Fiche du document numéro 9393

Num
9393
Date
Wednesday May 4, 1994
Amj
Fichier
Taille
18121
Pages
3
Surtitre
Editorial
Titre
Mercenaries Of Mercy
Source
Type
Article de journal
Langue
EN
Citation
Should the UN subcontract peacekeeping to the neighbours?

In less than a month of fratricidal mayhem, as many Rwandans are
thought to have been slaughtered as have died in former Yugoslavia. The
estimate of 200,000 mainly Tutsi victims can only be a guess:
independent witnesses are few.

When the fighting erupted, the 2,500-strong UNAMIR peacekeeping force
sent to Rwanda by the United Nations last year to monitor a peace
settlement had neither the mandate nor the firepower to restore peace.
Faced with the choice between heavily reinforcing UNAMIR or pulling
out, the Security Council decided last month to withdraw all but 270
observers. Even the International Red Cross, redoubtably present in the
world's worst conflicts, has withdrawn its international staff. In
Tanzania, the world's largest emergency camp is being hastily
constructed for 250,000 mainly Hutu refugees.

To avert further genocide, Dr Boutros Boutros Ghali, the UN
Secretary-General, has appealed for a UN force powerful enough to
reimpose order. American officials have responded by suggesting that
the US would be prepared to help finance and transport a force mustered
by the Organisation of African Unity. The OAU, which has berated the
Security Council for its inaction but none of whose members came
forward last month to offer troops, is thus being asked to muster what
sounds like an army of mercenaries, contracted out to the UN.

All troops under the UN flag are, in theory at least, paid for by the
UN membership, but a specific offer of Western money to subcontract
peacekeeping to non-Western troops is a new departure. A regional
volunteer force under the UN flag has obvious attractions. To some
extent, Nato is playing that role in Bosnia. Although the parallel is
far from exact, history offers a model in the condottieri who acted as
trouble-shooters for Renaissance princes. And the UN desperately needs
to innovate.

The average time-lag between the authorisation of a standard UN force
and its deployment is 60 to 90 days. If external intervention is to be
used to stop the killings in Rwanda and to calm the rising tensions in
neighbouring Burundi, where tribal massacres followed last October's
coup and the UN did nothing the need is for forces which can be far
more rapidly assembled.

There, in Africa, is the rub. The precedent set by ECOMOG, the joint
West African force which has been struggling to bring peace to Liberia,
is not encouraging. It is worth attempting to muster a scratch force
for preventive patrolling in Burundi. But unless the rebel Rwandan
Patriotic Front, now closing on government forces, accepts peace talks,
Rwanda would be an enforcement operation, not a cook and look
monitoring of established ceasefire lines.

As Kofi Annan, the UN's under secretary-general for peacekeeping,
pointed out yesterday, such a force would have to be highly mobile,
well trained under clear lines of command and rules of engagement, and
adequately equipped to defend itself and the Rwandan civilians it was
there to protect. The only troops in the region that would obviously
measure up are South African. That does not invalidate the idea of
mustering an African force now, ready to move as soon as the Arusha
accord can be resurrected; but the immediate emphasis has to be on
diplomatic mediation, on reopening the borders and airlifting help to
refugees, and on choking off the supply of arms to both sides.

The broader issue raised by the American proposal is that the UN, so
stretched for cash that it cannot even stockpile blue helmets in
advance, cannot move fast enough to tackle fires before they rage out
of control. So long as that is true, governments will increasingly dump
problems in the UN's lap only when they want an excuse for doing
nothing.

Sir Brian Urquhart, for many years head of UN peacekeeping, has called
for the creation of a rapid-deployment force of UN volunteers equipped
to break the cycle of violence at an early stage. Such a genuinely
international army of mercenaries would not be bought cheaply: until
the UN peacekeeping budget is put on a more rational basis, the idea
stands no chance. But if Western governments are not prepared to put
their own troops in harm's way to prevent genocide in countries like
Rwanda, they should give closer attention to this and other
alternatives. It is sobering to reflect that had the UN had such a
force available in 1991 as a tripwire to stop Serb incursions into
Bosnia, the Balkan wars might have been contained to Croatia, and peace
might by now have been achieved.
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