Welcome to our unaccompanied tours (UT) blog, Foggy Bottom Rambles! We can share information, programs, and resources quickly with you and since blogs are a two way street, we (and the other readers) can hear from you. What's in a name you say? This blog reflects how we (back here in DC, Foggy Bottom area) provide information (rambles) to you. Find websites and information, upcoming webinars, programs and events. FLO does not endorse organizations or companies linked-to in this blog, the views they express, or the products/services they offer. Let us know what you think: contribute to the blog or email us at FLOAskUT@state.gov.
Showing posts with label UT in the News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UT in the News. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 3, 2011


Why I Serve 
by Courtney Beale
Courtney Beale serves as Acting Spokesperson at the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad, Pakistan.  The following is from the Department's DipNote blog:

The insistent ringing penetrated my slumber. I woke up and looked at the clock. It was only 1:00 am, so it couldn't be the alarm. Then I realized it was the press phone, the one that all the journalists knew to call when they had questions for the U.S. Embassy. What now? My contact's questions shook me wide awake. An American official, he said, had been taken into custody at the airport trying to leave the country with sensitive military equipment. "Is it true?" he asked.


In a highly charged press environment leery of America and Americans, the last thing we needed was another inaccurate story to fuel further suspicions. I spent the next hour on the phone with the embassy's security office piecing together what had really happened, which was -- as usual -- much less newsworthy than the rumors. Just as the papers went to press, I was able to call back the journalist, tell him he had his facts wrong, and stop the non-incident from becoming front page news that morning.


In press work, especially in Pakistan, we often count our victories in what we prevent rather than what we create. 


I volunteered for a tour in Islamabad wanting to serve my country. The same motivations prompted my father to join the Navy 45 years ago. He flew F-4 Phantoms off aircraft carriers during the Vietnam War, putting his life on the line to defend our country. He also developed a lifelong passion for flying. I had always deeply respected him for having seen history in the making, and for helping make it himself. I grew up inspired by his service to America. Seeking an unaccompanied assignment and spending a year away from my husband was my own way of giving back to our nation.


While I can never compare squashing rumors during middle-of-the-night phone calls to flying a jet over a war zone, I feel honored to work in the press section at the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad. I was drawn to press work in this volatile region, because it is the great nexus of policy, public diplomacy, and national security. Pakistan has arguably the most intense and freewheeling media environment in the world, and conspiracy theories and misinformation about the United States run rampant. Having served in India and speaking Urdu, I felt called to use my skills and experience to tell America's story sensitively but honestly, and help create an environment of opinion conducive to U.S. policy goals.


From the massive U.S. relief effort after last summer's historic floods to the death of Osama bin Laden this spring, there has not been a dull moment since I arrived. I have certainly collected a few tales to tell my own children one day. But more than that, my service has also helped me discover new passions of my own -- the music, the people, the food, and the history of South Asia -- that I'll carry with me wherever I go in life.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Four Afghan women make history...

... as the first female pilots from their country.  "We should show the world that the women of Afghanistan are strong," said Lt. Sourya.

The women are also the first to attend the Defense Language Institute's general English course, where they will not only perfect their English skills, but also learn about U.S. history and culture.  "What a fantastic opportunity for us and the wing to build coalition and bilateral partnerships across the world," said Col. Eric Axelbank, the 37th Training Wing commander. The Institute represents 85 countries with over 1,100 students. 

Check out the full story and see pictures here.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Stay connected...

Are you a fan of Facebook? Did you know the following U.S. Embassies have Facebook pages? They all include lots of photos and updates about current events and news. It is a great way to feel more connected and also a fun way to share information with the kids.


U.S. Embassy Pakistan http://www.facebook.com/pakistan.usembassy

U.S. Embassy Baghdad http://www.facebook.com/embassybaghdad

U.S. Embassy Kabul http://www.facebook.com/kabulusembassy

Friday, February 18, 2011

I saw this article on the front page of the New York Times yesterday, but didn't get a chance to read it and managed to find it online.  The article discusses the good and the bad of instant communication like Skype and text messaging when separated from loved ones---focusing on how soldiers in Afghanistan are staying in touch with home.

Monday, January 24, 2011

Take a look at the essay Diplomacy in Tough Places.  The essay is written by a Foreign Service Officer currently serving in Iraq, who is also the author of an insightful blog about life in Baghdad, Wing Tips on The Ground.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

In the area? Check out this event...


Celebrate the Rich Artistry of Afghanistan
While Supporting Afghan Literacy
Benefit Dinner and Silent Auction
Saturday, January 29 – 6:00 pm
Cedar Lane Unitarian Universalist Church
9601 Cedar Lane, Bethesda, MD 20814
Tickets, $50 per person
Featuring:
• Authentic Afghan dinner
• Keynote speaker Dr. Susan Andersen, who will report on her trip to
Afghanistan and her work with women parliamentarians
• Kabultec founder Nasrine Gross will report briefly on her 2010 activities in
Afghanistan
• Raffle of unique Afghan textile, glassware, and beaded bag (tickets, $10)
Silent Auction to include
• Afghan cooking class with Nasrine
• Hand-crafted items from large and small textiles to jewelry, pottery, woodcarving, and metal work—all from Afghan bazaars and women’s groups

Proceeds will support couples literacy classes in Afghanistan through Kabultec.
Nasrine has been working on Afghan women's rights since 1996.

Reservations
Deadline is Thursday, January 27, 2011, but tickets may sell out sooner
Mail checks made out to "Kabultec" (a 501(c)3 organization) to:
Eleanor DePaola
7941 Inverness Ridge Rd.
Potomac, MD 20854-4010
Directions: http://www.cedarlane.org/directions or call (301) 493-8300


Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Don't forget!

In the D.C. area?  Don't forget our first coffee club gathering today!  Please join us!  Email FLOaskUT@state.gov or give us a call at 202-627-1076 for more details.

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

U.S. medics in Afghanistan treat an Afghan six-month baby boy with a rare heart condition. Check out this article--- what a great story.

Friday, September 24, 2010

Happy Friday UT bloggers! This article discusses the various issues families struggle with during the separation and reintegration of loved one before and after an unaccompanied tour. Take a moment to read it even if you are no longer experiencing an unaccompanied tour- we could all learn something from it!

Let us know what you think of the article:

Home Again: Military Spouses and Reintegration

Have a nice weekend!

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Fear is not the Enemy it is a Reason for us to be Hopeful in Afghanistan

Posted by Tom Niblock September 9,

From Afghan Strategic Communication

Afghanistan is a mess, everyone will tell you that, and that is what we receive each day from the media, but if we leave it at that, we are missing some extremely important points. As a close observer of the Afghan scene for the past three years here in Kabul I see so much that is not a part of the common narrative delivered by the media. There are two Afghanistans. In one, the Taliban throw acid into the faces of school girls, mullahs are murdered for suggesting moderation, and villagers receive death threats at night for growing wheat instead of poppy. The prevailing elements in this narrative are public fear, intimidation and resignation. The Taliban are masters of the message. They want Afghans to fear them. They threaten, and follow up on their threats, and then multiply small examples into generalized impressions. It's an effective approach if your numbers are small and when the public is vulnerable and unsure which way to turn for support.

There is, however, a completely different Afghan narrative coexisting alongside the gloomy one outlined above. In the Afghanistan I see every day it is the Taliban who ought to be living in fear. The Taliban fear Afghan government legitimacy. This is why they attack it when they can (and, of course, why rampant government corruption and maladministration is music to Mullah Omar's ears). The Taliban fear every Afghan girl who attends classes, and millions now do. They fear an Afghan Army that is viewed with increasing pride by the vast majority of citizens. The Taliban fear farmers who decide to switch from poppy. They fear candidates campaigning, even within a democratic process that is young and quite imperfect. Hundreds of Afghans have stepped up to run for Parliament and thousands more are campaigning on their behalf. The Taliban fear honest administrators -- and we must not fall prey to the lie that all Afghan officials are corrupt. Many have made large sacrifices to serve under difficult conditions. The Taliban fear moderation of all types. It is not surprising that they kill and threaten mullahs who challenge their false monopoly of religion -- and yet many still do speak out. Teachers are threatened every day, but thousands continue to teach. No group has paid a higher price than the Afghan police, who lost about a thousand of their number to violence last year, yet tens of thousands of young Afghans still answer the call to service.

The Taliban recently renewed their objections to music, fearful of cultural pollution. Good luck. Gone are the days when it is possible to imagine an Afghanistan without music, dance, and, most importantly, TV, which is now the staple entertainment and news source for perhaps 45 percent of the total population. The Taliban fear "normalcy" and many parts of Afghanistan are increasingly normal by local definitions. When I arrived here Kabul was garrisoned by foreign forces who patrolled the streets day and night. Those duties are now performed by Afghans. Foreign forces have relocated elsewhere and the city is more peaceful now that it was even a year ago. The Taliban fear this and seek to undermine the legitimacy of the security forces, yet most of their increasingly infrequent attacks in the city have been failures and they are relegated to lobbing an occasional rocket or killing civilians in indiscriminate bombings.

By any measure Afghanistan remains a desperately poor and badly administered country. Security has deteriorated in many areas which were more secure two years ago. But the underlying narrative is not what the Taliban would have us believe. They are not in control, not by a long shot. There are powerful dynamics which ought to be keeping the Quetta Shura awake at night. As we help improve security and governance systems citizens will feel more secure to do the things they already want to do, and which the Taliban fear so much. Regular Afghans are turning in local Taliban commanders and foreign fighters in surprising numbers and the middle ranks of the in-country leadership are being systematically degraded. Our support for education and health bolsters the courage of teachers and medical workers who work each day despite the threats. The Taliban can and do kill dozens of teachers each year... they can't kill tens of thousands, and amazingly brave Afghans know this. Our continuous pressure on the leadership to confront corruption has the potential to drain energy from the insurgency. The Taliban threatened to disrupt and prevent the last three Afghan elections. They could not, and they will not do so when Afghans vote later this month. Yes, they can conduct a hundred attacks on a given day, and perhaps double or triple that on a single day... but to disrupt 5,000 polling stations is beyond their ability. To try, and to fail, only highlights their weakness, not their strength. Taliban leaders know this, so expect some increase in trouble, but much more rhetoric and smoke. Our support for the independent media ensures that all Afghans now have better access to multiple channels of accurate information with which to counter the Taliban's lies and misinformation. Precisely when we will arrive at the tipping point in the insurgency is not clear, but it will happen, probably within the next year. We have a better fix on how we will get there. It is the Afghan people who will defeat the Taliban, with our help, because, fundamentally, the Taliban's extreme messages aren't welcomed by the vast majority of citizens. Be fearful Taliban, your Afghan brothers and sisters have your number. And, despite what you would have all believe, won't you be surprised when you discover that we foreign friends and partners of Afghanistan are not going anyplace anytime soon.


Comments?




Friday, September 3, 2010

Yes or no .... it is important to be heard!

    

                                          Unaccompanied Tour Survey
The Family Liaison Office (FLO) is conducting a survey of employees and family members who have served, are currently serving, or are about to serve an unaccompanied tour. FLO requests all American employees and their adult family members - including spouses, Members of Household, partners/fiancées, adult children, parents, and siblings - who have been, are now, or soon will be experiencing an Unaccompanied Tour (UT) to participate in this important survey. The survey can be accessed by going to  https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/UTSURVEY2010/ . FLO estimates it will take 10-20 minutes to complete the survey. .

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Ambassador Hill on NPR

Five months after Iraqis voted in a general election, Iraq is having trouble forming a new government even as U.S. troops draw down, but the outgoing U.S. ambassador says the country is making progress.

"I think any country where the election result is 4/100th of a percentage point difference between the winner and the second-place coalition is going to have some pushing and shoving, and that's what going on," Christopher Hill told NPR's Steve Inskeep. "So the question is: Are they getting anywhere? And, I must say, in the last couple of weeks, the pace has really quickened. And there's a feeling that things may be heading in the right direction."
Read the entire article:
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=129119290


Christopher R. Hill arrived in Baghdad on April 24, 2009, to begin serving as America’s Ambassador to Iraq. Immediately prior to this assignment, Ambassador Hill was Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, in which capacity he also was the lead U.S. negotiator at the Six-Party Talks on the North Korea nuclear issue.

Ambassador Hill’s lifelong career as a public servant began in 1974, when he served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Cameroon. He joined the U.S. Foreign Service in 1977.

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Ambassador Holbrooke speaks on Afghanistan



Richard Holbrooke
Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan
Treaty Room

Washington, DC

August 9, 2010

AMBASSADOR HOLBROOKE: Thank you, Madam Secretary. I’d be happy to take any specific questions you want.


QUESTION: How do you change the mindset of these people? I mean, there’s a lot of talk about trying to reintegrate and reconcile Taliban into society to have a one united Afghanistan with everybody working towards the future of the country. How do you change the mindset that this type of work is what the country needs and kind of build more bridges among these type of people that maybe don’t have opportunity, don’t see this way of life as the way that Afghanistan should be going?

To read the entire discussion please click below:
http://www.state.gov/s/special_rep_afghanistan_pakistan/2010/145824.htm

Friday, March 12, 2010

March is Women's History Month

Last night, I tried to attend a talk/panel discussion on women in journalism for Women's History Month at the National Archives, but was turned away due to a packed auditorium. If you're in the DC area, be sure to check out their calendar for upcoming events.

Do you know about Google Alerts?  I just learned about them this week in my social media class and signed up for "social media" and "military families".  I tried "unaccompanied tours", but received a ton of unrelated links and sites, thinking that that term is pretty specific since it pertains to the State Department's term for assignments to places that State does not allow families to accompany.  One Alert for "military families' directed me here to a blog post that discusses a new film documentary about two brothers fighting the war in Iraq, and also on a larger scale, how the war impacts military families.  The blog is Politics Daily and I thought I'd search blog to see what other posts were of interest.  Then I cam across an inspiring article called "Suraya Pakzad and the Long, Tough Fight for Afghan Women" and wanted to share this with you.  The article talks about Suraya's (photo at right from America.gov)  personal story and how she and the organization she helped start (Voice of Women Organization - VWO) are empowering Afghan women through education..

Monday, March 8, 2010

Oscar buzz

"The Hurt Locker" won six Oscars - including best picture and best director - at the Academy Awards last night.  I actually saw the movie in-flight on my way over the Atlantic heading to Germany for regional Community Liaison Office (CLO) Coordinator training in Garmisch.  Let us know what you think about the movie (or the Oscars) by commenting below.

Iraq Elections

Read about the Iraq National Elections 2010 on Embassy Baghdad's internet site, specifically FAQsremarks by Secretary Clinton, and remarks by President Obama.  Also, I just saw that Embassy Baghdad has started an official Facebook page.  There is even an election section about observations from the field and also make sure to look through the photos, postings, and more.

Friday, March 5, 2010

US Embassy Baghdad - 2010 PRT Highlights



The PRTs (Privincial Reconstruction Teams - check out the fact sheet) are doing some pretty important and cool things in Iraq. Don't worry - this information comes from the US Embassy's official internet page to highlight the accomplishments and programs occuring in PRTs.  Some highlights are: cultural arts festival, mud house performance, sewing class for women, delivery of medical supplies, adult literacy and life skills programs, Skype exchanges between US and Iraqi universities, and more.  That's just in February! 

We should all be proud of our diplomats working side by side with the military and Iraqis.  And, we should be proud of their families. I always say that the more that those of us who aren't over there can read/see what important work we're doing, the more we all feel connected. We all need to support each other and feel supported.  Looks like my posting got a bit off track...but that's why I'm posting this information about PRTs!

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Friday, December 18, 2009

Civilian Surge - CNN's Indiana training clip

CNN reports on the civilian surge in Afghanistan as Jill Dougherty reports from the Muscatatuck Urban Training Center in Butlerville, Indiana.