Here's where the State Department is planning its layoffs and changes
Various national security offices, as well as units that cover Asia and the Middle East, will be consolidated or slashed. Thousands of employees across divisions are targeted for cuts.
DRL will take on a “leaner” portfolio, State said, that will reflect the administration’s “values-based diplomacy [based] in traditional Western conceptions of core freedoms.” One foreign service officer familiar with the office called the reprioritization a “substantial” change to the office’s mission. The overall division handling humanitarian and foreign assistance, that employee said, will be “completely decimated.”
A new Office of Security Affairs will be stood up inside the Bureau of International Organization Affairs—which develops U.S. policy with the United Nations—that would merge the bureau’s coverage of UN peacekeeping operations, sanctions and counterterrorism, one memo said.
That same memo detailed multiple other office consolidations. The European and Eurasian Affairs unit, for instance, will merge Russian and Caucus nations’ coverage into a new Office of Russian Affairs and the Caucuses, it says. And in the South and Central Asian Affairs office, the Coordinator for Afghan Relocation Efforts and the Special Representative for Afghan Reconstruction will be shuttered, that memo added. Their functions are expected to be moved into the Afghanistan Affairs Office.
A major restructuring of the Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security family “consolidates nearly all of the Department’s security-oriented programs into a new vertical focused on addressing contemporary security and military challenges,” the readout also said.
International narcotics and law enforcement will now be nested in that arms control family, and a pair of arms control and nonproliferation bureaus will merge into a single Bureau of Arms Control and Nonproliferation, it said.
A new Bureau of Political-Military Affairs office, dubbed the Office of State-Defense Exchange, will combine current political and military advisor offices. The Political-Military Affairs bureau works with the Defense Department to advance military and national security objectives.
The State Department has repeatedly said its reorganization will empower regional offices and streamline decision making. One foreign service officer said it was hard to see how that comes about.
“It doesn't look any simpler, and they're taking completely different functions and welding them together to create Frankenstein offices,” the employee said.
In a separate memo, a report to Congress on the structure of the Bureau of Cyberspace and Digital policy argued that changes being made to the bureau will further enhance the State Department’s cybersecurity efforts. “The Secretary…has also considered interagency equities and concluded that the proposed moves further the broader interests of the United States and federal government,” it says. Politico first reported the planned reshuffling of the cyberspace unit.
There were bipartisan concerns about breaking up that cyber office, according to the summary of a meeting that Government Executive and Nextgov/FCW previously reported. The bureau’s work focused on digital freedom will be incorporated into the office of the Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs.
State’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research, an intelligence community office that protects the agency’s top secret networks and produces insights to inform diplomatic decisions, was shifted under a new Bureau of Emerging Threats, as reported earlier. That emerging threats office will focus on areas like cybersecurity and proliferating concerns about artificial intelligence.
How are these changes affecting you? Share your experience with us:
Eric Katz: ekatz@govexec.com, Signal: erickatz.28
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