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- <text id=93TT2328>
- <title>
- Jan. 18, 1993: Under Fire
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jan. 18, 1993 Fighting Back: Spouse Abuse
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- UNITED NATIONS, Page 32
- Under Fire
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A year into office, Secretary-General Boutros-Ghali finds himself
- and the U.N. tested by the new world disorder
- </p>
- <p>By MICHAEL S. SERRILL - With reporting by Bonnie Angelo/New York
- and William Mader/London, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> The post of U.N. Secretary General may well be one of the
- world's most thankless jobs. Whoever holds it is somehow
- expected to do the impossible: calm crises around the world,
- search for compromise among a welter of contending national
- agendas, enforce international agreements--and do it all with
- seemingly never sufficient resources.
- </p>
- <p> Despite those challenges, when Javier Perez de Cuellar
- prepared to leave the office in late 1991, Boutros
- Boutros-Ghali, Egypt's Deputy Prime Minister and one of the
- world's better-known diplomats, lobbied hard to be his
- successor. Boutros-Ghali, now 70, had ambitious ideas--foremost among them the desire to reshape the cumbersome,
- inefficient organization and deal aggressively with the problems
- of a world reinventing itself after the cold war. The U.N.
- seemed to be the beacon for a new planetary order; he was
- confident he could lead it in that direction.
- </p>
- <p> A year after taking office, Boutros-Ghali will not admit
- to disappointment, but it is evident that his ambitions to help
- shape the architecture of a new world order have run into
- trouble. Under his stewardship, the U.N. has dramatically
- expanded its peacekeeping mandate--only to find itself
- stymied, even rejected, on several of its recent initiatives.
- Though the Secretary-General acts at the behest of the Security
- Council, he is being saddled with much of the blame. Rightly or
- wrongly, the Secretary-General has, in effect, become the
- lightning rod for dissatisfaction with the U.N. and, more
- generally, for widespread frustration at the way in which
- nationalist ambitions and ethnic hostilities are threatening to
- convert the desired new world order into the very opposite.
- Never mind that the U.N., for all its good intentions, lacks the
- military force, political leverage, perhaps even the moral
- suasion to fulfill its expanded mandate.
- </p>
- <p> The pressures on Boutros-Ghali and the U.N. were evident
- in the scene that unfolded on a freezing New Year's Eve in
- Sarajevo, his first stop on a tour of peacekeeping trouble
- spots. When the Secretary-General declared that he was bringing
- desperate and besieged Bosnians a "message of hope" that peace
- would come soon, demonstrators jeered and spat at him. Climbing
- into an armored car, Boutros-Ghali was pursued by one Sarajevan
- who pushed his face against a window and screamed, "Murderer!
- Murderer!"
- </p>
- <p> The reception was no friendlier at his next stop,
- Mogadishu. The Secretary-General was forced to flee to a U.S.
- Marine compound after U.N. headquarters was surrounded by a
- raucous mob that hurled rocks and garbage. When Boutros-Ghali
- traveled on to Addis Ababa for the opening of peace talks among
- Somali faction leaders, Ethiopian demonstrators gathered to
- protest alleged U.N. support for the secession of the province
- of Eritrea.
- </p>
- <p> Among the most difficult obstacles ahead on the course for
- Boutros-Ghali:
- </p>
- <p>-- THE BALKANS. In Geneva the latest U.N.-sponsored effort
- to find a diplomatic solution to the war in Bosnia is stalled,
- and is likely to remain so in the wake of last week's brutal
- assassination of a Bosnian Deputy Prime Minister by Serb
- gunmen. In the meantime, 23,000 blue-helmeted U.N. troops are
- deployed on a peacekeeping mission in the former Yugoslavia,
- their purpose more uncertain by the day. Some 16,000 are
- assigned to keep Serbs and Croats apart in Croatia; the
- remainder are occupied with ferrying food and supplies to
- Sarajevo and other beleaguered towns in Bosnia. So far, the U.N.
- presence in Bosnia has done nothing to stop the fighting and
- little to relieve the suffering of Bosnians, who are still dying
- from shelling, sniper fire, hunger and intense cold. Says one
- European diplomat familiar with the Yugoslav morass: "What we've
- seen in Yugoslavia isn't peacekeeping, peacemaking or peace
- enforcing. It's been a case of watching as peace deteriorates."
- Despite pessimistic signs, Boutros-Ghali predicts an end to the
- fighting in Bosnia this year.
- </p>
- <p>-- SOMALIA. The decision by the U.S. and some of its allies
- to deploy up to 30,000 troops underlined the failure of U.N.
- peacekeeping efforts in that shattered country. Some 500
- Pakistani troops had been sent to Somalia under U.N. auspices
- beginning in September, three months before U.S. forces arrived
- to support food distribution, but they never got beyond the main
- Mogadishu airport. Since the landing of U.S.-led units, U.N.
- officials have concentrated on trying to work out a peace
- agreement among the dozen competing factions. Clan chieftains
- have now agreed to convene a full-fledged peace conference in
- Addis Ababa in March.
- </p>
- <p>-- CAMBODIA. The U.N. Transitional Authority in Cambodia is
- spending $2 billion to run the country until elections can be
- held in May. So far, the 20,000 U.N. personnel, including
- soldiers, police and civilian administrators, can claim only
- partial success. Registration for the election has proceeded
- apace, but last week Prince Norodom Sihanouk, whose political
- participation is essential to any settlement, washed his hands
- of the U.N. effort, charging that the peacekeepers had failed
- to protect opposition leaders organizing for the elections. At
- the same time, the Khmer Rouge have become increasingly brazen
- in defying the U.N., refusing orders to disarm, even taking U.N.
- personnel hostage in an effort at intimidation.
- </p>
- <p>-- EL SALVADOR. The conservative government of President
- Alfredo Cristiani failed to fulfill a U.N.-brokered agreement
- to remove 100 alleged assassins, torturers and other
- human-rights violators from the upper ranks of the armed forces
- by last Dec. 31; to date, only 23 have been cashiered. Cristiani
- contends that carrying out the agreement, part of a delicate
- balancing act to end a decade of civil war, could endanger
- national stability, and has proposed a delay until 1994. Rebel
- leaders have reacted cautiously; they are relying on the U.N.
- to enforce the strictures of the peace accord. "The
- Secretary-General is responsible for the entire process," says
- former guerrilla leader Ana Guadalupe Martinez. "If this fails,
- the U.N.'s reputation will be left seriously damaged."
- </p>
- <p>-- ANGOLA. The U.N. is blamed for having failed to insist
- on the disarmament of the UNITA rebel movement in Angola before
- U.N.-organized elections were held last September to end that
- country's 16-year civil war. As a result, UNITA head Jonas
- Savimbi reacted to his first-round election loss to President
- Jose Eduardo dos Santos by renewing the fighting.
- </p>
- <p> The Secretary-General and his supporters point out--correctly--that success or failure of U.N. peacekeeping is
- utterly dependent on the good faith of contesting parties, and
- that the organization can only rely on persuasion if the parties
- balk. Moreover, Boutros-Ghali notes, the tide of criticism
- reflects something positive, namely the U.N.'s new
- assertiveness: "The reaction against the United Nations
- everywhere in the world shows that at last the U.N. is being
- active."
- </p>
- <p> Since 1988 the U.N. has launched 14 peacekeeping
- operations--compared with just 13 in the previous 40 years.
- The latest such venture will send 7,500 peacekeepers to
- Mozambique to monitor the cease-fire in a 16-year civil war,
- disarm the fighting factions and organize elections.
- </p>
- <p> "We're just trying to slog our way through, doing it case
- by case," says U.N. spokesman Joseph Sills. "We are being asked
- to do jobs of greater size and scope than ever before, but we
- are short on manpower, short on money and short on troop
- contributions." The lack of resources is mainly the result of
- some member nations' being delinquent in paying their dues. The
- U.S., which pays 30% of the U.N.'s peacekeeping costs, owes $114
- million to that fund and $296 million in regular U.N. dues.
- Russia owes a total of $400 million. Meanwhile, the cost of
- keeping 60,000 U.N. peacekeepers in the field approaches $3
- billion annually.
- </p>
- <p> The blue helmets not only have expanded operations
- geographically but also have broadened their scope. Prior to the
- Balkan crisis, the U.N. had never set out on a humanitarian
- mission to a war-torn country before a cease-fire was declared,
- but it is doing so in Bosnia. In Somalia the Security Council
- took the unprecedented step of approving the current U.S.
- military intervention to provide protection for food
- distribution, even though the U.N. had received no official
- invitation. When the two sides in El Salvador's civil war could
- not agree on a land-distribution plan that was crucial to a
- peace accord, the U.N. proposed its own scheme. In Cambodia the
- U.N. has a broader--and, many say, more trying--charge than
- in any other operation it has mounted.
- </p>
- <p> Boutros-Ghali has done much to encourage the U.N.'s
- activism. Within months of taking office, he issued a much
- praised report, An Agenda for Peace, that outlined his ideas for
- the expansion of U.N. responsibilities in peacemaking,
- peacekeeping and what he called "preventive diplomacy." The
- centerpiece of the plan, which has yet to be discussed by the
- Security Council, is a proposal that various national armies
- create rapid-deployment units that could serve under the U.N.
- flag when needed. The Secretary-General hopes that such forces
- could be dispatched within days after a crisis erupts, rather
- than the several months it now takes to assemble and equip
- peacekeeping units. "It would be a complete change," he says.
- "If I could say I will send troops in the next three days, this
- would have an impact completely different from saying I will
- have troops in the next three months."
- </p>
- <p> He argues his ideas with zest and vigor--in contrast to
- the cautious, softspoken approach of Perez de Cuellar. Critics
- contend that Boutros-Ghali's sharp mind crosses the line into
- impatience and rudeness toward diplomats, who generally do not
- like to act hastily.
- </p>
- <p> His acid tongue has landed him in controversy several
- times. Last July at the U.N. he accused Europe and the U.S. of
- being more concerned with "the rich man's war" in Bosnia than
- with the fate of the starving in Somalia. He picked a fight
- with both Lord Carrington, then the European Community's chief
- negotiator in the Balkan crisis, and Sir David Hannay, Britain's
- U.N. ambassador, over the same issue, commenting that it was
- "maybe because I am a wog" that he had been criticized in the
- British press.
- </p>
- <p> The latest slip of the lip occurred during his Sarajevo
- visit. Angered by a local journalist's furious denunciation of
- the U.N., Boutros-Ghali snapped back, "I understand your
- frustration. But you have a situation that is better than 10
- other places in the world. I can give you a list."
- </p>
- <p> At headquarters in New York City, the Secretary-General's
- administrative style has drawn an unusual amount of fire. Early
- on, he upset several ambassadors at the U.N. by making it clear
- that he preferred to deal directly with the leaders of their
- governments; he still allots relatively little time in his
- schedule for consultations with envoys. Some diplomats are
- equally dismayed by the way he equates the status of his office
- with that of the Security Council and the General Assembly.
- Before his recent tiff with the Security Council, he attended
- meetings only selectively, calling them a time-consuming waste.
- "His imperiousness is intolerable," says a senior French
- diplomat. "His job has gone to his head."
- </p>
- <p> Born into a wealthy Coptic Christian family, Boutros-Ghali
- grew up speaking three languages--Arabic, French and English.
- He earned a Ph.D. in international law from the Sorbonne, then
- went on to a career as a professor of law at Cairo University
- and as a writer. He was tapped by President Anwar Sadat as a
- senior policy adviser and was named acting Foreign Minister when
- two foreign ministers resigned in protest over Sadat's historic
- visit to Jerusalem in 1977. Boutros-Ghali played a prominent
- role in the negotiations that led to the 1979 Camp David accord
- on the Middle East.
- </p>
- <p> When he decided to run for the Secretary-General's job,
- those qualifications clearly helped. He was also helped by being
- African, though black Africans preferred their own candidate.
- Working against him was his age, an issue he defused by
- declaring that he would serve only a single five-year term.
- Washington was initially unenthusiastic about Boutros-Ghali but
- warmed to him when he quickly instituted bureaucratic reforms,
- cutting 14 high-level jobs and putting other top officials on
- one-year contracts. Today U.S. officials have renewed their
- skepticism. "The U.S. finds him too independent-minded," said
- one U.N. observer. "He doesn't consult enough."
- </p>
- <p> Boutros-Ghali has his defense ready. "My role is becoming
- more difficult, not because of the absence of cooperation among
- the five permanent members of the Security Council but because
- of the multiplication of problems," he says. "The U.N. never
- before had to deal with so many big problems at the same time."
- </p>
- <p> He has lately grown more aware that he needs the goodwill
- of U.N. ambassadors, especially those on the Security Council,
- to succeed. At the same time, U.N. members are beginning to
- appreciate his readiness to tackle intractable situations, like
- those in Bosnia and Somalia, that require a multilateral effort
- to resolve. "His heart is in the right place," says a senior
- Dutch diplomat.
- </p>
- <p> But heart is clearly not enough. As currently constituted,
- the U.N. is ill prepared to deal with mushrooming demands for
- peacekeeping here and there and everywhere. Such operations are
- being handled by a small and overworked group at U.N.
- headquarters: there is no general military staff, no single body
- mapping contingency plans and no standing military force that
- can be deployed quickly. "If the U.S., as a superpower, has
- discovered that it cannot be a global cop, how can we expect
- that role of the Secretary-General, with his meager resources?"
- asks a British diplomat. Despite persistent problems for the
- U.N. around the world, and his personal abrasiveness,
- Boutros-Ghali has shown that the organization can play a
- constructive, perhaps ultimately even decisive, role in the
- quest for peace. What he needs is for member nations to set
- reasonable goals--and then give him the wherewithal to see
- them through.
- </p>
-
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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