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- <text id=93TT0523>
- <title>
- Nov. 15, 1993: Blue-Helmet Blues
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 15, 1993 A Christian In Winter:Billy Graham
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- UNITED NATIONS, Page 66
- Blue-Helmet Blues
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Strapped for cash and short of manpower, U.N. peacekeepers are
- asked to do too much with too little
- </p>
- <p>By MARGUERITE MICHAELS--Reported by Andrew Purvis/Nairobi
- </p>
- <p> This time the desperate nation was Burundi. Vicious fighting
- erupted in the central African state when military officers
- from the Tutsi tribe murdered President Melchior Ndadaye, a
- member of the rival Hutus. As the attempted coup collapsed,
- both tribes massacred thousands of people and put hundreds of
- thousands to flight. Please, government officials begged the
- United Nations, send us peacekeepers.
- </p>
- <p> Last week the U.S. said no. James Jonah, Under Secretary-General
- for Political Affairs, had warned Burundi not to expect any
- help because the Security Council "has shown no inclination
- to take on any new operations." In embattled Angola a recent
- request for an increase in U.N. military observers has gone
- unanswered. And in Somalia grudging participants are pressing
- Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali to rethink that faltering
- operation.
- </p>
- <p> Strapped for cash, short of manpower, criticized for its performance,
- the U.N. has reached the end of its capacity for settling global
- disputes. "We are at a critical stage," says Kofi Annan, Under
- Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations, "because we have
- been asked to do too much with too little." In 1988, when U.N.
- peacekeepers won the Nobel Peace Prize, their numbers totaled
- just over 10,000. This year almost 80,000 blue helmets are deployed
- around a post-cold war world in which peace has only been achieved
- piecemeal. Troops still patrol truce lines, but now they also
- monitor elections, protect human rights, train local police,
- guard humanitarian relief deliveries and take up arms against
- those who get in their way.
- </p>
- <p> The burgeoning operations have not been accompanied by any serious
- reassessment of the U.N.'s capability to manage them effectively.
- Jonah acknowledged that the peacekeepers have become "bystanders"
- in Somalia. An internal report states that "the U.N. lacks the
- technical, administrative and logistical tools required to implement
- effectively the peacekeeping agenda."
- </p>
- <p> Mistakes and miscues made in the field bear out that assessment.
- In Mogadishu a lack of proper equipment has cost scores of lives.
- Pakistan sent 5,000 troops who did not have telephones, walkie-talkies,
- flak jackets, tear gas and even batons. Gear was eventually
- provided by other countries, but not before some of the poorly
- protected troops died in ambushes, and Somali civilians were
- killed when soldiers without riot gear fired their guns to dispel
- angry crowds. The U.N. has yet to organize an efficient communications
- network or stockpile enough rations. At one point food and water
- for the peacekeepers dropped well below a week's supply; someone
- had miscounted the number of troops. "That's a court-martial
- offense in my country," says a U.N. military adviser.
- </p>
- <p> Yasushi Akashi, who ran the U.N. mission in Cambodia, looks
- back on that $1.5 billion operation with some skepticism. "The
- quality of personnel was not uniformly outstanding," he says.
- "Civil administration was an area in which the U.N. had no experience."
- The peacekeepers were supposed to create a neutral political
- environment for elections. U.N. officials acknowledged that
- no adequate control over civil administration was ever established.
- Materiel was routinely stolen from the airport before being
- logged in. Cambodian cleaning women stripped the mission of
- at least 10 computers before they were caught. The wait for
- official supplies of pens and paper drove desperate staff members
- to the local market. "When we start up in a new place, everything
- is wrong," says Denis Beissel, acting director of the U.N.'s
- Field Operations Division. "I don't have enough of anything
- to respond quickly. No staff, no stock, no money."
- </p>
- <p> Countries that contribute troops insist on commanding them from
- afar. Soldiers from Bulgaria, a hapless lot recruited through
- local newspaper ads, scandalized the Cambodian provinces with
- their drinking and womanizing, but the U.N. could not discipline
- them. A U.N. task force has been created to investigate alleged
- black marketeering by peacekeepers, as well as charges that
- blue helmets regularly visited a Serb-run brothel outside Sarajevo
- whose "prostitutes" were in fact Muslim and Croat prisoners.
- </p>
- <p> Management at headquarters is on overload. The quality of the
- New York City staff is hostage to the U.N.'s policy of hiring
- for geographic and sexual balance rather than expertise. There
- are more jobs than people with experience to fill them. It takes
- an average of 120 days for a supply request from the field to
- be answered; the U.S. Army, by comparison, generally responds
- in 14 to 21 days. Eight procurement officers were suspended
- from duty in July, accused of favoring a helicopter company
- in letting bids; they say they were just trying to act with
- dispatch. Budgets languish in a labyrinth of competing bureaucracies,
- and once expenditures are approved, the U.N. rarely receives
- more than 30% of peacekeeping assessments from member states
- within six months of fielding an operation. When the Yugoslav
- mission expanded to cover all of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the
- U.N. was under such financial pressure that it could not pay
- for the quick deployment of troops from Western Europe. The
- contingents had to cover their own expenses.
- </p>
- <p> No amount of improved management will make up for the shortfall
- in money. The lack of resources is chronic: this year's estimated
- $3.2 billion peacekeeping budget is more than $1 billion in
- arrears. Congress has just cut the U.S. share of new bills from
- nearly one-third to one-fourth. The shortage of funds results
- from a lack of political will. "Somalia was reality therapy
- for the international community," says the U.N.'s Annan. "Intellectually
- we were ready for it. Emotionally we were not."
- </p>
- <p> Annan uses the word frantic to describe the effects of Washington's
- planned withdrawal from Somalia by the end of next March. The
- first U.S. soldiers depart in December, along with most of the
- French; the Belgians are leaving this month. The Germans have
- said they will withdraw in April; the Italians have suddenly
- decided to "reevaluate" their continued presence. "If all these
- people leave," says a U.N. official, "it will be total anarchy."
- </p>
- <p> Given the frequency with which member states are turning to
- the U.N. to police world conflicts, Annan hopes they will start
- thinking seriously about how to do it better. Boutros-Ghali's
- call for the creation of a standby force has mostly been ignored.
- If some more effective mechanism is not created, he fears, the
- U.N. will go out of the peacekeeping business as quickly as
- it has gone into it.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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