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- <text id=93TT1966>
- <title>
- June 28, 1993: Pity the Peacemakers
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jun. 28, 1993 Fatherhood
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- UNITED NATIONS, Page 46
- Pity the Peacemakers
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Asked to take over as the world's Globo-cop, the U.N. has found
- no formula for success
- </p>
- <p>By J.F.O. MCALLISTER/WASHINGTON--With reporting by Bonnie Angelo/New York, Richard Hornik/Hong Kong,
- William Mader/London and Andrew Purvis/Mogadishu
- </p>
- <p> A U.S. Marine raised on John Wayne movies and bloodied in Desert
- Storm's armored romp through Iraq might be perplexed by last
- week's action in Mogadishu. Under the command of a Turkish general
- who was advised by a retired U.S. admiral, U.N. Special Envoy
- Jonathan Howe, troops from five countries set about destroying
- the power base of Somalia's most notorious warlord, General
- Mohammed Farrah Aidid, beneath a hail of missile fire and cannon
- bursts from helicopter gunships overhead. Troops from the U.S.,
- Pakistan, Morocco, France and Italy searched for Aidid. Prodded
- by Washington, the U.N. wanted to punish him for ordering an
- attack June 5 that killed 23 blue-helmeted U.N. peacekeepers
- from Pakistan. By last weekend, under authority of an arrest
- warrant issued by Howe, the U.N. forces had not caught Aidid
- despite house-to-house searches, but were satisfied they had
- him on the run. Five U.N. troops, four Moroccans and one Pakistani,
- were killed, and more than 100 Somali militia died during the
- raid.
- </p>
- <p> Even if the operation badly crippled Aidid's forces, it thrust
- the U.N. back into Somalia's chaos. It also underscored the
- immense difficulty of the U.N.'s new role--not only in Somalia
- but in Yugoslavia and Cambodia--in trying to make peace before
- the warring parties are ready.
- </p>
- <p> Not many of the U.N.'s recent undertakings can be called unalloyed
- successes: Cambodia is still locked in political rivalry; Somalia
- remains a violent, lawless land; Bosnia is shattered for good.
- Asked by the world to take over as Globo-cop, the U.N. has gone
- further than ever before, breaking its precedents and stretching
- its mandate to repair the ravages of war and internal breakdown.
- The role hasn't worked very well, in part because the U.N. lacks
- the money and men to do the job. But the main difficulty is
- with the job itself. The U.N. has been asked to patrol war zones,
- create governments from feuding factions, supply humanitarian
- relief--even as U.N. members lack the political will to impose
- peace on belligerents.
- </p>
- <p> The results were visible in the tracer fire illuminating Mogadishu's
- sky. This time the U.N. was one of the combatants. For four
- nights the Somalian capital echoed with deafening explosions
- as U.S. AC-130H ground-support planes and Cobra attack helicopters
- pounded the capital. Aidid's compound, arms caches and other
- locations took withering fire. Before U.N. ground forces advanced
- on his main base, a loudspeaker truck gave his gunmen several
- warnings to surrender. But soldiers came under fire as they
- moved in, provoking heavy retaliation from the air.
- </p>
- <p> Howe called the operation "very surgical," but Somalis were
- not convinced. Trust in the U.N.'s motives and skills was badly
- strained in the first days of the anti-Aidid campaign when at
- least 20 Somalis in a crowd of demonstrators, children included,
- were killed by Pakistani peacekeepers. Many Somalis and foreign
- journalists at the scene say the Pakistanis opened fire from
- behind sandbagged fortifications when the crowd was still 100
- yds. away.
- </p>
- <p> Even Somalis happy to see Aidid punished were terrified by the
- U.N.'s ferocious firepower and repelled by the civilian casualties
- that resulted.
- </p>
- <p> Such sentiments were widespread in Aidid's Mogadishu neighborhoods,
- which meant the U.N. was winning the battle against the warlord
- but losing the war to coax a workable society out of Somalia's
- anarchy. At the White House, the motive for intervention was
- simple: to restore respect for the blue helmets.
- </p>
- <p> But many foreign-aid workers and Somalis thought targeting Aidid
- was dangerously simplistic: other thuggish warlords are waiting
- to take his place. The U.N. action may have tipped the balance
- of power toward Aidid's enemies, rather than improved the chances
- for a political settlement. The peacekeepers inflicted more
- damage on Aidid than his opponents ever did, and they gleefully
- cheered the blue helmets on. The ferocity of the intervention
- may also have cast the U.N. as one more faction in the conflict.
- </p>
- <p> As a relief worker noted, "This is a political problem that
- is being treated with a military solution." Fear of bogging
- down in the country's primitive politics is exactly why first
- Bush and then Clinton tried to limit the mission to narrow military
- objectives, insisting that the U.N. take over the hard part
- of restoring the country as soon as basic security and aid deliveries
- were in place. Washington refused the job of disarming the warlords.
- Nor did the U.S. leave behind enough equipment to make sure
- the peacekeepers could decisively outgun the local thugs. The
- U.N. and the U.S. tacitly ratified the warlords' power by granting
- them a dominant role in all-party talks on Somalia's future.
- </p>
- <p> Now, having turned against Aidid, the U.N. is left with more
- questions than answers about its future responsibilities. Should
- it try to disarm all the warlords? Should it prosecute them?
- Should it conduct national elections? Should it intervene in
- case of attack? Most important, is Somalia vital enough to any
- U.N. member state to invest the money, lives and years required
- to reconstruct the country?
- </p>
- <p> Dilemmas even more painful hobble the big U.N. efforts in Bosnia
- and Cambodia. In both cases the world body has stepped far out
- of its traditional role of monitoring a cease-fire agreed to
- by the parties.
- </p>
- <p> In Bosnia almost 10,000 U.N. troops help deliver relief under
- extremely dangerous conditions. U.N. Secretary-General Boutros
- Boutros-Ghali has requested 7,500 more soldiers to enforce so-called
- safe havens around six Muslim towns under Serbian siege. But
- that plan was flawed from the outset: many fear the safe areas
- will turn into permanent refugee camps guarded indefinitely
- by U.N. soldiers. And it is proving nearly impossible to implement.
- U.N. troops are routinely refused access to Muslim areas by
- Serb commanders, cannot shoot unless fired upon or intervene
- even when they witness atrocities. Britain and France, who supply
- most of the manpower, have resisted serious military steps against
- the Serbs for fear of reprisals against their soldiers, making
- the blue helmets more like hostages than enforcers of international
- law. Western nations could never reach agreement that Bosnian
- carnage affected their vital interests and so could not make
- a credible threat of force. Last week Clinton underscored the
- ultimate irrelevance of the U.N. mission in Bosnia by virtually
- abandoning its government. The U.S., he said, would live with
- the country's partition into ethnic enclaves to reflect Serb
- and Croat territorial gains.
- </p>
- <p> In Cambodia the 18-month, $2 billion U.N. effort to hold elections
- and reconstitute the government has also been plagued by violence.
- When the Khmer Rouge and then the Cambodian government originally
- installed by Vietnam broke their agreement to place soldiers
- and weapons under U.N. control, the 20,000 U.N. personnel in
- the country had no mandate to levy punishment. Human-rights
- abuses continued, but the governwould not try violators and
- the U.N. would not force it to do so. U.N. bureaucrats in Cambodia,
- veterans of corridor wars in New York, did not know how to run
- the day-to-day operations of a collapsed government. "We tried
- to make everyone happy," said a U.N. official, "and that was
- a mistake."
- </p>
- <p> If its mission is defined solely by the elections held last
- month, the U.N. can count a success: 90% of registered voters
- turned out under perilous conditions. Despite early resistance,
- both winners and losers are trying to organize a coalition government.
- But "this is a failed state," says a senior U.N. official, "and
- you do not re-create a country simply by having an election."
- The U.N. effort is scheduled to wind down in September, and
- the peacekeepers will depart, leaving the country without a
- working civil service, judicial system, police force or economy.
- </p>
- <p> Some reformers, including Boutros-Ghali, argue that the U.N.
- needs its own rapid-deployment force under a strong Secretariat
- to permit swift intervention in the early stages of a crisis.
- Missions would not be fatally slowed by the laborious process
- of soliciting troops and the money to pay for them from member
- states. That could be a useful step: the 80,000 U.N. troops
- now deployed in 13 countries are constantly running out of money.
- </p>
- <p> The Clinton Administration is moving to step up its reliance
- on and commitment to the U.N., in pursuit of a policy its U.N.
- ambassador, Madeleine Albright, calls "assertive multilateralism."
- Washington is likely to designate specific U.S. units for quick
- deployment to U.N. missions.
- </p>
- <p> Yet the fundamental problem of peace enforcement is not the
- means available; it is the will to use them. The U.N. is not
- an independent body but the creature of its members--and when
- it comes to decisive action, dependent on the U.S. "The dilemma
- now is that member states are dumping on the U.N. problems more
- intractable than it used to face, but still not of first-order
- importance to them," says Steven Ratner, a former State Department
- lawyer and peacekeeping expert. Unless U.N. members begin to
- redefine the meaning of vital interests and undertake the kind
- of leadership Washington showed during the Gulf War, the U.N.
- will tend to the weak compromise and dithering so evident in
- Bosnia. Making peace against determined foes still demands a
- willingness to see soldiers, no matter what color their helmets,
- come home in body bags.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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