Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06BELGRADE907
2006-06-07 11:54:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy Belgrade
Cable title:  

MISSION BELGRADE'S ROLLING POLICY AGENDA

Tags:  AMGT EAID KSPR SR 
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VZCZCXRO0749
RR RUEHAST
DE RUEHBW #0907/01 1581154
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 071154Z JUN 06
FM AMEMBASSY BELGRADE
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 8761
INFO RUEHZL/EUROPEAN POLITICAL COLLECTIVE
RUEAWJL/DOJ WASHDC
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 BELGRADE 000907 

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DEPT FOR EUR/SCE, DOJ FOR CARL ALEXANDRE
DEPT ALSO FOR A/S HIGGINS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: AMGT EAID KSPR SR
SUBJECT: MISSION BELGRADE'S ROLLING POLICY AGENDA

BELGRADE 00000907 001.2 OF 002


UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 BELGRADE 000907

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DEPT FOR EUR/SCE, DOJ FOR CARL ALEXANDRE
DEPT ALSO FOR A/S HIGGINS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: AMGT EAID KSPR SR
SUBJECT: MISSION BELGRADE'S ROLLING POLICY AGENDA

BELGRADE 00000907 001.2 OF 002



1. (U) Summary: Mission Belgrade's interagency process -
the "Rolling Policy Agenda" (RPA) - is the way we develop
policy recommendations and implementation, the mechanism by
which we oversee foreign assistance, and the vehicle by
which we implement the Mission Performance Plan (MPP).
Centered on seven interagency teams, each with a thematic
focus closely linked to an MPP strategic goal, the RPA
ensures broad-based participation and buy-in for decision-
making, equitable division of responsibilities among
agencies, and efficient dissemination of information.
Active participation in the RPA by the Embassy Front Office
injects discipline into the process and stimulates action.
Nearing the two-year anniversary of its implementation, the
RPA process has significantly improved inter-agency
cooperation and stimulated "bottom-up" policy initiative in
our Mission. End Summary.

ONE MISSION, ONE POLICY, ONE PLAN


2. (U) Two years ago, this Mission developed the RPA to
instill better coordination among its dozen agencies in
both republics of Serbia and Montenegro. The RPA process
was envisaged as a way to brainstorm initiatives across
agency lines, to review and oversee the mission's numerous
assistance programs, and to ensure that the mission carries
out the ambitious goals it sets through the yearly MPP
process. Free thinking is demanded; debate encouraged; and
disputes brought to the Ambassador for final decision.


3. (U) The core of the RPA process consists of seven
interagency teams that represent our top Mission
priorities. Each of these teams is closely linked to an
MPP Strategic Goal. For example, the Democratization RPA
team manages work that would fall under the MPP's
"Democracy and Human Rights" Strategic Goal; the
Management, Security and Infrastructure RPA team handles
work relevant to the MPP's "Overseas and Domestic
Facilities" Strategic Goal. One exception is that three
RPA teams cover the MPP's "Regional Stability" Strategic
Goal -- one team on regional cooperation between Serbia and
Montenegro, one on addressing vulnerable regions within
Serbia, and one charged with military and defense issues.

Since all RPA teams have a public diplomacy component, they
all include representation from the Public Diplomacy
section.

HOW IT WORKS


4. (U) Each interagency team has a Coordinator, a Deputy
Coordinator, and an Entry Level (EL) Officer who serves as
a team "secretary." All three of these delegates represent
different agencies or sections, ensuring broader
information flow and efficient division of
responsibilities. For example, the Economic Development
RPA team's coordinator is from the Economic section, the
deputy is from USAID, and the secretary is from the
Consular Section. Each secretary is assigned to a team
that is outside his or her normal portfolio in order to
provide our EL officers broader exposure to the work of the
mission, experience in inter-agency policy-making, and
regular interaction with the Ambassador. In addition to
these standing RPA "officers," other American and local
employees of the Mission with an interest or role in the
subject matter handled by the RPA team participate in its
work. Membership is flexible and adapted to the projects
at hand. The agendas of the RPAs are indeed "rolling" in
the sense that actions are routinely added and removed as
old items are completed and new ones are addressed.


5. (U) RPA teams meet for one hour with the Ambassador and
Deputy Chief once every seven weeks (on a weekly rotating
basis) to review policy and make recommendations. While
these meetings take place at the Embassy, members from the
Consulate in Podgorica participate via DVC. The teams also
meet on an ad-hoc basis between these sessions to
brainstorm, prepare agendas for the coming weeks, review
policy or assistance issues, and agree on recommendations
for the Front Office.

BOTTOM-UP APPROACH


6. (U) One of the positive results of the RPA process is
that it has created a dynamic bottom-up approach to policy
formulation and implementation within the mission. The RPA
process depends on the active participation and expertise
of officers, specialists and locally employed staff (who
are encouraged to participate actively.) It eliminates
barriers between agencies, establishes buy-in from the
working-level at the earliest stages, and provides the

BELGRADE 00000907 002.2 OF 002


Front Office with well-formulated policy recommendations
that have already been fully coordinated among our various
agencies. The RPA process also injects discipline into the
MPP process -- the MPP has become a living document, one
that the RPA teams design, implement, and update throughout
the year. By the time MPP season arrives, RPA teams have
by and large determined the mission's goals and strategies
through their agendas and policy decisions. The
secretaries produce concise records of decisions made by

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the RPA teams, which are then placed in "shared folders"
accessible to employees throughout the Mission.

RPA SUCCESSES


7. (U) The RPA has worked well at this post, and we can
point to dozens of concrete success stories. Of great help
has been the RPA teams' review and preparation of our
annual assistance budgets and their oversight of all new
significant assistance initiatives in both republics of
SAM. We can cite other recent successes as well. The Rule
of Law RPA team, which tackles issues within the MPP's "Law
Enforcement and Judicial Systems" Strategic Goal, has had
several recent successes. This RPA coordinated policy on a
high-profile murder case of three American-citizen
brothers. Drawing on members' expertise, particularly from
the Consular section and the Department of Justice, the
team synchronized its efforts to communicate with the
American family and to move the investigation and legal
case forward. The RPA team also created a special working
group to coordinate the mission's anti-corruption efforts;
the group brings together members from the Economic,
Political and Consular sections, USAID, and the Department
of Justice's Office of Overseas Prosecutorial Development,
Assistance and Training (OPDAT). These are just some very
recent examples of the RPA's interagency efforts at work.

MOORE