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<text id=93TT1966>
<title>
June 28, 1993: Pity the Peacemakers
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Jun. 28, 1993 Fatherhood
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
UNITED NATIONS, Page 46
Pity the Peacemakers
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Asked to take over as the world's Globo-cop, the U.N. has found
no formula for success
</p>
<p>By J.F.O. MCALLISTER/WASHINGTON--With reporting by Bonnie Angelo/New York, Richard Hornik/Hong Kong,
William Mader/London and Andrew Purvis/Mogadishu
</p>
<p> A U.S. Marine raised on John Wayne movies and bloodied in Desert
Storm's armored romp through Iraq might be perplexed by last
week's action in Mogadishu. Under the command of a Turkish general
who was advised by a retired U.S. admiral, U.N. Special Envoy
Jonathan Howe, troops from five countries set about destroying
the power base of Somalia's most notorious warlord, General
Mohammed Farrah Aidid, beneath a hail of missile fire and cannon
bursts from helicopter gunships overhead. Troops from the U.S.,
Pakistan, Morocco, France and Italy searched for Aidid. Prodded
by Washington, the U.N. wanted to punish him for ordering an
attack June 5 that killed 23 blue-helmeted U.N. peacekeepers
from Pakistan. By last weekend, under authority of an arrest
warrant issued by Howe, the U.N. forces had not caught Aidid
despite house-to-house searches, but were satisfied they had
him on the run. Five U.N. troops, four Moroccans and one Pakistani,
were killed, and more than 100 Somali militia died during the
raid.
</p>
<p> Even if the operation badly crippled Aidid's forces, it thrust
the U.N. back into Somalia's chaos. It also underscored the
immense difficulty of the U.N.'s new role--not only in Somalia
but in Yugoslavia and Cambodia--in trying to make peace before
the warring parties are ready.
</p>
<p> Not many of the U.N.'s recent undertakings can be called unalloyed
successes: Cambodia is still locked in political rivalry; Somalia
remains a violent, lawless land; Bosnia is shattered for good.
Asked by the world to take over as Globo-cop, the U.N. has gone
further than ever before, breaking its precedents and stretching
its mandate to repair the ravages of war and internal breakdown.
The role hasn't worked very well, in part because the U.N. lacks
the money and men to do the job. But the main difficulty is
with the job itself. The U.N. has been asked to patrol war zones,
create governments from feuding factions, supply humanitarian
relief--even as U.N. members lack the political will to impose
peace on belligerents.
</p>
<p> The results were visible in the tracer fire illuminating Mogadishu's
sky. This time the U.N. was one of the combatants. For four
nights the Somalian capital echoed with deafening explosions
as U.S. AC-130H ground-support planes and Cobra attack helicopters
pounded the capital. Aidid's compound, arms caches and other
locations took withering fire. Before U.N. ground forces advanced
on his main base, a loudspeaker truck gave his gunmen several
warnings to surrender. But soldiers came under fire as they
moved in, provoking heavy retaliation from the air.
</p>
<p> Howe called the operation "very surgical," but Somalis were
not convinced. Trust in the U.N.'s motives and skills was badly
strained in the first days of the anti-Aidid campaign when at
least 20 Somalis in a crowd of demonstrators, children included,
were killed by Pakistani peacekeepers. Many Somalis and foreign
journalists at the scene say the Pakistanis opened fire from
behind sandbagged fortifications when the crowd was still 100
yds. away.
</p>
<p> Even Somalis happy to see Aidid punished were terrified by the
U.N.'s ferocious firepower and repelled by the civilian casualties
that resulted.
</p>
<p> Such sentiments were widespread in Aidid's Mogadishu neighborhoods,
which meant the U.N. was winning the battle against the warlord
but losing the war to coax a workable society out of Somalia's
anarchy. At the White House, the motive for intervention was
simple: to restore respect for the blue helmets.
</p>
<p> But many foreign-aid workers and Somalis thought targeting Aidid
was dangerously simplistic: other thuggish warlords are waiting
to take his place. The U.N. action may have tipped the balance
of power toward Aidid's enemies, rather than improved the chances
for a political settlement. The peacekeepers inflicted more
damage on Aidid than his opponents ever did, and they gleefully
cheered the blue helmets on. The ferocity of the intervention
may also have cast the U.N. as one more faction in the conflict.
</p>
<p> As a relief worker noted, "This is a political problem that
is being treated with a military solution." Fear of bogging
down in the country's primitive politics is exactly why first
Bush and then Clinton tried to limit the mission to narrow military
objectives, insisting that the U.N. take over the hard part
of restoring the country as soon as basic security and aid deliveries
were in place. Washington refused the job of disarming the warlords.
Nor did the U.S. leave behind enough equipment to make sure
the peacekeepers could decisively outgun the local thugs. The
U.N. and the U.S. tacitly ratified the warlords' power by granting
them a dominant role in all-party talks on Somalia's future.
</p>
<p> Now, having turned against Aidid, the U.N. is left with more
questions than answers about its future responsibilities. Should
it try to disarm all the warlords? Should it prosecute them?
Should it conduct national elections? Should it intervene in
case of attack? Most important, is Somalia vital enough to any
U.N. member state to invest the money, lives and years required
to reconstruct the country?
</p>
<p> Dilemmas even more painful hobble the big U.N. efforts in Bosnia
and Cambodia. In both cases the world body has stepped far out
of its traditional role of monitoring a cease-fire agreed to
by the parties.
</p>
<p> In Bosnia almost 10,000 U.N. troops help deliver relief under
extremely dangerous conditions. U.N. Secretary-General Boutros
Boutros-Ghali has requested 7,500 more soldiers to enforce so-called
safe havens around six Muslim towns under Serbian siege. But
that plan was flawed from the outset: many fear the safe areas
will turn into permanent refugee camps guarded indefinitely
by U.N. soldiers. And it is proving nearly impossible to implement.
U.N. troops are routinely refused access to Muslim areas by
Serb commanders, cannot shoot unless fired upon or intervene
even when they witness atrocities. Britain and France, who supply
most of the manpower, have resisted serious military steps against
the Serbs for fear of reprisals against their soldiers, making
the blue helmets more like hostages than enforcers of international
law. Western nations could never reach agreement that Bosnian
carnage affected their vital interests and so could not make
a credible threat of force. Last week Clinton underscored the
ultimate irrelevance of the U.N. mission in Bosnia by virtually
abandoning its government. The U.S., he said, would live with
the country's partition into ethnic enclaves to reflect Serb
and Croat territorial gains.
</p>
<p> In Cambodia the 18-month, $2 billion U.N. effort to hold elections
and reconstitute the government has also been plagued by violence.
When the Khmer Rouge and then the Cambodian government originally
installed by Vietnam broke their agreement to place soldiers
and weapons under U.N. control, the 20,000 U.N. personnel in
the country had no mandate to levy punishment. Human-rights
abuses continued, but the governwould not try violators and
the U.N. would not force it to do so. U.N. bureaucrats in Cambodia,
veterans of corridor wars in New York, did not know how to run
the day-to-day operations of a collapsed government. "We tried
to make everyone happy," said a U.N. official, "and that was
a mistake."
</p>
<p> If its mission is defined solely by the elections held last
month, the U.N. can count a success: 90% of registered voters
turned out under perilous conditions. Despite early resistance,
both winners and losers are trying to organize a coalition government.
But "this is a failed state," says a senior U.N. official, "and
you do not re-create a country simply by having an election."
The U.N. effort is scheduled to wind down in September, and
the peacekeepers will depart, leaving the country without a
working civil service, judicial system, police force or economy.
</p>
<p> Some reformers, including Boutros-Ghali, argue that the U.N.
needs its own rapid-deployment force under a strong Secretariat
to permit swift intervention in the early stages of a crisis.
Missions would not be fatally slowed by the laborious process
of soliciting troops and the money to pay for them from member
states. That could be a useful step: the 80,000 U.N. troops
now deployed in 13 countries are constantly running out of money.
</p>
<p> The Clinton Administration is moving to step up its reliance
on and commitment to the U.N., in pursuit of a policy its U.N.
ambassador, Madeleine Albright, calls "assertive multilateralism."
Washington is likely to designate specific U.S. units for quick
deployment to U.N. missions.
</p>
<p> Yet the fundamental problem of peace enforcement is not the
means available; it is the will to use them. The U.N. is not
an independent body but the creature of its members--and when
it comes to decisive action, dependent on the U.S. "The dilemma
now is that member states are dumping on the U.N. problems more
intractable than it used to face, but still not of first-order
importance to them," says Steven Ratner, a former State Department
lawyer and peacekeeping expert. Unless U.N. members begin to
redefine the meaning of vital interests and undertake the kind
of leadership Washington showed during the Gulf War, the U.N.
will tend to the weak compromise and dithering so evident in
Bosnia. Making peace against determined foes still demands a
willingness to see soldiers, no matter what color their helmets,
come home in body bags.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>