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Policy Planning Staff (S/P)

MISSION STATEMENT

Fusing Thought with Action: the Mission and Purpose of the Policy Planning Staff

Created in 1947 by George Kennan at the request of Secretary of State George C. Marshall, the Policy Planning Staff (S/P) serves as a source of independent policy analysis and advice for the Secretary of State. The Policy Planning Staff's mission is to take a longer term, strategic view of global trends and frame recommendations for the Secretary of State to advance U.S. interests and American values.

In his memoirs Present at the Creation, former Secretary of State Dean Acheson characterized the role of Policy Planning: "To anticipate the emerging form of things to come, to reappraise policies which had acquired their own momentum and went on after the reasons for them had ceased, and to stimulate and, when necessary, to devise basic policies crucial to the conduct of our foreign affairs."

For today's Policy Planning Staff, fulfilling this same, core mission for the Secretary requires striking a fine balance between engagement in the day-to-day requirements of diplomacy and development of long term, strategic plans. Broadly speaking, the daily work of the Policy Planning Staff may be divided into six areas:

Analysis
Policy Planning serves as an internal think tank for the Department of State - undertaking broad analytical studies of regional and functional issues, identifying gaps in policy, and initiating policy planning and formulation to fill these gaps. Policy Planning also serves as an institutionalized "second opinion" on policy matters - providing recommendations and alternative courses of action to the Secretary of State.

Special Projects
Policy Planning assumes special projects or takes the lead on certain issues as tasked by the Secretary of State. Recent examples include Policy Planning's work on assembling the international coalition against terrorism, coordinating the reconstruction of Afghanistan through February 2002, and implementing the Good Friday agreement in Northern Ireland.

Policy Coordination
Policy Planning engages functional and regional bureaus within the State Department and relevant government agencies to ensure coordination and integration of policy with longer-term objectives.

Policy Articulation
The speechwriters for the Secretary of State are members of the Policy Planning Staff and work together with the whole Staff and all bureaus to draft the Secretary's speeches, public remarks, testimony before Congress, and contributions to print media.

Liaison
Policy Planning acts as a liaison with nongovernmental organizations, the academic community, think tanks, and others to exchange expert views on matters relevant to U.S. policy and to ensure that broad public opinion informs the policy formulation process.

Planning Talks
Policy Planning holds a series of dialogues - known as planning talks - with counterparts from other countries, including our key European allies, Japan, South Korea, Australia, China, and Russia. These talks provide an opportunity to discuss broad strategic issues that go beyond crisis management or the day-to-day concerns of diplomacy.

Dr. Mitchell B. Reiss is the twenty-second Director of Policy Planning and holds a rank equivalent to Assistant Secretary of State.

The Policy Planning Staff is typically a mix of career government officials and outside experts who bring differing perspectives and bases of experience to the conduct of U.S. diplomacy.  Recently, the staff has included Foreign Service Officers, academics from universities and think tanks, intelligence analysts, former congressional staffers, an emergency room physician, a retired military officer, a business consultant, an arms control expert, and an economist. The staff is responsible for covering the full range of foreign policy issues facing the United States, although staff members exercise discretion and judgement in identifying the areas they focus on.

Shortly after he left the Policy Planning Staff in 1969, Zbigniew Brzezinski (who went on to become President Carter's National Security Advisor) wrote: "The purpose of planning policy is to fuse thought with action." That imperative guides us today.

  
Highlights

June 21, 2004: Policy Planning Director Mitchell B. Reiss spoke at the 2004 Carnegie International Non-Proliferation Conference in Washington: " What needs to be done to meet today's difficult proliferation challenges? The starting point is to realize that no one country can solve this problem; we must work together. As President Bush has stated, 'Every civilized nation has a stake in preventing the spread of weapons of mass destruction.'" (full text)

June 4, 2004: Policy Planning Director Mitchell B. Reiss spoke at Stanford University to a conference sponsored by the Center for International Security and Cooperation and the U.S. Army War College: "As states with nuclear capabilities, India and Pakistan share special obligations to each other and to the world.... We believe that India and Pakistan should share our commitment to global nonproliferation efforts. In particular, we believe there are five specific areas where Delhi and Islamabad can cooperate with Washington...." (full text)

May 14, 2004: Policy Planning Director Mitchell B. Reiss spoke at the Asia Foundation in Washington, D.C.: "We seek an East Asia that is open and inclusive. We want a regional architecture that allows states to build partnerships with each other as well as partnerships with the United States." (full text)

May 11, 2004: Policy Planning Director Mitchell B. Reiss addressed the German Council for Foreign Relations in Berlin, Germany: "We can agree on a deal: We will not interpret the European desire to achieve a unified position as an excuse for inaction.... And Europe should not interpret the U.S. desire for action as an opportunity to provoke divisions in Europe." (full text

  
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