Maintaining Peace In Unconventional Conflicts
Since the end of the cold war, the world has seen major changes in the number
and nature of armed conflicts. The proliferation of civil wars and other internal
conflicts within states now threaten international peace and security and
cause massive human suffering. Peacekeeping, which developed as a means of
dealing with inter-state conflicts, is now being applied increasingly to intra-state
conflicts and civil wars. As a result, peacekeepers often find themselves
in internal conflicts where irregular forces and militias ignore ceasefire
agreements, where the rule of law is nonexistent and the constant shifting
lines of confrontation often complicate their tasks. Local parties sign peace
accords to "buy time" and renege on their commitments and in many
times undermine the peace agreements by resorting to violence, such as was
the case in Cambodia, Liberia, Angola, Somalia, Sierra Leone and Rwanda, just
to name a few. In these situations, peacekeepers have sought to stabilize
the situations and minimize the suffering of non-combatants through negotiations
and political pressure.
However, there are times when the jobs of peacekeepers have become impossible.
Questions of what tasks should peacekeepers undertake and how prepared are
the peacekeepers to confront the lingering forces of war and violence are
being raised in the aftermath of the crisis in Rwanda, Bosnia and Herzegovina
and Somalia. These conflicts demonstrate the limits of peacekeeping and the
unwillingness of sponsors to place their forces in harm's way unless occasioned
through peace enforcement activities under national control, such as the Kosovo
mission. The memories of dead American soldiers in Somalia, the dead Belgian
peacekeepers in Rwanda, and the kidnapping of United Nations peacekeepers
in Sierra Leone explain some of the difficulties that United Nations member
states face when they attempt to convince their legislatures and their citizens
to support United Nations peace operations.
The traditional idea of peacekeeping tries to prevent hostilities from erupting
or resuming or to help a society rebuild in the aftermath of the war by using
the minimum level of force necessary to achieve their aims. However, internal
conflicts and civil wars where multiple armed factions with different political
objectives and fractured lines of command demand that peacekeepers' mandates
become more clear and defined to address current international humanitarian
and security concerns.
In order to be successful in maintaining the peace in present times, peacekeeping
missions must have a sound peace-building strategy, must have a clear and
definite mandate that authorizes the use of an adequate amount of force to
protect the civilian population, must have the political support and the cooperation
of United Nations countries or regional members, and must be able to rapidly
deploy in trouble spots.
Lessons learned from the Sierra Leonean conflict and some recommendations
The intervention of the United Nations, ECOWAS and the United Kingdom was
justified. In order to avert the disintegration of an already deteriorating
humanitarian situation and massive human rights abuses, foreign intervention
was required. The intervention into the Sierra Leone crisis was necessary
to halt the senseless fighting between supporters of the government and the
RUF rebels that had led to the displacement, both internally and externally,
of thousands of civilians. The migration of civilians traumatized by years
of senseless fighting created a refugee crisis within the West African sub-region
and also threatened regional and international security in many ways. The
civil conflict and the influx of refugees to neighboring states led to the
rise of human trafficking, identity theft such as passport fraud, prostitution,
slavery, and the spread of various diseases.
The conflict also posed an international environmental threat because rebel
forces exploited the natural resources of the country, without any regard
to any environmental consequences. The continued fighting contributed to the
degradation of the environment because of the toxins released from firearms
and the pollution of rivers and drinking water by the dumping human remains
into rivers and wells.
The intervention of the foreign community into the Sierra Leone crisis was
the result of a sense of the moral duty of all nations to respond and aid
other nations when they are being faced with a humanitarian or civil disaster.
The nations facing the greatest threat from such a disaster must be willing
to contribute and bear the greater responsibility of aiding the nation in
need. If the nations that face the greatest threat cannot respond adequately,
then it should be the moral duty of other nations to aid them in their endeavors
to ensure that any peacekeeping, peace enforcement or rescue operations have
a clear mission and are carryout effectively.
The intervention in the civil conflict in Sierra Leone has raised the question
of when is it appropriate for the United Nations or other coalition of the
willing states to use force. It is paramount that the use of force must always
be the last resort of any peacekeeping mission or diplomatic policy. When
all diplomatic efforts and all peace initiatives have been fully exhausted,
the use of force must be used only if such force will save the lives of the
civilian population, lives of members of the peace operations and personnel
not involved in the conflict and such use of force will avert a humanitarian
and/or massive human rights disaster. The use of force should be sanctioned
when continued fighting and instability pose a potential, immediate and significant
threat to the world and regional peace and security.
The United Nations should be willing to endorse ad hoc coalitions such as
the United Kingdom's role in Sierra Leone and regional peacekeeping efforts
such as ECOMOG's role in Sierra Leone and Liberia because of the following
reasons:
1. the willingness of a nation or a group of nations to respond to the humanitarian
or civil disaster of another nations should be encouraged; and,
2. the ability of that nation or group of nations to respond immediately to
the situation so as to avoid a humanitarian or civil disaster should be taken
into account when endorsing such actions.
Even though all the sides in Sierra Leonean conflict did not approve of the
intervention, these interventions were necessary to save lives and respond
to the immediate threat it posed to regional stability. The United Nations
should not object to moves made by coalition of willing states to intervene
in these situations. The coalition of willing states should be approved when
United Nations sanctions and intervention efforts have failed and when such
coalitions would protect and enhance international security.
The United Nations should create categories in which situations could be classified.
Situations could be classified into three categories:
1. Inter-state conflicts - conflict between nations that would be dealt with
in accordance with traditional peacekeeping and diplomatic policies.
2. Intra-state conflicts - when dealing with intra-state conflicts, the United
Nations should look at the humanitarian situation on the ground and the willingness
of the parties to reach a peaceful situation. If the parties are willing to
negotiate a peaceful solution, policies administered under traditional peacekeeping
and diplomacy should be applied.
3. Unconventional conflicts - where massive human rights abuses have occurred
or occurring and there is a degrading humanitarian situation on the ground,
traditional peacekeeping and diplomatic policies should not be used. Peace
enforcement under the United Nations or a coalition of willing states or ad
hoc coalition of willing states should be allowed. If there is no legitimate
central authority, coalition or United Nations' forces must establish a presence
in the area and create an atmosphere to create dialogue, to respond to the
humanitarian disaster and halt massive human rights abuses. When there is
a legitimate authority present, coalition or United Nations' forces must secure
an area, create a buffer zone, to respond immediately to the humanitarian
crisis while discussing ways to implement a cease-fire.
In each situation discussed above, coalition or United Nations' forces must
make every attempt to protect civilians and use force only if necessary. The
United Nations must do all it can to intervene very at the beginning of every
crisis. If the need arise to send in peacekeeping troops, they must be well
armed, the mission must be supported both financially and politically by members
of the United Nations, and the United Nations must make sure that the peacekeeping
soldiers are well trained.
Further, the impartiality of the United Nations must not be seen as weakness.
The United Nations must respond to each attack with the necessary amount of
force needed to repel and subdue the attacking forces and should treat each
warring parties according to their behavior. The United Nations must also
be willing to sign or ratify a resolution agreeing to the use of peace enforcement
if a situation like Sierra Leone occurs. If the United Nations must imposed
sanctions on a nation or a warring faction, sanctions should target high-ranking
members of the regime and all measures must be taken to limit the impact on
the civilian population. Some examples of targeting members of a regime or
organization under sanctions could be the freezing of foreign assets by nations
of the United Nations, a United Nations' ban on travel by high ranking officials
and their families, the expulsion by foreign nations of certain individuals
who are connected to the regime or organization and the halting of any kind
of economic aid by foreign governments. However, there should continue to
be attempts to negotiate a peaceful solution to the crisis and continuous
pressure should be applied on all sides to the conflict.