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Press
Release..............................
UNESCAP News Services
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Date 29
May 2004
Press Release No: L/28/2004
A plan to strengthen UN peacekeeping -- Third
World conflicts
By JeanMarie Gu?henno (IHT)
NEW YORK: Recent headlines notwithstanding, fewer
people are being killed by war than at almost any time in the
past century. Some 25,000 were killed in armed conflict in 2002,
barely one tenth the number killed each year during the 1990s.
Even Sept. 111 and wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, have not reversed
the decline.
There are two basic reasons for this decline in war deaths:
Fewer wars are starting and, even more important, many old wars
are ending. This is particularly true in Africa. Wars in Angola,
Congo and Sudan - in which some 7 million people have died -
are over, or soon may be. Sierra Leone, recently home to the
limb-hacking rebels, is stable. Neighboring Liberia seems to
be moving in the same direction.
Nor is the trend limited to Africa. Europe and East Asia, which
lost some 60 million people in the wars of the last century,
are almost entirely at peace. Even the smouldering Balkans,
after the recent violence in Kosovo, is more stable now. India
and Pakistan are talking about a resolution of their differences.
On April 24, the Annan plan for Cyprus will be put to a referendum
in both parts of the divided island.
A word of caution, though, before concluding that world peace
is about to break out. In 1914, the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace declared that the great powers were "manifestly unwilling"
to make war, just in time for World War I. The present positive
trend could be reversed at any moment.
Only one thing is certain: A large number of conflicts are moving
towards resolution, and millions of lives are being saved.
To ensure that some of these conflicts really do have a chance
of ending completely, the UN Security Council is creating a
number of new peacekeeping missions. Those for Liberia and Ivory
Coast are already on the ground. In Haiti, a multinational force
will soon be replaced by a UN force. There is a paradox, though,
in this growing peace: The military resources needed to help
keep the peace are being strained by so much peace to keep.
There are already 15 UN-led peacekeeping missions on three continents.
Some 50,000 soldiers and police personnel are wearing the United
Nations' blue helmet, mainly from developing countries, led
by Pakistan and Bangladesh. The numbers could
rise to 70,000 or more by the end of 2004.
In the scheme of world military activity, this is not much.
Even if the bill for UN peacekeeping rises to $4 billion a year,
which is possible if the Security Council calls for new missions
in all of the places currently on its list, UN peacekeeping
will still cost less than 1 percent of what the United States
alone spends each year on defense.
But in the UN context, the current surge will push the system
to the outer limits of its capacity. For every person in the
Peacekeeping Department at the New York headquarters, there
will be more than 100 in the field, creating major challenges
in the areas of planning, force generation, logistics, procurement
and command and control. If this wind down in war is to work
at all, there will have to be some hard decisions by the international
community. Four well-established principles might help guide
those decisions.
First, no UN engagement in hot wars. The United Nations cannot
fight wars, and cannot keep the peace where there is no peace
to keep. At best, it can stare down some of the "spoilers"
who renege on peace agreements after the UN is deployed. If
there is real campaigning to be done, then military coalitions,
such as the one the Security Council authorized in the Gulf
in 1990, should be used.
Second, partners count. The last few years has seen the rise
of partnership peacekeeping - the U.N. working alongside the
regional organizations like the European Union, NATO and Ecowas,
the West African grouping. These arrangements have their complications,
but the neighbors and friends have an interest in seeing problems
through. In a world of short attention spans, there is a need
for those who won't turn away.
Third, no job without the tools. When U.S. forces withdrew from
Somalia a decade ago, the UN mission failed. If the community
of nations wants peacekeeping to be done, the support must be
there to do it well - the men and women in uniform from developed
and developing countries alike; the specialized military support
services from those countries that have them, the financial
resources, the strategic force reserves, the sustained commitment.
Without that support,the peace will invariably fail.
Fourth, stick with it until peace takes root. Building peace
from the ashes of war takes time and the international community
must be willing to work with local institutions until they are
ready to shoulder responsibility for democratic governance,
the rule of law and continued economic development. Peacekeeping
operations must be linked to a longer term plan for achieving
this sort of stability.
There is a peace dividend to be had, but not without a clear-headed
investment.
Jean-Marie Gu?henno is United Nations Under-Secretary-General
for Peacekeeping.
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