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- <text id=94TT0151>
- <title>
- Feb. 07, 1994: The Perils of Good Intentions
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Feb. 07, 1994 Lock 'Em Up And Throw Away The Key
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- DIPLOMACY, Page 44
- The Perils of Good Intentions
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Humanitarian aid is proving no substitute for action in post-cold
- war conflicts
- </p>
- <p>By Marguerite Michaels--With reporting by James L. Graff/Zagreb and Andrew Purvis/Mogadishu
- </p>
- <p> Hunger and hopelessness can drive people to desperate acts.
- As a 10-truck U.N. aid convoy entered the Muslim village of
- Ticici in central Bosnia on its way to Tuzla last Wednesday,
- more than 200 residents stood waiting by the road. Someone opened
- fire from the window of a house at the convoy's police escort,
- and the villagers mobbed the trucks, grabbing for any supplies
- they could reach. It was the second attack in two days on a
- convoy in Ticici, where villagers believe they are not receiving
- their fair share of food.
- </p>
- <p> On Thursday night, gunmen armed with assault weapons ambushed
- a Land Rover belonging to three British aid workers near a food
- warehouse in the central Bosnian city of Zenica. The bandits
- took all three to an isolated spot, where they executed the
- driver and wounded the other two as they fled. The Overseas
- Development Administration, which manages British humanitarian
- aid to Bosnia and carries 40% of U.N.-distributed supplies,
- suspended its deliveries.
- </p>
- <p> Months of strict Serbian and Croatian blockades have reduced
- the Muslims in supply-starved central Bosnia to banditry and
- the looting of food meant for the thousands of other Muslim
- refugees in besieged Tuzla, 45 miles to the north. Increased
- harassment at checkpoints has cut aid to the Muslims to a fraction
- of what Serbs and Croats receive.
- </p>
- <p> Humanitarian aid is, in the post-cold war world, increasingly
- the response of choice to the plethora of small-scale slaughters
- that prick the West's collective conscience but do not seem
- important enough to command greater diplomatic or military involvement.
- The travails in delivery last week were only a symptom of the
- lack of political will in Western capitals to act forcefully.
- Humanitarian aid feels good to those who insist that something
- must be done to stop the killing in Bosnia, in Somalia, in a
- dozen other bloody conflicts. And it is far more politically
- palatable than sending soldiers to fight and die in countries--without strategic assets like oil or nuclear weapons--that
- few people can locate on a map. But as Bosnia and Somalia show,
- aid by itself solves very little and rapidly becomes part of
- the problem.
- </p>
- <p> Never have so many aid workers paid such a high price for their
- commitment. Eleven U.N. relief staff members have died in Bosnia.
- Kidnappings, shootings and death threats are part of the job
- description in Somalia, where six aid workers have been slain.
- Although the Clinton Administration denies it, there is a perception
- that the U.S. has chosen to abandon Somalia rather than contend
- with the dangers. Turkish General Cevik Bir, leaving the command
- of the U.N. operation there last week, leaked an "eyes only"
- letter to U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali, indirectly
- chastising the Americans and Europeans for "mission erosion."
- Said Bir: "The contributing nations must be committed enough
- to accept the violence and loss of life associated with war,
- and then stay the course."
- </p>
- <p> The U.N. forces assigned to safeguard the convoys complain bitterly
- over the gap between their task of assuring free passage through
- a raging factional war zone and the means provided to achieve
- it. With only 13,000 troops on the ground and no air cover,
- "our job is becoming impossible," said Belgian General Francis
- Briquemont just after he asked to leave his post as commander
- of Bosnia six months early. The overall chief of the U.N. forces,
- French General Jean Cot, has been relieved of his job after
- quarreling publicly with Boutros-Ghali over his right to call
- in air strikes when troops are attacked.
- </p>
- <p> Even the policy of humanitarian aid has come under fire. Frustrated
- that the Americans are using aid contributions as an excuse
- to avoid sending in ground forces, French Foreign Minister Alain
- Juppe urged the U.S. last week to take a more active role to
- push the Muslim-dominated government into accepting a settlement
- partitioning Bosnia among the three ethnic blocs. "The humanitarian
- track," he said, "is not enough. "
- </p>
- <p> Originally volunteers followed armies onto the battlefield to
- care for victims. Now it is the armies themselves that must
- accompany humanitarian organizations to the front line if aid
- is to be distributed. As the angels of mercy in Bosnia have
- learned, it is all too easy for combatants to stop, steal or
- hold hostage the shipments, thrusting the troops protecting
- them into the middle of the war. Air strikes--something the
- U.S. and its allies have resisted--may now be necessary to
- relieve Canadian troops in the Bosnian town of Srebrenica, a
- U.N.-declared "safe" enclave surrounded by Serbs. In Mogadishu
- 12,000 U.N. soldiers are sitting inside walled compounds rather
- than risk casualties by patrolling the streets. "They are doing
- nothing but eating and sleeping," says a U.N. military adviser.
- "Ridiculous."
- </p>
- <p> As aid increasingly serves as a geopolitical tool, the proud
- humanitarian tradition of neutrality has largely been shattered.
- "There is a definite change in the attitude toward humanitarian
- workers," says U.N. aid official Paul Mitchell. "We are now
- targets." Aid staff members, alone and together with their uniformed
- escorts, have taken sides, wittingly and unwittingly, in these
- fragmented, fratricidal wars. In Somalia, "relief workers tend
- to become identified with different subclans," says Lance Salisbury,
- assistant country representative for Catholic Relief Services.
- "And the leaders attempt to draw you into larger conflicts."
- In Baidoa, where Salisbury is based, most of his staff is from
- the Lyssan subclan, which prompted attacks from an opposing
- subclan.
- </p>
- <p> Nearly two years and more than 200,000 deaths after the West
- began to assist the Bosnians, some are asking if the aid intended
- to save lives has only prolonged the war. "That is a downright
- deadly argument," retorts Wolfgang Berger of the Austrian Catholic
- charity Caritas, the largest private agency working in the former
- Yugoslavia. "You can't make peace by sacrificing still more
- civilians to hunger and destitution."
- </p>
- <p> But Mark Almond, a fellow of the London-based Institute for
- European Defense and Strategic Studies, believes humanitarian
- aid in Bosnia has done more harm than good: Serbs and Croats
- at checkpoints have exacted tolls in hard currency, siphoned
- food and medicine from the relief trucks and then used the cash
- and supplies to sustain the fighting. Roads improved by the
- U.N. to facilitate access for aid convoys have made it easier
- for all three factions to move troops and guns. The 300,000
- survivors of the two-year-long siege of Sarajevo refer to themselves
- bitterly as "the well-fed dead," plied with just enough food
- to keep them alive for more shelling and sniper fire while Western
- nations refuse them military help to end the siege.
- </p>
- <p> The West is also discovering that once a nation engages to bring
- war-torn countries relief, it is almost impossible to disengage.
- Last week Foreign Secretary Douglas Hurd visited the British
- troops in Bosnia to see if it might be a smart time to get them
- out. He came home full of admiration for the soldiers fighting
- to deliver aid despite constant danger. Britain's participation
- in the humanitarian program--as frustrating as it is--is
- popular enough that one Foreign Office official admitted "withdrawal
- would be difficult domestically."
- </p>
- <p> From the beginning it was widely understood that humanitarian
- aid was not going to resolve a war of such ethnic-based savagery
- as Bosnia's. But aid was deemed sufficient to straighten out
- Somalia, where the fighting was considered to be the result
- of hardship. Yet as both cases demonstrate, in the continued
- absence of concerted political and military initiatives for
- peace, humanitarian-aid workers are losing the war against misery.
- The West will pay a high price for that defeat in a loss of
- credibility, loss of capacity for effective action, loss of
- the right to call itself civilized.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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-