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Feature of the Month
Archive
November 2006

State Partnership Program

The State Partnership Program is a cooperation program between the U.S. armed forces and countries around the world. Serbia signed an SPP with the State of Ohio in September 2006.

European State Partnerships

Benefits:

• Supports modernization and professionalization of Serbia's armed forces
• Provide immediate opportunity to increase Serbia's ties with Ohio, including economic, cultural, and commercial ties
• Allows for Sister City Partnerships
• Promotes access to state NGOs, charities, and commercial and business organizations
• Fosters information exchange on a wide variety of issues from public heath to wildlife management
• Promotes training for and conduct of Emergency Response Activities

Other SPPs:

The U.S. has active SPPs with 23 countries in Europe and Africa, including:

• Hungary-Ohio (1993)
• Bulgaria-Tennessee (1993)
• Romania-Alabama (1994)
• Macedonia-Vermont (1995)
• Albania-New York/New Jersey (2002)
• BiH-Maryland (2003)

Examples of joint programs under these SPPs:

• Morocco/Utah 2004: National Guard KC-135 Tanker/Transport aircraft flew disaster relief missions in response to a devastating earthquake in Morocco
• Ukraine/California 2004: National Guard assisted Ukraine in transfer of border control from Military Border Guards to civilian law enforcement.
• Moldova/North Carolina: Over 10,000 Moldovan children were vaccinated for Hepatitis in the last three years.


May 8, 2007
National Guard

Information Paper
National Guard State Partnership Program

The National Guard provides unique capacity building capabilities to Combatant Commanders and U.S. Ambassadors via 56 comprehensive partnerships between U.S. states and partner nations. The State Partnership Program directly supports the broad national interests and security cooperation goals of the United States by engaging partner nations via military, socio-political, and economic conduits at the local, state, and national levels. The program’s public diplomacy effectiveness lies in its ability to leverage the full breadth and depth of U.S. defense and interagency capabilities from within the state-country relationship.

The State Partnership Program evolved from a 1993 European Command decision to set up the Joint Contact Team Program (JCTP) in the Baltics with reserve component Soldiers and Airmen. At the time, it was believed reserve component personnel would present a less provocative posture to the new Russian Federation. A subsequent National Guard Bureau proposal to pair state National Guards with the countries of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania formally initiated the program. Since then, the program has grown far beyond JCTP and is now a key US security cooperation tool, facilitating mutual cooperation across all aspects of international civil-military affairs.

The goals of the program reflect an evolving international affairs mission for the National Guard emphasizing its unique state-federal and civil-military characteristics to interact with both the active and reserve forces of foreign nations, interagency partners, and international non-governmental organizations. The value of the SPP lies in its ability to concentrate a small component of the U.S. defense structure—a state’s National Guard—on a single country or region in support of U.S. Government policies. This concentrated focus supports the development of long term personal relationships and interagency coordination mechanisms that would not otherwise exist. The optimum SPP partnership is one in which: the partner nation professes genuine interest in partnership; U.S. national and theater security cooperation objectives are satisfied; the force protection risk is acceptable; a minimum of additional resources is required to execute engagement; and National Guard core competencies, particularly homeland defense and support to civil authority are fully incorporated.

States and their partners participate in a broad range of strategic security cooperation activities to include homeland defense/security, disaster response/mitigation, consequence/crisis management, interagency cooperation, border/port/aviation security, combat medical, fellowship-style internships, and bilateral familiarization events that lead to training and exercise opportunities. All activities are coordinated through the Combatant Commanders, U.S. Ambassadors’ country teams, and other agencies as appropriate to ensure National Guard cooperation is tailored to meet U.S. and international partners’ objectives.

U.S. EUROPEAN COMMAND (USEUCOM) – 26 Partnerships

Alabama – Romania

Kansas – Armenia

New York – South Africa

Pennsylvania – Lithuania

California – Ukraine

Maine – Montenegro

North Carolina – Moldova

Tennessee – Bulgaria

California – Nigeria

Maryland – Estonia

North Dakota – Ghana               

Texas & Nebraska – Czech Republic

Colorado – Slovenia

Maryland – Bosnia

Ohio – Hungary

Utah-Morocco

Georgia – Republic of Georgia

Michigan – Latvia

Ohio – Serbia

Vermont – Macedonia

Illinois – Poland

Minnesota – Croatia

Oklahoma - Azerbaijan

Wyoming – Tunisia

Indiana – Slovakia

New Jersey – Albania

 

 

U.S. CENTRAL COMMAND (USCENTCOM) – 6 Partnerships


Arizona – Kazakhstan

Louisiana – Uzbekistan

Nevada – Turkmenistan

Virginia – Tajikistan

Colorado – Jordan

Montana – Kyrgyzstan

 

 

U.S. SOUTHERN COMMAND (USSOUTHCOM) – 20 Partnerships


Arkansas – Guatemala              

Florida – Venezuela

Missouri – Panama  

Rhode Island – Bahamas

Connecticut – Uruguay

Kentucky – Ecuador

New Hampshire – El Salvador

South Dakota – Suriname

Delaware – Trinidad & Tobago

Louisiana – Belize

New Mexico – Costa Rica

Washington DC – Jamaica

Florida – Guyana

Massachusetts – Paraguay

Puerto Rico – Dominican Rep

West Virginia – Peru

Florida – RSS

Mississippi – Bolivia

Puerto Rico – Honduras

Wisconsin – Nicaragua

U.S. PACIFIC COMMAND (USPACOM) – 4 Partnerships


Alaska – Mongolia

Hawaii & Guam – Philippines

Hawaii – Indonesia

Washington – Thailand

National Guard Bureau J-5 International Affairs Division (NGB J-5 IA), 703-607-2816, www.ngb.army.mil/ia/, Revised 1 Jan 2007

 

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