Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-4rdpn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-05T15:35:44.386Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Whole of (coalition) government: Comparing Swedish and German experiences in Afghanistan

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 May 2021

Maya Dafinova*
Affiliation:
The Norman Paterson School of International Affairs, Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada
*
*Corresponding author. Email: [email protected]

Abstract

Whole-of-government (WOG) approaches have emerged as a blueprint for contemporary peace and state-building operations. Countries contributing civilian and military personnel to multinational interventions are persistently urged to improve coherence and enhance coordination between the ministries that form part of the national contingent. Despite a heated debate about what WOG should look like and how to achieve it, the causal mechanisms of WOG variance remains under-theorised. Based on 47 in-depth, semi-structured interviews, this study compares Swedish and German WOG approaches in the context of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF). I argue that coalition bargaining drove the fluctuation in the Swedish and German WOG models. Strategic culture was an antecedent condition. In both cases, COIN and the war on terror clashed with foundational elements of the Swedish and German strategic cultures, paving the way for a non-debate on WOG on the political arena. Finally, bureaucratic politics was an intervening condition that obstructed or enabled coherence, depending on the ambition of the incumbent coalition government to progress WOG. Overall, the results suggest that coalitions face limitations in implementing a WOG framework when the nature of the military engagement is highly disputed in national parliaments.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the British International Studies Association

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Patrick, Steward and Brown, Kaysie, Greater Than the Sum of Its Parts? Assessing ‘Whole of Government’ Approaches to Fragile States (New York, NY: International Peace Academy, 2007)Google Scholar.

2 Coning, Cedric de and Friis, Karsten, ‘Coherence and coordination: The limits of the comprehensive approach’, Journal of International Peacekeeping, 15 (2011), pp. 15, 251CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Caslen, Robert L. Jr and Loudon, Bradley S., ‘Forging a comprehensive approach to counterinsurgency operations’, PRISM, 2:3 (July 2011), p. 3Google Scholar.

3 Alan Ryan, ‘Delivering “joined-up” government: Achieving the integrated approach to offshore crisis management’, Strategic Insights (November 2016), p. 5; Patrick and Brown, Greater Than the Sum of Its Parts?.

4 Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), ‘Whole of Government Approaches to Fragile States’ (Paris, 2006), pp. 8, 47–52.

5 Cedric de Coning, ‘Civil-military interaction: Rationale, possibilities and limitations’, in Gerard Lucius and Sebastiaan Rietjens (eds), Effective Civil-Military Interaction in Peace Operations: Theory and Practice (Switzerland: Springer, 2016), p. 11; Susanna Campbell, Anja Kaspersen, and Erin Weir, ‘Integration missions revisited: Synthesis of findings’, in Multidimensional and Integrated Peace Operations (Oslo: Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 2007), p. 10, Smith, Dan, ‘Towards a strategic framework for peacebuilding: Getting their act together. Overview report of the Joint Utstein Study of Peacebuilding’, Foreign Affairs, 1 (2004), pp. 16, 57Google Scholar.

6 See, for example, Rempel, Roy, Dreamland: How Canada's Pretend Foreign Policy Has Undermined Sovereignty (Kingston, ON: McGill-Queen's University Press, 2006), p. 137Google Scholar.

7 Karlsrud, John, ‘From liberal peacebuilding to stabilization and counterterrorism’, International Peacekeeping, 26:1 (2019), p. 2CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

8 OECD, ‘Whole of Government Approaches to Fragile States’, pp. 7–14; Personal interview S003 (May 2014); Jasper, Scott and Moreland, Scott, ‘A comprehensive approach to multidimensional operations’, Journal of International Peacekeeping, 19 (2015), p. 197CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

9 Roberto Belloni, ‘Stabilization: Rethinking intervention in weak and fragile states’, in Sonia Lucarelli, Alessandro Marrone, and Francesco Niccolò Moro (eds), Projecting Stability in an Unstable World (Brussels: NATO, 2017), pp. 13–18.

10 de Coning and Friis, ‘Coherence and coordination’, pp. 243–72.

11 Egnell, Robert, ‘Civil-military coordination for operational effectiveness: Towards a measured approach’, Small Wars & Insurgencies, 24:2 (2013), pp. 237–71CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

12 Octavian Manea, ‘Counterinsurgency as a whole of government approach: Notes on the British army field manual Weltanschauung. An interview with Colonel Alexander Alderson’, Small Wars Journal (24 January 2011), pp. 7–9; Cecile Wendling, ‘The comprehensive approach to civil-military crisis management: A critical analysis and perspective’, Institut de Recherche Stratégique de l'Ecole Militaire (IRSEM) (Paris: 2010), pp. 39–49.

13 For a definition of ‘clear, hold, build’, see David H. Ucko, ‘Beyond clear-hold-build: Rethinking local-level counterinsurgency after Afghanistan’, Contemporary Security Policy, 34:3 (2013), pp. 526–51.

14 Weitz, Richard, ‘CORDS and the whole of government approach: Vietnam, Afghanistan, and beyond’, Small Wars Journal, 6:1 (February 2010)Google Scholar.

15 Barbara J. Stapleton, ‘The civil-military approaches developed by the United Kingdom under its PRTs in Mazar-E Sharif and Lashkar Gah’, in William Maley and Susanne Schmeidl (eds), Reconstructing Afghanistan: Civil-Military Experiences in Comparative Perspective (London, UK: Routledge, 2014), pp. 37–9; Lara Olson and Hrach Gregorian, ‘Side by Side or Together? Working for Security, Development and Peace in Afghanistan and Liberia’, Report on 30 and 31 March 2007 Workshop ‘Coordinated Approaches to Security, Development and Peacemaking: Lessons Learned from Afghanistan and Liberia’ (Calgary: October, 2007), p. 70; Weitz, ‘CORDS and the whole of government approach’, p. 8.

16 Oskari Eronen, ‘PRT models in Afghanistan: Approaches to civil-military integration’, CMC Finland Civilian Crisis Management Studies, 1:5 (Helsinki: CMC Finland Crisis Management Centre, 2008), pp. 27–41.

17 See, for example, Travers, Patrick and Owen, Taylor, ‘Between metaphor and strategy: Canada's integrated approach to peacebuilding in Afghanistan’, International Journal, 63:3 (2008), p. 701CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

18 Olson and Gregorian, ‘Side by Side or Together?’, pp. 20–30; Ryan, ‘Delivering “joined-up” government’, p. 9.

19 Emily Munro, ‘Multidimensional and integrated peace operations: trends and challenges’, GCSP Geneva Papers, 1 (Oslo: Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 2008), p. 16.

20 OECD, ‘Whole of Government Approaches to Fragile States’, pp. 8, 47–52.

21 Akash Paun, United We Stand? Coalition Government in the UK (London, UK: Institute for Government, 2010), p. 14, available at: {https://www.instituteforgovernment.org.uk/sites/default/files/publications/United%20we%20stand.pdf} accessed 27 July 2020; United Nations, ‘How We Are Funded’(New York: United Nations Peacekeeping, 2019), available at: {https://peacekeeping.un.org/en/how-we-are-funded} accessed 27 July 2020.

22 See, for example, Alexis Below and Anne-Sophie Belzile, ‘Comparing Whole of Government Approaches to Fragile States’, BIGS Policy Paper No. 3 (Potsdam: Brandenburgisches Institut Für Gesellschaft und Sicherheit (BIGS), 2013), pp. 5–39; Volker Hauck and Camilla Rocca, ‘Gaps between Comprehensive Approaches of the EU and EU Member States: Scoping Study’ (Maastricht: European Centre for Development Policy Management (ECDPM), 2014), p. 45; David Harriman, Anna Weibull, and Cecilia Hull Wiklund, ‘Implementing the Comprehensive Approach: A Study of Key Aspects Related to Canada's, the Netherland's and the United Kingdom's Implementation of the Comprehensive Approach’, Swedish Defence Research Agency (FOI), Memo 3487 (September 2012), pp. 1–44.

23 Alister Miskimmon, Ben O'Loughlin, and Laura Roselle, Forging the World: Strategic Narratives and International Relations (Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 2017), p. 4.

24 Alister Miskimmon, Ben O'Loughlin, and Laura Roselle, Strategic Narratives: Communication Power and the New World Order (London, UK: Routledge, 2013).

25 Olson and Gregorian, ‘Side by Side or Together?’, pp. 54–5.

26 For a detailed discussion on framing, projection, and reception of strategic narratives, see Miskimmon, O'Loughlin, and Roselle, Forging the World, pp. 9–10.

27 Due to space limitations, this study only engages with the basic tenets of the three theories.

28 Brian C. Rathbun, Partisan Interventions: European Party Politics and Peace Enforcement in the Balkans (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2004), p. 13.

29 Gunnar Fermann and Per Marius Frost-Nielsen, ‘Conceptualizing caveats for political research: Defining and measuring national reservations on the use of force during multinational military operations’, Contemporary Security Policy, 40:1 (2019), pp. 56–69.

30 David P. Auerswald and Stephen M. Saideman, NATO in Afghanistan: Fighting Together, Fighting Alone (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2016), pp. 6, 66.

31 Otto Trønnes, ‘Mapping and Explaining Norwegian Caveats in Afghanistan from 2001 to 2008’ (Master's thesis, Oslo, Norway: Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet, Fakultet for samfunnsvitenskap og teknologiledelse, Institutt for sosiologi og statsvitenskap, 2012), p. 104, available at: {https://ntnuopen.ntnu.no/ntnu-xmlui/handle/11250/268583} accessed 4 April 2020.

32 Daan Fonck, Tim Haesebrouck, and Yf Reykers, ‘Parliamentary involvement, party ideology and majority-opposition bargaining: Belgian participation in multinational military operations’, Contemporary Security Policy, 40:1 (2019), p. 96.

33 Graham T. Allison and Morton Halperin, ‘Bureaucratic politics: A paradigm and some policy implications’, World Politics, 24 (1 April 1972), pp. 40–79; Marie-Eve Desrosiers and Philippe Lagassé, ‘Canada and the bureaucratic politics of state fragility’, Diplomacy & Statecraft, 20 (10 December 2009), p. 659.

34 Patrick and Brown, Greater Than the Sum of Its Parts?, p. 122; Conor Keane and Steve Wood, ‘Bureaucratic politics, role conflict, and the internal dynamics of US provincial reconstruction teams in Afghanistan’, Armed Forces & Society, 42:1 (2016), pp. 99–118.

35 For a summary of the broader debate on strategic culture, see Jan Angstrom and Jan Willem Honig, ‘Regaining strategy: Small powers, strategic culture, and escalation in Afghanistan’, The Journal of Strategic Studies, 35:5 (October 2012), pp. 670–1.

36 Douglass North, Institutions, Institutional Change and Economic Performance (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1990), pp. 36–45; Fredrik Doeser, ‘Finland, Sweden and Operation Unified Protector: The impact of strategic culture’, Comparative Strategy, 35:4 (2016), pp. 285–6. This article uses the concept of strategic culture, as opposed to political culture. For a conceptual distinction between the two, see Alastair Iain Johnston, ‘Thinking about strategic culture’, International Security, 19:4 (spring 1995), p. 33.

37 Kerry Longhurst, Germany and the Use of Force: The Evolution of Germany Security Policy, 1990–2003 (Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press, 2005), pp. 17–18.

38 Gunnar Åselius, ‘Swedish strategic culture after 1945’, Cooperation and Conflict: Journal of the Nordic International Studies Association, 40:1 (2005), pp. 25–6, 39; Oscar Lassenius, ‘Swedish Strategic Culture in the post-Cold War Era: A Case Study of Swedish Military Strategic Doctrine’ (Diploma thesis, Finnish National Defence University, August 2020), p. 75t.

39 Doeser, ‘Finland, Sweden and Operation Unified Protector’, p. 288; Angstrom and Willem Honig, ‘Regaining strategy’, pp. 679–83.

40 Bergen Bassett, ‘Factors Influencing Sweden's Changing Stance on Neutrality’ (Master's thesis, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, 2012), pp. 52–3.

41 Personal interviews S003, S006 (May 2014).

42 Anna Bergstrand and Kjell Engelbrekt, ‘To deploy or not to deploy a parliamentary army? German strategic culture and international military operations’, in Malena Britz (ed.), European Participation in International Operations: The Role of Strategic Culture (London, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016), pp. 49–50.

43 James D. Bindenagel and Philip A. Ackermann, ‘Germany's Troubled Strategic Culture Needs to Change’, Transatlantic Take (Berlin: The German Marshall Fund of the United States, October 2018), p. 2; Jørgen Staun, ‘The slow path towards “normality”: German strategic culture and the Holocaust’, Scandinavian Journal of Military Studies, 3:1 (2020), pp. 89, 94.

44 Dalgaard-Nielsen, ‘The test of strategic culture’, pp. 344–50; Jeffrey Lantis, ‘The moral imperative of force: The evolution of German strategic culture in Kosovo’, Comparative Strategy, 21:1 (2002), pp. 25–6.

45 Carolin Hilpert, Strategic Cultural Change and the Challenge for Security Policy (London, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014), p. 27; Wilfried Von Bredow, ‘Germany in Afghanistan: The pitfalls of peace-building in national and international perspective’, Res Militaris, 2:1 (autumn 2011), p. 6.

46 North, Institutions, Institutional Change and Economic Performance.

47 See Sebastiaan Rietjens and Gerard Lucius, ‘Getting better at civil-military interaction’, in Lucius and Rietjens (eds), Effective Civil-Military Interaction in Peace Operations, pp. 11–28; Patrick and Brown, Greater Than the Sum of Its Parts?.

48 Here, I borrow from research on integrated missions. See Susanna P. Campbell and Michael Hartnett, ‘A framework for improved coordination: Lessons learned from the international development, peacekeeping, peacebuilding, humanitarian and conflict resolution communities’, Communities (2005), pp. 1–35.

49 Below and Belzile, ‘Comparing Whole of Government Approaches to Fragile States’, pp. 1–44.

50 Eronen, ‘PRT models in Afghanistan’, pp. 27–41.

51 Stephen Van Evera, Guide to Methods for Students of Political Science (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1997), pp. 29–55.

52 Alexander L. George and Andrew Bennett, Case Studies and Theory Development in the Social Sciences (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2005), pp. 19–21; Robert K. Yin, Case Study Research: Design and Methods (Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publications, 2009), p. 9.

53 George and Bennett, Case Studies and Theory Development in the Social Sciences, pp. 206–07; Van Evera, Guide to Methods for Students of Political Science, pp. 71–2.

54 Yin, Case Study Research, p. 10. See also Desrosiers and Lagassé, ‘Canada and the bureaucratic politics of state fragility’; Magdalena Tham, Lindell Och, and Cecilia Hull, Jakten På Synergin: Erfarenheter Av Civil-Militär Samverkan I PRT Mazar-E Sharif (Stockholm: Swedish Defence Research Agency, 2011).

55 Yin, Case Study Research, pp. 50–4.

56 Hilpert, Strategic Cultural Change and the Challenge for Security Policy, p. 27; Stig A. Nohrstedt and Rune Ottosen, ‘Brothers in arms or peace? The media representation of Swedish and Norwegian defence and military co-operation’, Conflict & Communication Online, 9:2 (2010), p. 2.

57 Patrick Biernacki and Dan Waldorf, ‘Snowball sampling: Problems and techniques of chain referral sampling’, Sociological Methods & Research, 10:2 (1 November 1981), pp. 141–63.

58 Gunnar Åselius, ‘Swedish strategic culture after 1945’, Cooperation and Conflict: Journal of the Nordic International Studies Association, 40:1 (2005), pp. 26–7.

59 Bassett, ‘Factors Influencing Sweden's Changing Stance on Neutrality’, pp. 20–1; Tham, Och, and Hull, ‘Jakten på synergin’, p. 20.

60 Erik Noreen and Jan Angstrom, ‘A catch-all strategic narrative: target audiences and Swedish troop contributions to Afghanistan’, in Beatrice De Graaf, George Dimitriu, and Jens Ringsmose (eds), Strategic Narratives, Public Opinion and War: Winning Domestic Support for the Afghan War (New York, NY: Routledge, 2015), pp. 286–7.

61 Personal interviews S006, S011, S013 (May 2014).

62 Personal interviews S007, S011 (May 2014).

63 Olov Östberg, Per Johannissonn, and Per-Arne Persson, ‘Capability formation architecture for provincial reconstruction in Afghanistan’, in John Gotze and Anders Jenzen-Waud (eds), Systems, Vol. 3: Beyond Alignment; Applying Systems Thinking in Architecting Enterprises (London, UK: College Publications, 2013), p. 405; Personal interviews S006, S014 (May 2014).

64 Personal interview S006 (May 2014); Stefan Lagerlöf, Civil-Militära Relationer: Förutsättningar För Samverkan (Stockholm: Försvarshögskolan, 2011), p. 37, available at: {http://www.diva-portal.org/smash/record.jsf?pid=diva2%3A418220&dswid=790} accessed 14 April 2019.

65 Personal interviews S007, S008 (May 2014).

66 Personal interviews S012, S016 (May 2014).

67 Personal interviews S006, S007, S008, S011, S013 (May 2014).

68 Personal interviews S001, S002, S004, S006, S007, S014, S017 (May 2014).

69 Personal interviews S006, S014 (May 2014); Riksdagen, ‘Fortsatt svenskt deltagande i en internationell styrka i Afghanistan’, Regeringens Proposition, 179 (Stockholm, 2001/02), p. 7, available at: {http://data.riksdagen.se/fil/c9587334-00dc-435f-aced-77833507001a} accessed 14 April 2019; Riksdagen, ‘Fortsatt svenskt deltagande i en internationell säkerhetsstyrka i Afghanistan’, Regeringens Proposition, 21 (Stockholm, 2002/03), p. 8, available at: {https://www.riksdagen.se/sv/dokument-lagar/dokument/proposition/fortsatt-svenskt-deltagande-i-en-internationell_GQ0321} accessed 14 April 2019.

70 Personal interviews S003, S016 (May 2014); Patrick and Brown, Greater Than the Sum of Its Parts?, p. 124.

71 Robert Egnell and Claes Nilsson, Svensk civil-militär samverkan för internationella insatser: från löftesrika koncept till konkret handling (Stockholm: Swedish Defence Research Agency (FOI), 2010), p. 16; Personal interviews S001, S003, S006, S007, S010, S012, S015, S016 (May 2014).

72 Personal interviews S001, S006, S009, S011, S017 (May 2014).

73 Personal interviews S001, S002, S003, S004, S005, S006, S007, S008, S010 (May 2014).

74 Riksdagen, ‘Fortsatt svenskt deltagande i en internationell säkerhetsstyrka i Afghanistan’, Regeringens Proposition, 71 (Stockholm, 2003/04), p. 7, available at: {https://www.riksdagen.se/sv/dokument-lagar/dokument/proposition/fortsatt-svenskt-deltagande-i-en-internationell_GR0371} accessed 14 April 2019.

75 Personal interviews S003, S004, S005, S006, S007, S009, S012, S014, S015, S016 (May 2014); Sara Bandstein, ‘Civil-militär samverkan i internationella insatser – en översikt av hur svenska aktörer samverkar på operativ och strategisk nivå’, FOI Memo 3309 (Stockholm: Swedish Defence Research Agency, 2010), pp. 9–12; Stefan Hedmark, Comprehensive approach eller pragmatic approach? En fallstudie om civil-militär samverkan vid PRT Mazar-E Sharif (Stockholm: Försvarshögskolan, 2009), p. 30.

76 Personal interview S001 (May 2014).

77 Tham, Och, and Hull, ‘Jakten på synergin’, p. 20.

78 Riksdagen, ‘Fortsatt svenskt deltagande i den internationella säkerhetsstyrkan i Afghanistan’, Regeringens Proposition, 83 (Stockholm, 2006/07), p. 10, available at: {http://www.regeringen.se/rattsdokument/proposition/2007/03/prop.-20060783/} accessed 14 April 2019.

79 Riksdagen, ‘Fortsatt svenskt deltagande i den internationella säkerhetsstyrkan i Afghanistan (ISAF)’, Regeringens Proposition, 69 (Stockholm, 2008/09), p. 11, available at: {http://www.regeringen.se/rattsdokument/proposition/2008/11/prop.-20080969/} accessed 14 April 2019.

80 Government Offices of Sweden, ‘Strategy for Development Cooperation with Afghanistan, July 2009–December 2013’ (Stockholm, 2009), pp. 7–8.

81 Personal interview S007 (May 2014).

82 Personal interviews S006, S016, S017 (May 2014).

83 Personal interview S001 (May 2014).

84 Personal interview S005, S008, S009, S010, S014 (May 2014).

85 Personal interviews S005, S011, S014 (May 2014); Sanna Svensson, ‘Lessons Still to Be Learned: Interoperability Between Swedish Authorities in Northern Afghanistan (BA thesis, University of Gothenburg, Sweden, 2011), p. 22; Tham, Och, and Hull, ‘Jakten på synergin’, p. 38; Helené Lackenbauer, Reflektioner Kring Civil-Militär Samverkan I Afghanistan (Stockholm: Swedish Defence Research Agency, 2011), p. 15.

86 Rod Nordland, ‘Security in Afghanistan is deteriorating, aid groups say’, The New York Times, available at: {https://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/12/world/asia/12afghan.html} accessed 26 September 2020.

87 Personal interview S016 (May 2014); Radio Sweden, ‘Afghanistan Becomes an Election Issue’ (Stockholm: Radio Sweden, 2010), available at: {http://sverigesradio.se/sida/artikel.aspx?programid=2054&artikel=3892096} accessed 14 April 2019; David Stavrou, ‘The debate over Swedish troops in Afghanistan’, The Local (2010), available at: {http://www.thelocal.se/20101215/30858} accessed 14 April 2019.

88 Personal interviews S014, S017 (May 2014).

89 Personal interview S007 (May 2014).

90 Regeringskansliet, ‘Strategi för sveriges stöd till det internationella engagemanget i Afghanistan’ (Stockholm, 2010), pp. 12–26, available at: {http://www.regeringen.se/49b728/contentassets/6284170ece4f493cad8960d2369bbcf6/strategi-for-sveriges-stod-till-det-internationella-engagemanget-i-afghanistan} accessed 14 April 2019, Riksdagen, ‘Fortsatt svenskt deltagande i den internationella säkerhetsstyrkan i Afghanistan (ISAF)’, Regeringens Proposition, 29 (Stockholm, 2011/12), p. 20.

91 Government Offices of Sweden, ‘Revised Development Cooperation Strategy Afghanistan: January 2012–December 2014’ (Stockholm, 2012); Personal interview S014 (May 2014).

92 Government Offices of Sweden, ‘Strategy for Development Cooperation with Afghanistan’, pp. 8, 13; Government Offices of Sweden, ‘Revised Development Cooperation Strategy Afghanistan: January 2012–December 2014’, p. 3.

93 Personal interview S017 (June 2014).

94 Personal interviews S004, S005, S007, S008, S009, S010, S011, S013, S014, S016 (May 2014).

95 Personal interviews S005, S007, S016 (May 2014); Östberg, Johannissonn, and Persson, ‘Capability formation architecture for provincial reconstruction in Afghanistan’, p. 401.

96 Personal interviews G003 (June 2014); S004 (May 2014); G017 (October 2015).

97 Personal interviews S005, S007, S009, S010, S013 (May 2014).

98 Personal interviews S006, S013, S014 (May 2014); Tham, Och, and Hull, ‘Jakten på synergin’, pp. 35–6.

99 Personal interview S009 (May 2014).

100 Personal interview S007, S008 (May 2014).

101 Personal interview S013 (May 2014).

102 Personal interviews S001, S003, S007, S008, S010, S013, S014 (May 2014).

103 Personal interviews S006, S011 (May 2014).

104 Personal interview S014 (May 2014); Tham, Och, and Hull, ‘Jakten på synergin’, pp. 40–1.

105 Svensson, ‘Lessons Still to Be Learned’, p. 24.

106 Personal interview S014 (May 2014).

107 Personal interviews S004, S005 (May 2014).

108 Personal interviews G020, G022 (October 2015); Timo Behr, ‘Germany and regional Command-North: ISAF's weakest link?’, in Nik Hynek and Péter Marton (eds), Statebuilding in Afghanistan: Multinational Contributions to Reconstruction (London and New York: Routledge, 2011), pp. 42–64; Timo Noetzel and Thomas Rid, ‘Germany's options in Afghanistan’, Survival, 51:5 (2009), pp. 78–9.

109 Hilpert, Strategic Cultural Change and the Challenge for Security Policy, pp. 43–50, 193; Personal interview G030 (January 2016); Timo Noetzel, ‘The German politics of war: Kunduz and the war in Afghanistan’, International Affairs, 87:2 (2011), p. 403.

110 Personal interviews G003, G009, G012 (June 2014); G013 (July 2014); G016, G017, G020, G022, G028 (October 2015). See also Action Plan: Civilian Crisis Prevention, Conflict Resolution and Post-Conflict Peace-Building (Berlin: Bundesregierung. 2004).

111 Bundesministerium der Verteidigung, ‘Defence Policy Guidelines’ (Berlin, 2003), p. 18; Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development, ‘Sector Strategy for Crisis Prevention, Conflict Transformation and Peace-Building in German Development Cooperation’ (Berlin, 2005), p. 24.

112 Personal interview G017 (October 2015); Von Ansgar Graw, ‘Wieczorek-Zeul fordert strategiewechsel der USA’, WELT (2007), available at: {https://www.welt.de/politik/article1256355/Wieczorek-Zeul-fordert-Strategiewechsel-der-USA.html} accessed 14 April 2019.

113 Personal interview G014 (July 2014).

114 Personal interviews G014 (July 2014); G017, G018, G020, G021, G025, G028 (October 2015); G030 (January 2016).

115 Personal interviews G002, G003, G006, G007, G011, G014, G015 (July 2014).

116 Personal interviews G009, G014 (July 2014); G017, G022 (October 2015).

117 Wade Boese, ‘Germany, NATO Advance Missile Defenses’, Arms Control Association (2005), available at: {http://legacy.armscontrol.org/act/2005_06/Germany_NATO} accessed 1 January 2016.

118 Personal interviews G005 (June 2014); G030 (January 2016).

119 Personal interview G025 (October 2015).

120 Personal interviews G010, G014 (July 2014); G025 (October 2015).

121 Personal interviews G021 (October 2015); G024 (October 2015).

122 Personal interview G006 (June 2014).

123 Personal interviews G001, G005, G007, G009 (June 2014); G012, G014 (July 2014); G023, G024, G026, G027 (October 2015); G029 (November 2015); G030 (January 2016).

124 Personal interviews G005, G006, G007, G011, G012 (June 2014).

125 Personal interviews G010, G011, G012 (June 2014); G014 (July 2014); G021 (October 2015).

126 Behr, ‘Germany and regional Command-North’, pp. 42–64; Noetzel and Rid, ‘Germany's options in Afghanistan’, pp. 80–1.

127 Behr, ‘Germany and regional Command-North’, pp. 52–4; Noetzel and Rid, ‘Germany's options in Afghanistan’, pp. 80–1; Personal interview G026 (October 2015).

128 Hilpert, Strategic Cultural Change and the Challenge for Security Policy, pp. 93–193; Gareis, Sven, ‘Schlüssiges konzept oder schlagwort? Zu anspruch und praxis “Vernetzter Sicherheit” in Afghanistan’, Security and Peace, 28:4 (2010), p. 241Google Scholar; Noetzel, Timo and Schreer, Benjamin, ‘Counter – what? Germany and counter-insurgency in Afghanistan’, RUSI, 153:1 (2008), p. 45CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Personal interviews G011 (June 2014); G013 (July 2014).

129 Personal interview G019 (October 2015).

130 Federal Ministry of Defence, ‘White Paper on the Security of the Federal Republic of Germany and the Situation of the Bundeswehr’ (Berlin, 2006).

131 Svenja Post, Toward a Whole-of-Europe Approach: Organizing the European Union's and Member States Comprehensive Crisis Management (New York, NY: Springer VS, 2015), p. 289; Personal interviews G017, G022, G027 (October 2015).

132 Personal interview G017 (October 2015).

133 Personal interview G014 (July 2014).

134 Timo Noetzel, ‘Germany's small war in Afghanistan: Military learning amid politico-strategic inertia’, Contemporary Security Policy, 31:3 (2010), p. 500.

135 Personal interview G012, G013 (June 2014).

136 Personal interviews G014, G025, G026 (October 2015).

137 Personal interviews G012 (June 2014); G013, G014, G015 (July 2014); G025, G030 (October 2015).

138 Personal interview G013 (July 2014).

139 Noetzel, ‘The German politics of war’, pp. 405–07.

140 Michael Beetle, ‘Niebel setzt auf Vernetzte Sicherheit’, Stuttgarter-Zeitung (2011), available at: {http://www.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/inhalt.niebel-setzt-auf-vernetzte-sicherheit.bbbc9644-b4a3-4a14-b307-e8965d82272c.html} accessed 1 January 2016; Berlin Policy Journal, ‘Pure aid creates dependency: An interview with German Development Minister Dirk Niebel’, Berlin Policy Journal (2010), available at: {https://dgap.org/en/ip-journal/topics/“pure-aid-creates-dependency} accessed 1 January 2020; Personal interviews G003 (June 2014); G021, G017 (October 2015).

141 Personal interviews G003 (June 2014); G006 (June 2014); G014 (July 2014); G026 (October 2015).

142 Personal interview G026 (October 2015).

143 German Institute for Development Evaluation, ‘A Review of Evaluative Work of German Development Cooperation in Afghanistan’ (Bonn, 2014), pp. 4–9; Personal interviews G003 (June 2014); G017, G018, G021, G025, G027, G029 (October 2015).

144 Personal interviews G011 (July 2014); G017, G020, G021, G023, G024 (October 2015).

145 Personal interview G020, G025 (October 2015); G030 (January 2016).

146 Paul, Christopher, Clarke, Colin P., and Grill, Beth, Victory Has a Thousand Fathers: Sources of Success in Counterinsurgency (Santa Monica: RAND Corporation, 2010), pp. 3182Google Scholar; Sexton, Renard, ‘Aid as a tool against insurgency: Evidence from contested and controlled territory in Afghanistan’, American Political Science Review, 110:4 (2016), pp. 731–49CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

147 See Eronen, ‘PRT models in Afghanistan’, p. 12; Olson and Gregorian, ‘Side by Side or Together?’, pp. 71, 92.

148 See, for example, Tham, Och, and Hull, Jakten På Synergin, pp. 39–40.

149 Egnell, ‘Civil–military coordination for operational effectiveness’, p. 271.

150 North, Institutions, Institutional Change and Economic Performance, p. 68.

151 Juliet Kaarbo, Coalition Politics and Cabinet Decision Making: A Comparative Analysis of Foreign Policy Choices (Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 2012), pp. 4–18.

152 Namie Di Razza, What to Expect for the Future of Protection in UN Peace Operations (OCHA: 24 September, 2020), available at: {https://reliefweb.int/report/world/what-expect-future-protection-un-peace-operations} accessed 29 November 2020.

153 Christopher Holshek, ‘Lessons from Iraq and Afghanistan: Looking from outside the box’, in Volker H. Franke and Robert H. Dorf (eds), Conflict Management and ‘Whole-of-Government’: Useful Tools for US National Security Strategy? Strategic Studies Institute Book (Carlisle Barracks, PA: US Army War College, March, 2012), pp. 288–9.

154 Olson and Gregorian, ‘Side by Side or Together?’, p. 42.

155 Daniel Farber, Whole-of-Government Climate Policy (Washington, DC: The Center for Progressive Reform, 20 November 2020), available at: {http://progressivereform.org/cpr-blog/whole-government-climate-policy/} accessed 12 December 2020; International Organization for Migration (IOM), ‘Migration Policy and Legislation’ (Grand-Saconnex, 2020), available at: {https://www.iom.int/migration-policy-and-legislation} accessed 12 December 2020.

156 Gagnon, Michelle L. and Labonté, Ronald, ‘Understanding how and why health is integrated into foreign policy: A case study of health is global, a UK Government Strategy 2008–2013’, Globalization and Health, 9:24 (2013), p. 1CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed.