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- <text id=93TT0336>
- <title>
- Oct. 04, 1993: When To Go, When To Stay
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Oct. 04, 1993 On The Trail Of Terror
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- DIPLOMACY, Page 40
- When To Go, When To Stay
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Murky wars like Somalia and Bosnia raise hard questions about
- whether the U.S. has the will to take on the nasty work of peacekeeping
- </p>
- <p>By J.F.O. McALLISTER/WASHINGTON--With reporting by James L. Graff/Vienna, Andrew Purvis/Nairobi
- and Bruce van Voorst/Washington
- </p>
- <p> On a hot moonless night two weeks ago, elite U.S. Army Rangers
- aboard helicopters slithered down ropes onto a roof in northern
- Mogadishu to arrest 39 Somalis. Under intense questioning, one
- man in custody confessed he was General Mohammed Farrah Aidid,
- the warlord whose fighters have been attacking peacekeeping
- troops since June. But the big catch quickly turned into an
- embarrassing fumble. Though he bore a slight resemblance, the
- arrested man was not Aidid. He turned out to be a former police
- chief who assumed the fake identity out of fear that the soldiers
- would shoot him.
- </p>
- <p> Like the 1982 U.S. intervention in Beirut to keep a peace that
- did not exist, the Somalia deployment is beginning to founder
- on messy local politics, which foreign commanders do not really
- understand and cannot put right. As the death toll of peacekeepers
- and civilians mounts and Mogadishu remains resolutely unpacified,
- American support for the mission in Somalia has plummeted. According
- to a TIME/CNN poll last week, only 43% of respondents approve
- of keeping U.S. troops there, while 46% disapprove. Eight months
- ago, 79% of those polled supported the deployment. The death
- of three more U.S. soldiers when their helicopter was shot down
- Saturday near Mogadishu will do nothing to improve those numbers.
- Washington politicians are increasingly nervous, fearing that
- the Clinton Administration does not have a strategy for getting
- out.
- </p>
- <p> The growing opposition raises sharp questions about whether
- the U.S. military is equipped, and the U.S. public has the will,
- to take on the nasty work of peacekeeping. An answer is needed
- fast: Clinton is contemplating sending 25,000 troops to enforce
- an awkward Bosnian peace accord sputtering toward completion.
- </p>
- <p> Murky wars like Somalia and Bosnia--complicated local fights
- with a potential for international spillover--are a growth
- industry now that the cold war no longer imposes a rough order
- on world politics. The Clinton Administration is faced with
- redefining when the U.S. should intervene abroad and whether
- it should be done alone, through the U.N. or through permanent
- or ad hoc alliances. Secretary of State Warren Christopher,
- National Security Adviser Anthony Lake and U.N. Ambassador Madeleine
- Albright all gave speeches last week that sketched parts of
- the doctrine they are constructing for how America should manage
- its global obligations. Clinton is to follow them this week
- with an address at the U.N. expected to lay out, among other
- things, the criteria that will govern his decisions on sending
- U.S. forces abroad.
- </p>
- <p> His advisers reject complaints that the President has no strong
- views on foreign affairs and is too prone to turn over world
- leadership, including the command of American troops, to a flabby
- and uncertain U.N. They insist he is determined to lead, alone
- if need be, to protect American interests. But they doubt there
- should be any general commitment to come to the rescue of humanitarian
- tragedies like Somalia's or complex ethnic implosions like Yugoslavia's.
- Lake says the U.S. should instead adopt a strategy of "enlargement,"
- promoting global stability by increasing the numbers, strength
- and cohesiveness of free-market democracies.
- </p>
- <p> Albright set a high threshold for U.S. military involvement
- abroad. She said the U.S. should not step in unless there was
- a "clear mission, competent commanders, sensible rules of engagement
- and the means required to get the job done." If the U.N. ran
- the show, Washington would also demand that a cease-fire be
- in place and an end to the deployment identified.
- </p>
- <p> These doctrines show that the Administration is anything but
- trigger-happy. Why, then, is Clinton marching resolutely toward
- the deployment of U.S. soldiers to help NATO police Bosnia?
- The President promised the forces once the warring parties all
- agree on a settlement. The one now about to be signed will dismember
- the country into Serb, Croat and Muslim zones and allow the
- Serb and Croat regions to secede in two years. Senior U.S. officials
- say enforcement should not be too bloody because all three sides
- will gain from peace. But reluctant units must be disarmed,
- thousands of refugees relocated and safe passage corridors patrolled
- in a land where bitter hatred and the thirst for revenge still
- prevail.
- </p>
- <p> So far Clinton has avoided investing American revenue and lives
- in Bosnia, while maintaining that he personally would like to
- do more to help its government resist aggression. The Administration
- says it still must see the fine print of the accord before it
- actually mobilizes troops. And Clinton has pledged to seek congressional
- approval for a Bosnia deployment--a potential escape hatch
- if the mission looks too burdensome.
- </p>
- <p> Late last week top aides went to Capitol Hill to begin explaining
- the difficult options the U.S. may soon face. General John Shalikashvili,
- the next Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, acknowledged
- that the Bosnian operation could cost the U.N. $4 billion its
- first year. Lawmakers, led by influential Senator Sam Nunn,
- expressed deep anxiety that the Administration had no exit strategy.
- "My big question will be not how do we go about it," Nunn told
- the New York Times, "but how do we get out if the parties begin
- fighting again?''
- </p>
- <p> It is hard to see how Clinton, with his heavy domestic agenda,
- could gain politically from putting more American troops in
- harm's way. Unfortunately, Washington has promised to guarantee
- a Bosnia settlement so long and loudly that a reversal, even
- if Congress provides welcome cover, will make Clinton look feckless.
- Says a senior Pentagon official: "If the U.S. can't take part
- in this operation, it will be a major blow to the structure
- of NATO,"--as well as a final abandonment of Bosnian civilians
- to bloodthirsty aggressors.
- </p>
- <p> Somalia was supposed to prove that intervention could be simple.
- A year ago, as many as 1,000 Somalis a day were dying of starvation
- while feuding warlords stole relief supplies. Operation Restore
- Hope quickly restored the flow of foodstuffs and choked off
- most banditry. Starvation has all but ended. Refugees are returning.
- In most of the country, order now prevails. Washington has reduced
- its contingent from 28,000 to 4,800 soldiers. Says retired U.S.
- Admiral Jonathan Howe, the U.N.'s special representative in
- Somalia: "A lot more work needs to be done. But the story of
- Somalia is a good story."
- </p>
- <p> In south Mogadishu, where Aidid is still defiant, the story
- is anything but good. Constantly on the move, always surrounded
- by women and children, Aidid has managed to elude arrest and
- assassination despite the arrival last August of 400 U.S. Rangers
- ordered to find him. His gunmen are marauding through the city,
- and U.N. forces, led by the U.S., have responded with a heavy
- hand. Earlier this month, more than 100 Somalis were killed
- and wounded when U.S. helicopters fired into a crowd that had
- ambushed a passing U.N. convoy. Last week the Rangers had a
- small success when they captured Aidid's major banker, but the
- man was not in hiding.
- </p>
- <p> Fifty-two foreign soldiers have died since Aidid started targeting
- them in June. U.S. officials admit his forces have the capacity
- to conduct hit-and-run attacks indefinitely. U.N. positions
- take mortar fire most nights as Aidid tries to wear down the
- staying power of the 30 countries contributing troops. His subordinates
- vow to fight on even if he is captured.
- </p>
- <p> Some in Congress want the U.S. to pull out all its remaining
- troops immediately, leaving the work of nation building to other
- U.N. members. The TIME/CNN poll shows that only 22% of the public
- think the U.S. should engage in disarming the warlords. But
- Clinton advisers fear the whole U.N. mission would collapse
- if the U.S. military backbone were withdrawn, returning Somalia
- to anarchy and famine. "Our sense is to keep picking away one
- lieutenant here, one bunch of militiamen there," says a Clinton
- official. "If we keep up the pressure, we'll eventually get
- there."
- </p>
- <p> The Administration hopes its blizzard of foreign-policy speeches
- will help direct public attention away from the bloodshed in
- Somalia and Bosnia toward its accomplishments in other regions--propping up Boris Yeltsin, for example. Top officials worry,
- as Lake says, that "we have come into the new era with relatively
- few ways to convince a skeptical public that engagement abroad
- is a worthwhile investment." But there is no sidestepping the
- hard cases. If Washington is to remain a superpower, the public
- will have to bear not only comparatively light burdens like
- democratic "enlargement" but onerous ones like Somalia and Bosnia
- as well.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-