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<text id=93TT2328>
<title>
Jan. 18, 1993: Under Fire
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Jan. 18, 1993 Fighting Back: Spouse Abuse
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
UNITED NATIONS, Page 32
Under Fire
</hdr>
<body>
<p>A year into office, Secretary-General Boutros-Ghali finds himself
and the U.N. tested by the new world disorder
</p>
<p>By MICHAEL S. SERRILL - With reporting by Bonnie Angelo/New York
and William Mader/London, with other bureaus
</p>
<p> The post of U.N. Secretary General may well be one of the
world's most thankless jobs. Whoever holds it is somehow
expected to do the impossible: calm crises around the world,
search for compromise among a welter of contending national
agendas, enforce international agreements--and do it all with
seemingly never sufficient resources.
</p>
<p> Despite those challenges, when Javier Perez de Cuellar
prepared to leave the office in late 1991, Boutros
Boutros-Ghali, Egypt's Deputy Prime Minister and one of the
world's better-known diplomats, lobbied hard to be his
successor. Boutros-Ghali, now 70, had ambitious ideas--foremost among them the desire to reshape the cumbersome,
inefficient organization and deal aggressively with the problems
of a world reinventing itself after the cold war. The U.N.
seemed to be the beacon for a new planetary order; he was
confident he could lead it in that direction.
</p>
<p> A year after taking office, Boutros-Ghali will not admit
to disappointment, but it is evident that his ambitions to help
shape the architecture of a new world order have run into
trouble. Under his stewardship, the U.N. has dramatically
expanded its peacekeeping mandate--only to find itself
stymied, even rejected, on several of its recent initiatives.
Though the Secretary-General acts at the behest of the Security
Council, he is being saddled with much of the blame. Rightly or
wrongly, the Secretary-General has, in effect, become the
lightning rod for dissatisfaction with the U.N. and, more
generally, for widespread frustration at the way in which
nationalist ambitions and ethnic hostilities are threatening to
convert the desired new world order into the very opposite.
Never mind that the U.N., for all its good intentions, lacks the
military force, political leverage, perhaps even the moral
suasion to fulfill its expanded mandate.
</p>
<p> The pressures on Boutros-Ghali and the U.N. were evident
in the scene that unfolded on a freezing New Year's Eve in
Sarajevo, his first stop on a tour of peacekeeping trouble
spots. When the Secretary-General declared that he was bringing
desperate and besieged Bosnians a "message of hope" that peace
would come soon, demonstrators jeered and spat at him. Climbing
into an armored car, Boutros-Ghali was pursued by one Sarajevan
who pushed his face against a window and screamed, "Murderer!
Murderer!"
</p>
<p> The reception was no friendlier at his next stop,
Mogadishu. The Secretary-General was forced to flee to a U.S.
Marine compound after U.N. headquarters was surrounded by a
raucous mob that hurled rocks and garbage. When Boutros-Ghali
traveled on to Addis Ababa for the opening of peace talks among
Somali faction leaders, Ethiopian demonstrators gathered to
protest alleged U.N. support for the secession of the province
of Eritrea.
</p>
<p> Among the most difficult obstacles ahead on the course for
Boutros-Ghali:
</p>
<p>-- THE BALKANS. In Geneva the latest U.N.-sponsored effort
to find a diplomatic solution to the war in Bosnia is stalled,
and is likely to remain so in the wake of last week's brutal
assassination of a Bosnian Deputy Prime Minister by Serb
gunmen. In the meantime, 23,000 blue-helmeted U.N. troops are
deployed on a peacekeeping mission in the former Yugoslavia,
their purpose more uncertain by the day. Some 16,000 are
assigned to keep Serbs and Croats apart in Croatia; the
remainder are occupied with ferrying food and supplies to
Sarajevo and other beleaguered towns in Bosnia. So far, the U.N.
presence in Bosnia has done nothing to stop the fighting and
little to relieve the suffering of Bosnians, who are still dying
from shelling, sniper fire, hunger and intense cold. Says one
European diplomat familiar with the Yugoslav morass: "What we've
seen in Yugoslavia isn't peacekeeping, peacemaking or peace
enforcing. It's been a case of watching as peace deteriorates."
Despite pessimistic signs, Boutros-Ghali predicts an end to the
fighting in Bosnia this year.
</p>
<p>-- SOMALIA. The decision by the U.S. and some of its allies
to deploy up to 30,000 troops underlined the failure of U.N.
peacekeeping efforts in that shattered country. Some 500
Pakistani troops had been sent to Somalia under U.N. auspices
beginning in September, three months before U.S. forces arrived
to support food distribution, but they never got beyond the main
Mogadishu airport. Since the landing of U.S.-led units, U.N.
officials have concentrated on trying to work out a peace
agreement among the dozen competing factions. Clan chieftains
have now agreed to convene a full-fledged peace conference in
Addis Ababa in March.
</p>
<p>-- CAMBODIA. The U.N. Transitional Authority in Cambodia is
spending $2 billion to run the country until elections can be
held in May. So far, the 20,000 U.N. personnel, including
soldiers, police and civilian administrators, can claim only
partial success. Registration for the election has proceeded
apace, but last week Prince Norodom Sihanouk, whose political
participation is essential to any settlement, washed his hands
of the U.N. effort, charging that the peacekeepers had failed
to protect opposition leaders organizing for the elections. At
the same time, the Khmer Rouge have become increasingly brazen
in defying the U.N., refusing orders to disarm, even taking U.N.
personnel hostage in an effort at intimidation.
</p>
<p>-- EL SALVADOR. The conservative government of President
Alfredo Cristiani failed to fulfill a U.N.-brokered agreement
to remove 100 alleged assassins, torturers and other
human-rights violators from the upper ranks of the armed forces
by last Dec. 31; to date, only 23 have been cashiered. Cristiani
contends that carrying out the agreement, part of a delicate
balancing act to end a decade of civil war, could endanger
national stability, and has proposed a delay until 1994. Rebel
leaders have reacted cautiously; they are relying on the U.N.
to enforce the strictures of the peace accord. "The
Secretary-General is responsible for the entire process," says
former guerrilla leader Ana Guadalupe Martinez. "If this fails,
the U.N.'s reputation will be left seriously damaged."
</p>
<p>-- ANGOLA. The U.N. is blamed for having failed to insist
on the disarmament of the UNITA rebel movement in Angola before
U.N.-organized elections were held last September to end that
country's 16-year civil war. As a result, UNITA head Jonas
Savimbi reacted to his first-round election loss to President
Jose Eduardo dos Santos by renewing the fighting.
</p>
<p> The Secretary-General and his supporters point out--correctly--that success or failure of U.N. peacekeeping is
utterly dependent on the good faith of contesting parties, and
that the organization can only rely on persuasion if the parties
balk. Moreover, Boutros-Ghali notes, the tide of criticism
reflects something positive, namely the U.N.'s new
assertiveness: "The reaction against the United Nations
everywhere in the world shows that at last the U.N. is being
active."
</p>
<p> Since 1988 the U.N. has launched 14 peacekeeping
operations--compared with just 13 in the previous 40 years.
The latest such venture will send 7,500 peacekeepers to
Mozambique to monitor the cease-fire in a 16-year civil war,
disarm the fighting factions and organize elections.
</p>
<p> "We're just trying to slog our way through, doing it case
by case," says U.N. spokesman Joseph Sills. "We are being asked
to do jobs of greater size and scope than ever before, but we
are short on manpower, short on money and short on troop
contributions." The lack of resources is mainly the result of
some member nations' being delinquent in paying their dues. The
U.S., which pays 30% of the U.N.'s peacekeeping costs, owes $114
million to that fund and $296 million in regular U.N. dues.
Russia owes a total of $400 million. Meanwhile, the cost of
keeping 60,000 U.N. peacekeepers in the field approaches $3
billion annually.
</p>
<p> The blue helmets not only have expanded operations
geographically but also have broadened their scope. Prior to the
Balkan crisis, the U.N. had never set out on a humanitarian
mission to a war-torn country before a cease-fire was declared,
but it is doing so in Bosnia. In Somalia the Security Council
took the unprecedented step of approving the current U.S.
military intervention to provide protection for food
distribution, even though the U.N. had received no official
invitation. When the two sides in El Salvador's civil war could
not agree on a land-distribution plan that was crucial to a
peace accord, the U.N. proposed its own scheme. In Cambodia the
U.N. has a broader--and, many say, more trying--charge than
in any other operation it has mounted.
</p>
<p> Boutros-Ghali has done much to encourage the U.N.'s
activism. Within months of taking office, he issued a much
praised report, An Agenda for Peace, that outlined his ideas for
the expansion of U.N. responsibilities in peacemaking,
peacekeeping and what he called "preventive diplomacy." The
centerpiece of the plan, which has yet to be discussed by the
Security Council, is a proposal that various national armies
create rapid-deployment units that could serve under the U.N.
flag when needed. The Secretary-General hopes that such forces
could be dispatched within days after a crisis erupts, rather
than the several months it now takes to assemble and equip
peacekeeping units. "It would be a complete change," he says.
"If I could say I will send troops in the next three days, this
would have an impact completely different from saying I will
have troops in the next three months."
</p>
<p> He argues his ideas with zest and vigor--in contrast to
the cautious, softspoken approach of Perez de Cuellar. Critics
contend that Boutros-Ghali's sharp mind crosses the line into
impatience and rudeness toward diplomats, who generally do not
like to act hastily.
</p>
<p> His acid tongue has landed him in controversy several
times. Last July at the U.N. he accused Europe and the U.S. of
being more concerned with "the rich man's war" in Bosnia than
with the fate of the starving in Somalia. He picked a fight
with both Lord Carrington, then the European Community's chief
negotiator in the Balkan crisis, and Sir David Hannay, Britain's
U.N. ambassador, over the same issue, commenting that it was
"maybe because I am a wog" that he had been criticized in the
British press.
</p>
<p> The latest slip of the lip occurred during his Sarajevo
visit. Angered by a local journalist's furious denunciation of
the U.N., Boutros-Ghali snapped back, "I understand your
frustration. But you have a situation that is better than 10
other places in the world. I can give you a list."
</p>
<p> At headquarters in New York City, the Secretary-General's
administrative style has drawn an unusual amount of fire. Early
on, he upset several ambassadors at the U.N. by making it clear
that he preferred to deal directly with the leaders of their
governments; he still allots relatively little time in his
schedule for consultations with envoys. Some diplomats are
equally dismayed by the way he equates the status of his office
with that of the Security Council and the General Assembly.
Before his recent tiff with the Security Council, he attended
meetings only selectively, calling them a time-consuming waste.
"His imperiousness is intolerable," says a senior French
diplomat. "His job has gone to his head."
</p>
<p> Born into a wealthy Coptic Christian family, Boutros-Ghali
grew up speaking three languages--Arabic, French and English.
He earned a Ph.D. in international law from the Sorbonne, then
went on to a career as a professor of law at Cairo University
and as a writer. He was tapped by President Anwar Sadat as a
senior policy adviser and was named acting Foreign Minister when
two foreign ministers resigned in protest over Sadat's historic
visit to Jerusalem in 1977. Boutros-Ghali played a prominent
role in the negotiations that led to the 1979 Camp David accord
on the Middle East.
</p>
<p> When he decided to run for the Secretary-General's job,
those qualifications clearly helped. He was also helped by being
African, though black Africans preferred their own candidate.
Working against him was his age, an issue he defused by
declaring that he would serve only a single five-year term.
Washington was initially unenthusiastic about Boutros-Ghali but
warmed to him when he quickly instituted bureaucratic reforms,
cutting 14 high-level jobs and putting other top officials on
one-year contracts. Today U.S. officials have renewed their
skepticism. "The U.S. finds him too independent-minded," said
one U.N. observer. "He doesn't consult enough."
</p>
<p> Boutros-Ghali has his defense ready. "My role is becoming
more difficult, not because of the absence of cooperation among
the five permanent members of the Security Council but because
of the multiplication of problems," he says. "The U.N. never
before had to deal with so many big problems at the same time."
</p>
<p> He has lately grown more aware that he needs the goodwill
of U.N. ambassadors, especially those on the Security Council,
to succeed. At the same time, U.N. members are beginning to
appreciate his readiness to tackle intractable situations, like
those in Bosnia and Somalia, that require a multilateral effort
to resolve. "His heart is in the right place," says a senior
Dutch diplomat.
</p>
<p> But heart is clearly not enough. As currently constituted,
the U.N. is ill prepared to deal with mushrooming demands for
peacekeeping here and there and everywhere. Such operations are
being handled by a small and overworked group at U.N.
headquarters: there is no general military staff, no single body
mapping contingency plans and no standing military force that
can be deployed quickly. "If the U.S., as a superpower, has
discovered that it cannot be a global cop, how can we expect
that role of the Secretary-General, with his meager resources?"
asks a British diplomat. Despite persistent problems for the
U.N. around the world, and his personal abrasiveness,
Boutros-Ghali has shown that the organization can play a
constructive, perhaps ultimately even decisive, role in the
quest for peace. What he needs is for member nations to set
reasonable goals--and then give him the wherewithal to see
them through.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>