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ESSENTIAL FUNCTIONS


Donor nation ambassadors, CSTC-A personnel and international partners joined Afghan leaders, including President Ashraf Ghani, at the Presidential Palace in Kabul on Jan. 24, to review prog- ress on transparency, accountability and affordability initiatives within the Afghan security institu- tions at the sixth meeting of the Oversight and Coordination Body. Encouraging transparency and the will to fight corruption is part of the second essential function of the Resolute Support Mission. (U.S. military photo by LT Charity A. Edgar, CSTC-A Public Affairs)


contributions are expected to increase. What makes this so important is the government of Afghanistan’s own commit- ment to do so during the NATO Chicago Summit in 2012. Donor nations came together to discuss the security situation in Afghanistan, and many countries pledged their continued sup- port for the mission.


Donor nations will convene again this summer at the NATO Warsaw Summit to assess progress and determine their level of financial support in the years to come. Many challenges remain, and the hard work continues. Seeds are being planted all over Afghanistan, and it will be up to the people and the country’s new unity government to demonstrate to the rest of the world that Afghanistan can be counted on as an equal partner to


promote and ensure regional stability, now and well into the future.


For more information, please contact the author at sabine.peters@ us.af.mil.


MAJ SABINE PETERS, Ph.D is deputy chief, Program and Analy- sis Division, CSTC-A CJ-8, Kabul, Afghanistan. She holds a Ph.D. in instructional systems from Florida State University, an M.S. in management of technology from Murray State University and a B.S. in business operations from DeVry University. She is Level II certified in financial management and a member of the Association for Educational Communications and Technology.


ASC.ARMY.MIL 37


RESOLUTE SUPPORT


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