Lessons in Leadership

Terrorists' bombs tested an ambassador's fortitude, resolve and experience.

Ambassador Prudence Bushnell's slight frame and soft-spoken manner do not readily signal the qualities of fortitude and resolve that lie beneath.

But a leader she is, without a doubt, as was quickly clear to the 1,000 people who listened to her talk at the Excellence in Government Conference in Washington in late July. Bushnell was ambassador to Kenya on Aug. 7, 1998, the date the American embassy in Nairobi was demolished by a terrorist bomb. One-quarter of the embassy staff was killed and another quarter had to be dug out and medically evacuated. In all, 213 people died. One hundred buildings were partly or completely destroyed and 250 businesses in the environs were lost.

It fell to Bushnell to pick up the pieces. She had too many funerals to attend, too many people to comfort, too much anger to quell among Kenyans who were ruing the decision to permit the embassy to be located in downtown Nairobi. Offices and computers were unusable, and yet she had to reconstitute the embassy as quickly as possible.

From this dire experience, as difficult for the U.S. Foreign Service as the 9/11 attacks were for the rest of us, Bushnell drew three leadership lessons.

First, she said, is the importance of a clear mission all can understand-in this case caring for those in need and restoring American embassy services. Second is the importance of putting the right team in place in key jobs, as she had worked to do long before the attack. Third, she said, it's essential to have a "practiced leader," someone who has had deep enough experience to know how to handle crisis and who is not afraid to delegate, or share power. Having risen through the ranks of government from her start as a secretary, Bushnell had developed these skills over time.

Federal civilian workers who serve abroad are called upon for special fortitude, vulnerable as they are to America's enemies, while not nearly as well protected as U.S. military forces overseas. But many federal workers, at home and abroad, are now in positions of such importance to the nation's security that new levels of initiative and leadership are required.

One challenge is controlling the huge contractor work forces that do so much for government in these times. The problem has been growing, as Government Executive's annual score card on federal contracting shows: Procurement outlays are up 18 percent in fiscal 2003 from the previous year. Prime contracts totaled some $290 billion in 2003, not counting tens of billions more in "black" spending by intelligence agencies. This issue of the magazine includes tables ranking the top contractors at major agencies and in large categories of spending.

At this moment, we are in between the Democratic and Republican national conventions. With national security top of mind, political leaders are talking about life and liberty, two of the "inalienable rights" mentioned by our Declaration of Independence.

Mentioned less often in speeches, but no less important in a subliminal sense, is the third right-the pursuit of happiness. Should federal programs be evaluated according to a happiness index? Some think so, as Denise Kersten reports.

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