled by gratis officials, while other Departments continue to enjoy overly generous staffing. We are working to get DPKO to utilize experts-in-kind where it currently has au-thority to do so. And we are seeking to reintroduce this on a basis acceptable to UN members, including the Non-Aligned Movement. Fortunately, Secretary General Annan is an ally in our reform efforts. He recently appointed a blue-ribbon panel to look closely at how the UN can improve its per-formance in peace operations. We are pleased that two Americans are members of the panel: former AID Administrator Brian Atwood and William Durch of the St. . . This item ships from La Vergne,TN., Rarebooksclub.com<
RareBooksClub. Paperback. New. This item is printed on demand. Paperback. 52 pages. OCLC Number: (OCoLC)45442530 Excerpt: . . . 11 First, we are concerned that the Department of Peaceke… Mehr…
RareBooksClub. Paperback. New. This item is printed on demand. Paperback. 52 pages. OCLC Number: (OCoLC)45442530 Excerpt: . . . 11 First, we are concerned that the Department of Peacekeeping Operations is stretched too thin. Secretary General Annan agrees and told the Security Council so at the end of February. We are working to help correct this shortfall. UN peace-keeping operations cannot succeed without sufficient personnel, both in New York and on the ground. There is no quick fix for this. We are actively supporting the Secretary Generals review of permanent DPKO staff and ways that they could be supplemented to pro-vide surge capacity and specific expertise. This is especially important in view of the internal nature of many conflicts and resultant tremendous increase in demand for civilian police ( CIVPOL ). To demonstrate the priority we place on this, in February the President signed Presidential Decision Directive 71 ( PDD - 71 ). PDD-71 directs the Administration to enhance U. S. CIVPOL capacities and help enhance the CIVPOL capacities of the UN and other member states. We look forward to working with the Congress as we move forward to implement this new directive. Another key issue is the use of experts-in-kind at the UN ( including civilians, not just military officers ). DPKO has paid a real penalty for the decision to curtail the experts-in-kind. Nowhere near as many UN slots have been made available to DPKO as were filled by gratis officials, while other Departments continue to enjoy overly generous staffing. We are working to get DPKO to utilize experts-in-kind where it currently has au-thority to do so. And we are seeking to reintroduce this on a basis acceptable to UN members, including the Non-Aligned Movement. Fortunately, Secretary General Annan is an ally in our reform efforts. He recently appointed a blue-ribbon panel to look closely at how the UN can improve its per-formance in peace operations. We are pleased that two Americans are members of the panel: former AID Administrator Brian Atwood and William Durch of the St. . . This item ships from La Vergne,TN., RareBooksClub<
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Buch in der Datenbank seit 2014-06-26T08:18:55+02:00 (Berlin) Detailseite zuletzt geändert am 2015-06-14T15:45:14+02:00 (Berlin) ISBN/EAN: 1234409607
ISBN - alternative Schreibweisen: 1-234-40960-7, 978-1-234-40960-9 Alternative Schreibweisen und verwandte Suchbegriffe: Titel des Buches: leben und abenteuer des robinson crusoe
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