Thursday, October 02, 2008

Presidential Fellows Program Develops Future DoD Leaders

By Gerry J. Gilmore
American Forces Press Service

Oct. 2, 2008 - Motivated individuals who want a fast track to executive careers within the Defense Department or at other federal agencies might investigate the Presidential Fellows Management Program. The PFM program's purpose "is to attract to the federal service outstanding men and women from a variety of academic disciplines and career paths who have a clear interest in, and commitment to, excellence in the
leadership and management of public policies and programs," President Bush said in a statement on the Office of Personnel Management's Web site explaining the program.

The program was created by Executive Order in 1977, when it was known as the Presidential Management Internship program. The program's name was changed a few years ago.

The Defense Department is among several federal agencies that participate in the PFM program, said Washington Headquarters Services manager Ken Rauch, director of the PFP program for DoD. Successful applicants, he said, serve on paid, two-year assignments.

Officials received 148 applicants for the seven Defense Department fellowship positions that were available this year, Rauch said. The department, he said, maintains 14 total positions as part of the program.

After completing the program, most participants join the federal
civil service in functional areas that reflect their expertise, Rauch said.

Some DoD participants, like Ylber Bajraktari and Natalie Howley, volunteer for overseas duty in Iraq or Afghanistan as part of their two years of service.

Bajraktari, 30, obtained his graduate degree at Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. A member of the PFM program's class of 2006, he served in Baghdad from February 2007 to February 2008 on the staff of then-Multinational Force Iraq commander
Army Gen. David H. Petraeus.

"I cannot say enough good things about the program," said the Kosovo-born Bajraktari, who became a U.S. citizen in 2004. The program, he said, offers challenging assignments, as well as plentiful training opportunities.

Bajraktari was a member of a 20-person joint strategic assessment team during his duty tour in Baghdad. The team, he said, studied how military, economic, political and diplomatic assets could be best employed to effect stability in and around Baghdad during the surge.

Surge-fortified U.S. and Iraqi security operations helped to reduce insurgent-committed violence in Baghdad and were a key component that contributed to the surge's success, Bajraktari said. Iraq today "is in a better place" than it was prior to the surge, Bajraktari said. However, he added, the situation in Iraq is still fragile.

Bajraktari earned the Defense Superior Civilian Service Award for his service in Iraq. He plans to join the Middle East section of the Office of the Secretary of Defense's policy shop to put his training and experience to good use.

"I wanted to do public service, and I wanted to work for the government," Bajraktari said in explaining why he applied for the PFM program. And, international affairs "never gets boring," he said.

Howley, 27, began the Pentagon's PFM program a year after Bajraktari. Like Bajrakatari, she also obtained her graduate degree at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. Now about halfway through the program, Howley said she's still deciding where she'd like to work in the Defense Department.

Howley also performed overseas service, having served with the U.S. Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan, from February to May of this year. She received the Global War on Terrorism Medal for her service there. While in Kabul, she worked with Afghan federal officials on Afghan local governance, elections and other issues.

"You do try to connect with the people and make their lives better," Howley, a Frankfort, Ky., native, said of her tour in Afghanistan. Her work in Kabul, she said, was conducted in a balanced way, with the view that Afghanistan is a sovereign nation with its own policies and priorities.

"I really enjoyed it, and would go back," Howley said of her assignment in Afghanistan.

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