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<text id=93TT0336>
<title>
Oct. 04, 1993: When To Go, When To Stay
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Oct. 04, 1993 On The Trail Of Terror
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
DIPLOMACY, Page 40
When To Go, When To Stay
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Murky wars like Somalia and Bosnia raise hard questions about
whether the U.S. has the will to take on the nasty work of peacekeeping
</p>
<p>By J.F.O. McALLISTER/WASHINGTON--With reporting by James L. Graff/Vienna, Andrew Purvis/Nairobi
and Bruce van Voorst/Washington
</p>
<p> On a hot moonless night two weeks ago, elite U.S. Army Rangers
aboard helicopters slithered down ropes onto a roof in northern
Mogadishu to arrest 39 Somalis. Under intense questioning, one
man in custody confessed he was General Mohammed Farrah Aidid,
the warlord whose fighters have been attacking peacekeeping
troops since June. But the big catch quickly turned into an
embarrassing fumble. Though he bore a slight resemblance, the
arrested man was not Aidid. He turned out to be a former police
chief who assumed the fake identity out of fear that the soldiers
would shoot him.
</p>
<p> Like the 1982 U.S. intervention in Beirut to keep a peace that
did not exist, the Somalia deployment is beginning to founder
on messy local politics, which foreign commanders do not really
understand and cannot put right. As the death toll of peacekeepers
and civilians mounts and Mogadishu remains resolutely unpacified,
American support for the mission in Somalia has plummeted. According
to a TIME/CNN poll last week, only 43% of respondents approve
of keeping U.S. troops there, while 46% disapprove. Eight months
ago, 79% of those polled supported the deployment. The death
of three more U.S. soldiers when their helicopter was shot down
Saturday near Mogadishu will do nothing to improve those numbers.
Washington politicians are increasingly nervous, fearing that
the Clinton Administration does not have a strategy for getting
out.
</p>
<p> The growing opposition raises sharp questions about whether
the U.S. military is equipped, and the U.S. public has the will,
to take on the nasty work of peacekeeping. An answer is needed
fast: Clinton is contemplating sending 25,000 troops to enforce
an awkward Bosnian peace accord sputtering toward completion.
</p>
<p> Murky wars like Somalia and Bosnia--complicated local fights
with a potential for international spillover--are a growth
industry now that the cold war no longer imposes a rough order
on world politics. The Clinton Administration is faced with
redefining when the U.S. should intervene abroad and whether
it should be done alone, through the U.N. or through permanent
or ad hoc alliances. Secretary of State Warren Christopher,
National Security Adviser Anthony Lake and U.N. Ambassador Madeleine
Albright all gave speeches last week that sketched parts of
the doctrine they are constructing for how America should manage
its global obligations. Clinton is to follow them this week
with an address at the U.N. expected to lay out, among other
things, the criteria that will govern his decisions on sending
U.S. forces abroad.
</p>
<p> His advisers reject complaints that the President has no strong
views on foreign affairs and is too prone to turn over world
leadership, including the command of American troops, to a flabby
and uncertain U.N. They insist he is determined to lead, alone
if need be, to protect American interests. But they doubt there
should be any general commitment to come to the rescue of humanitarian
tragedies like Somalia's or complex ethnic implosions like Yugoslavia's.
Lake says the U.S. should instead adopt a strategy of "enlargement,"
promoting global stability by increasing the numbers, strength
and cohesiveness of free-market democracies.
</p>
<p> Albright set a high threshold for U.S. military involvement
abroad. She said the U.S. should not step in unless there was
a "clear mission, competent commanders, sensible rules of engagement
and the means required to get the job done." If the U.N. ran
the show, Washington would also demand that a cease-fire be
in place and an end to the deployment identified.
</p>
<p> These doctrines show that the Administration is anything but
trigger-happy. Why, then, is Clinton marching resolutely toward
the deployment of U.S. soldiers to help NATO police Bosnia?
The President promised the forces once the warring parties all
agree on a settlement. The one now about to be signed will dismember
the country into Serb, Croat and Muslim zones and allow the
Serb and Croat regions to secede in two years. Senior U.S. officials
say enforcement should not be too bloody because all three sides
will gain from peace. But reluctant units must be disarmed,
thousands of refugees relocated and safe passage corridors patrolled
in a land where bitter hatred and the thirst for revenge still
prevail.
</p>
<p> So far Clinton has avoided investing American revenue and lives
in Bosnia, while maintaining that he personally would like to
do more to help its government resist aggression. The Administration
says it still must see the fine print of the accord before it
actually mobilizes troops. And Clinton has pledged to seek congressional
approval for a Bosnia deployment--a potential escape hatch
if the mission looks too burdensome.
</p>
<p> Late last week top aides went to Capitol Hill to begin explaining
the difficult options the U.S. may soon face. General John Shalikashvili,
the next Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, acknowledged
that the Bosnian operation could cost the U.N. $4 billion its
first year. Lawmakers, led by influential Senator Sam Nunn,
expressed deep anxiety that the Administration had no exit strategy.
"My big question will be not how do we go about it," Nunn told
the New York Times, "but how do we get out if the parties begin
fighting again?''
</p>
<p> It is hard to see how Clinton, with his heavy domestic agenda,
could gain politically from putting more American troops in
harm's way. Unfortunately, Washington has promised to guarantee
a Bosnia settlement so long and loudly that a reversal, even
if Congress provides welcome cover, will make Clinton look feckless.
Says a senior Pentagon official: "If the U.S. can't take part
in this operation, it will be a major blow to the structure
of NATO,"--as well as a final abandonment of Bosnian civilians
to bloodthirsty aggressors.
</p>
<p> Somalia was supposed to prove that intervention could be simple.
A year ago, as many as 1,000 Somalis a day were dying of starvation
while feuding warlords stole relief supplies. Operation Restore
Hope quickly restored the flow of foodstuffs and choked off
most banditry. Starvation has all but ended. Refugees are returning.
In most of the country, order now prevails. Washington has reduced
its contingent from 28,000 to 4,800 soldiers. Says retired U.S.
Admiral Jonathan Howe, the U.N.'s special representative in
Somalia: "A lot more work needs to be done. But the story of
Somalia is a good story."
</p>
<p> In south Mogadishu, where Aidid is still defiant, the story
is anything but good. Constantly on the move, always surrounded
by women and children, Aidid has managed to elude arrest and
assassination despite the arrival last August of 400 U.S. Rangers
ordered to find him. His gunmen are marauding through the city,
and U.N. forces, led by the U.S., have responded with a heavy
hand. Earlier this month, more than 100 Somalis were killed
and wounded when U.S. helicopters fired into a crowd that had
ambushed a passing U.N. convoy. Last week the Rangers had a
small success when they captured Aidid's major banker, but the
man was not in hiding.
</p>
<p> Fifty-two foreign soldiers have died since Aidid started targeting
them in June. U.S. officials admit his forces have the capacity
to conduct hit-and-run attacks indefinitely. U.N. positions
take mortar fire most nights as Aidid tries to wear down the
staying power of the 30 countries contributing troops. His subordinates
vow to fight on even if he is captured.
</p>
<p> Some in Congress want the U.S. to pull out all its remaining
troops immediately, leaving the work of nation building to other
U.N. members. The TIME/CNN poll shows that only 22% of the public
think the U.S. should engage in disarming the warlords. But
Clinton advisers fear the whole U.N. mission would collapse
if the U.S. military backbone were withdrawn, returning Somalia
to anarchy and famine. "Our sense is to keep picking away one
lieutenant here, one bunch of militiamen there," says a Clinton
official. "If we keep up the pressure, we'll eventually get
there."
</p>
<p> The Administration hopes its blizzard of foreign-policy speeches
will help direct public attention away from the bloodshed in
Somalia and Bosnia toward its accomplishments in other regions--propping up Boris Yeltsin, for example. Top officials worry,
as Lake says, that "we have come into the new era with relatively
few ways to convince a skeptical public that engagement abroad
is a worthwhile investment." But there is no sidestepping the
hard cases. If Washington is to remain a superpower, the public
will have to bear not only comparatively light burdens like
democratic "enlargement" but onerous ones like Somalia and Bosnia
as well.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>