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<text id=93TT0523>
<title>
Nov. 15, 1993: Blue-Helmet Blues
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Nov. 15, 1993 A Christian In Winter:Billy Graham
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
UNITED NATIONS, Page 66
Blue-Helmet Blues
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Strapped for cash and short of manpower, U.N. peacekeepers are
asked to do too much with too little
</p>
<p>By MARGUERITE MICHAELS--Reported by Andrew Purvis/Nairobi
</p>
<p> This time the desperate nation was Burundi. Vicious fighting
erupted in the central African state when military officers
from the Tutsi tribe murdered President Melchior Ndadaye, a
member of the rival Hutus. As the attempted coup collapsed,
both tribes massacred thousands of people and put hundreds of
thousands to flight. Please, government officials begged the
United Nations, send us peacekeepers.
</p>
<p> Last week the U.S. said no. James Jonah, Under Secretary-General
for Political Affairs, had warned Burundi not to expect any
help because the Security Council "has shown no inclination
to take on any new operations." In embattled Angola a recent
request for an increase in U.N. military observers has gone
unanswered. And in Somalia grudging participants are pressing
Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali to rethink that faltering
operation.
</p>
<p> Strapped for cash, short of manpower, criticized for its performance,
the U.N. has reached the end of its capacity for settling global
disputes. "We are at a critical stage," says Kofi Annan, Under
Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations, "because we have
been asked to do too much with too little." In 1988, when U.N.
peacekeepers won the Nobel Peace Prize, their numbers totaled
just over 10,000. This year almost 80,000 blue helmets are deployed
around a post-cold war world in which peace has only been achieved
piecemeal. Troops still patrol truce lines, but now they also
monitor elections, protect human rights, train local police,
guard humanitarian relief deliveries and take up arms against
those who get in their way.
</p>
<p> The burgeoning operations have not been accompanied by any serious
reassessment of the U.N.'s capability to manage them effectively.
Jonah acknowledged that the peacekeepers have become "bystanders"
in Somalia. An internal report states that "the U.N. lacks the
technical, administrative and logistical tools required to implement
effectively the peacekeeping agenda."
</p>
<p> Mistakes and miscues made in the field bear out that assessment.
In Mogadishu a lack of proper equipment has cost scores of lives.
Pakistan sent 5,000 troops who did not have telephones, walkie-talkies,
flak jackets, tear gas and even batons. Gear was eventually
provided by other countries, but not before some of the poorly
protected troops died in ambushes, and Somali civilians were
killed when soldiers without riot gear fired their guns to dispel
angry crowds. The U.N. has yet to organize an efficient communications
network or stockpile enough rations. At one point food and water
for the peacekeepers dropped well below a week's supply; someone
had miscounted the number of troops. "That's a court-martial
offense in my country," says a U.N. military adviser.
</p>
<p> Yasushi Akashi, who ran the U.N. mission in Cambodia, looks
back on that $1.5 billion operation with some skepticism. "The
quality of personnel was not uniformly outstanding," he says.
"Civil administration was an area in which the U.N. had no experience."
The peacekeepers were supposed to create a neutral political
environment for elections. U.N. officials acknowledged that
no adequate control over civil administration was ever established.
Materiel was routinely stolen from the airport before being
logged in. Cambodian cleaning women stripped the mission of
at least 10 computers before they were caught. The wait for
official supplies of pens and paper drove desperate staff members
to the local market. "When we start up in a new place, everything
is wrong," says Denis Beissel, acting director of the U.N.'s
Field Operations Division. "I don't have enough of anything
to respond quickly. No staff, no stock, no money."
</p>
<p> Countries that contribute troops insist on commanding them from
afar. Soldiers from Bulgaria, a hapless lot recruited through
local newspaper ads, scandalized the Cambodian provinces with
their drinking and womanizing, but the U.N. could not discipline
them. A U.N. task force has been created to investigate alleged
black marketeering by peacekeepers, as well as charges that
blue helmets regularly visited a Serb-run brothel outside Sarajevo
whose "prostitutes" were in fact Muslim and Croat prisoners.
</p>
<p> Management at headquarters is on overload. The quality of the
New York City staff is hostage to the U.N.'s policy of hiring
for geographic and sexual balance rather than expertise. There
are more jobs than people with experience to fill them. It takes
an average of 120 days for a supply request from the field to
be answered; the U.S. Army, by comparison, generally responds
in 14 to 21 days. Eight procurement officers were suspended
from duty in July, accused of favoring a helicopter company
in letting bids; they say they were just trying to act with
dispatch. Budgets languish in a labyrinth of competing bureaucracies,
and once expenditures are approved, the U.N. rarely receives
more than 30% of peacekeeping assessments from member states
within six months of fielding an operation. When the Yugoslav
mission expanded to cover all of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the
U.N. was under such financial pressure that it could not pay
for the quick deployment of troops from Western Europe. The
contingents had to cover their own expenses.
</p>
<p> No amount of improved management will make up for the shortfall
in money. The lack of resources is chronic: this year's estimated
$3.2 billion peacekeeping budget is more than $1 billion in
arrears. Congress has just cut the U.S. share of new bills from
nearly one-third to one-fourth. The shortage of funds results
from a lack of political will. "Somalia was reality therapy
for the international community," says the U.N.'s Annan. "Intellectually
we were ready for it. Emotionally we were not."
</p>
<p> Annan uses the word frantic to describe the effects of Washington's
planned withdrawal from Somalia by the end of next March. The
first U.S. soldiers depart in December, along with most of the
French; the Belgians are leaving this month. The Germans have
said they will withdraw in April; the Italians have suddenly
decided to "reevaluate" their continued presence. "If all these
people leave," says a U.N. official, "it will be total anarchy."
</p>
<p> Given the frequency with which member states are turning to
the U.N. to police world conflicts, Annan hopes they will start
thinking seriously about how to do it better. Boutros-Ghali's
call for the creation of a standby force has mostly been ignored.
If some more effective mechanism is not created, he fears, the
U.N. will go out of the peacekeeping business as quickly as
it has gone into it.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>