UPDATED ON:
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2007
4:31 MECCA TIME, 1:31 GMT
 
NEWS MIDDLE EAST
US to force diplomats to go to Iraq
The diplomats would have to work
in the green zone [AFP]
The US state department has said it will require its diplomats to staff its embassy in Iraq due to a lack of volunteers.

Forty to 50 posts will be open next year in the embassy, located in Baghdad's fortified green zone.

Until now postings have been staffed on a voluntary basis and have often been hard to fill.
Up to 300 US diplomats will be notified that they are "prime candidates" for one-year terms in Iraq.
 
Only those with compelling reasons, such as medical problems or extreme personal hardships, will be exempt from disciplinary action if they refuse.

Difficult posting

Harry Thomas, state department human resources director, said: "We have all taken an oath to serve our country and so if someone decides they do not want to go, then we would then consider appropriate actions. We have many options, including dismissal from the foreign service."

On Thursday, Thomas returned from a visit to Iraq where he was assessing staffing needs for next year.

Privately, many US diplomats say they fear being posted to Iraq because of the risks of working in a war zone.

In addition, it is an "unaccompanied" posting, meaning children and a spouse cannot join the diplomat because of the dangers involved.

Thomas said the state department had made "directed" assignments before, such as in 1969 when an entire junior foreign officer class was sent to Vietnam and again in the 1970s and 1980s for some difficult African postings.

"This is not unique. Foreign service officers have always volunteered for their country," he said.

Disneyland

There are currently about 200 US diplomats in Iraq who serve on a one-year basis and the staffing would need to rise to about 250 for next summer, he said.

Thomas said about 1,200 state department employees have already served in Iraq since the US invasion in March 2003.

He said there was an attractive financial package for those serving in Iraq as well as five recreational breaks during the posting.

He did not believe the move would discourage people from joining the foreign service.

"After Google and Disney, we are the most popular place for people to work," Thomas said, referring to a recent survey that ranked the state department amongst the top five organisations to work for.

Related:
Iraq clamps down on security firms  
(24 Oct 2007)
US official quits over Iraq report  
(25 Oct 2007)
US air raid kills Iraqi civilians  
(23 Oct 2007)
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