Embassies to test worldwide net

A State Department program would establish systems that would enable all agencies worldwide to exchange email and other information

The 1998 "Diplomacy for the 21st Century" report

The State Department is looking to its embassies in Mexico City and New

Delhi, India, as test sites for a program aimed at putting U.S. diplomatic

missions worldwide in touch with one another and with all other federal

agencies that have an overseas presence.

The proposal is the recommendation of the department's Overseas Presence

Advisory Panel, which was established more than a year ago following terrorist

attacks on U.S. embassies in Africa.

Under the plan, the department would establish an interagency, interoperable

infrastructure that would enable all agencies worldwide to exchange e-mail

and other information, according to a senior State Department official.

Fernando Burbano, chief information officer at State, detailed the plan

before the House International Relations Committee June 22.

Burbano told the committee that the leadership role the country has in international

affairs "demands that we develop an integrated, responsive and secure IT

capability, including systems and tools that enable us to access, manipulate

and share up-to-date information and to collaborate with others in addressing

foreign policy issues."

A November 1999 panel report on overseas locations concluded that U.S. embassies

and missions are equipped with "antiquated, grossly inefficient, and incompatible

information technology systems."

Few employees have Internet access, the panel found, nor is there an Internet

or e-mail-based network to link agencies and posts. Many department employees

find the fastest way to communicate with colleagues elsewhere overseas or

in Washington, D.C., is to use their home computers and personal Internet

accounts, the report stated.

Burbano told the House committee that State was developing plans to beef

up communications between and among its overseas locations even before the

panel's report was released in November 1999.

Many of the panel's recommendations are included in a 1998 State Department

report, "Diplomacy for the 21st Century," Burbano said.

That report detailed five goals to be achieved by 2005.

* A secure global network and infrastructure.

* Ready access to internal affairs applications and information.

* Integrated messaging.

* Leveraging IT to streamline operations.

* Sustaining a trained productive work force.

Under the proposal that Burbano pitched to the House committee, the pilot

programs would be up and running by the end of next year.

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