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- <text id=93TT0250>
- <title>
- July 26, 1993: Peacemaking War
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 26, 1993 The Flood Of '93
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SOMALIA, Page 48
- Peacemaking War
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The drive to punish a renegade warlord pits allies in the blue-helmet
- force against one another
- </p>
- <p>By MARGUERITE MICHAELS--With reporting by Clive Mutiso/Mogadishu and Bruce van Voorst/Washington,
- with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> The sniping was almost as fierce in the corridors of the United
- Nations as in the streets of Mogadishu. Without bothering to
- notify Rome, Kofi Annan, the U.N.'s chief of peacekeeping operations,
- ordered General Bruno Loi, Italy's military commander in Somalia,
- to be "rotated back home" for insubordination. Annan denounced
- Loi for meeting with armed clansmen of Mohammed Farrah Aidid
- and refusing to carry out orders in the increasingly violent
- campaign to capture or kill the warlord. "Only the Italian government
- has the competence to decide who should lead our soldiers,"
- responded Foreign Minister Beniamino Andreatta. The Italians,
- retorted a U.N. official, should "either get on the team or
- get off."
- </p>
- <p> The furor over the U.N.'s attempt to discipline Loi quickly
- widened last week into a full-scale international debate over
- the pistol-packing tactics the peacekeepers are pursuing to
- destroy one of Somalia's most powerful warlords. After weeks
- of escalating assaults on Aidid's compounds, the Italian government,
- the aid community in Mogadishu and many Somali citizens charged
- that the attacks served mainly to broaden the war and divert
- attention from the primary goal of humanitarian relief. "A peace
- mission," said Italian chief of staff General Domenico Corcione,
- "is being transformed into a war operation."
- </p>
- <p> Gun battles have raged in the streets of Mogadishu almost daily
- since 23 Pakistani peacekeepers died in an ambush last month.
- Blaming Aidid, the U.S. has led U.N. forces in an aggressive
- bid to flush him out, culminating in a daylight attack on a
- meeting of Aidid's top commanders on Monday. At the end of a
- 20-min. barrage of missiles and cannon fire from U.S. helicopter
- gunships, dozens of bodies lay scattered around the demolished
- villa. When foreign journalists arrived to view the carnage,
- an enraged crowd turned on them with stones, guns and machetes,
- killing four.
- </p>
- <p> Italy, which had three soldiers killed in Somalia earlier this
- month, immediately threatened to withdraw its 2,400 troops unless
- the goals of the mission were reassessed. The Germans, who have
- sent only 250 of a promised 1,700-strong contingent, grumbled
- that it was a mistake to have soldiers in Somalia at all. In
- Washington, Democrat Robert Byrd thundered a warning that "the
- Senate has not bought into a police action against Somali warlords."
- </p>
- <p> Gone are the tragic images of vacant-eyed skeletal children
- dying by the thouin Somali villages. In their place are equally
- troubling images of shell-shattered civilians and Mogadishu
- mobs, fists raised in anger against the mounting violence. "It
- is more dangerous today in Mogadishu than at any time during
- the civil war," says Howard Bell, country director for the relief
- agency CARE.
- </p>
- <p> Anger is focused squarely on the U.S. The helicopters and missiles
- responsible for the civilian casualties are almost entirely
- American. While the U.N. military forces are ostensibly led
- by Turkish General Cevik Bir, his staff is predominantly American
- and the real boss in Somalia is U.N. special representative
- Jonathan Howe, a retired U.S. Navy admiral. The determination
- to decapitate Aidid's faction is considered an American interpretation
- of the U.N. resolution calling for the capture of the Somalis
- responsible for the ambush of the Pakistanis. A total of 35
- peacekeepers have died since May, none of them American. "The
- U.S. is quick to stir up trouble with air strikes," said a Pakistani
- peacekeeper, "but it is my men and other Third World soldiers
- who always draw the tough assignments on the ground."
- </p>
- <p> Fear and resentment are fraying cohesion among the 20,854 troops
- that 29 countries have sent to Somalia. India promised a brigade
- for February that still has not arrived. The Kuwaitis and the
- Saudis will not take action without first checking with their
- home government. The U.N.'s move against Loi was intended to
- restore discipline, though the Italian high command denied that
- he disobeyed orders.
- </p>
- <p> A growing number of critics are suggesting that the U.N. has
- gone off course in hunting Aidid, damaging its credibility as
- a neutral peacemaker. Howe insists that the U.N. remains impartial.
- "We oppose no clan, subclan or party," he says. "We must, however,
- defend ourselves and the people of Somalia against terrorist
- attacks and take the necessary measures to prevent such attacks."
- Howe is supported by the Pakistanis and others, who agree that
- Aidid must be removed from the scene if national reconciliation
- is to be achieved. That determination is shared at the Pentagon,
- where Secretary of Defense Les Aspin says bluntly, "There is
- no reason to change the course."
- </p>
- <p> U.N. officials in New York City have also dug in their heels,
- pointing out that the Security Council has twice authorized
- the use of any action necessary to protect U.N. forces and bring
- about stability. The Italians' proposal to pursue diplomatic
- negotiations with Aidid instead of military force was met with
- derision as a tactic that has already been tried, and failed.
- </p>
- <p> The disarray is clearly not going to be quieted with conciliatory
- rhetoric or stand-tough bravado. The challenge facing all members
- of the peacekeeping team is not only how to bring stability
- to Somalia but also how to devise successful formulas for undertaking
- a more active role in post-cold war peacemaking. Even if the
- Loi furor is smoothed over, the real debate has just begun.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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