Peacekeeping: we need serious rethinking.

AuthorVinogradov, Sergei
PositionInterview with former UN Under-Secretary-General Brian Urquhart - Interview

Sir Brian, who joined the United Nations at the very inception of the Organization, retired 41 years later as Under-Secretary-General after a career which saw direct association with the formative and innovative years of international peacekeeping. He has continued to be an active and articulate commentator on issues related to the United Nations, as writer, scholar and thinker; his published works include a biography of Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold. Here are some of the thoughts he shared:

How Peacekeeping Came into Being

When the major European empires began to disintegrate, a whole series of power vacuums developed, which had to be filled in some way, and we needed some kind of a buffer arrangement as a pretext for not having conflict. The structure of the UN Charter was not going to work, since it was what President Roosevelt called "the four policemen", the alliance which had won the war - the Soviet Union, the United States, Britain and China - who were to remain together to supervise and, if necessary, enforce the peace and provide the whole basis of Chapter VI and Chapter VII of the UN Charter. And then it became very clear that that was a complete non-starter, it was not going to work.

There was a fundamental common interest on both sides in the cold war in not being dragged into a nuclear conflict. Fortunately, they both felt very strongly about it-otherwise, we would not be here to discuss this today. When we got a really dangerous situation, then we got agreement. Take the Congo (the Republic of the Congo, now Zaire). Both the Soviet Union and the United States were extremely uneasy about what could have been a direct clash between the two in the middle of Africa, for which neither of them was properly prepared. And so they both originally welcomed the idea of putting a UN force into the Congo, which would be the pretext for neither of them for taking it over.

The Post-Cold-War Years

One of the many troubles with the United Nations is that it is not a rational or logical organization. Governments do things for political or emotional reasons, very often not thinking where it's leading them. At the end of the cold war, it suddenly became dear that the members of the Security Council could actually agree on a great deal more than they had been able to agree on before. And there was all this talk about the "new world order"; there was Desert Storm, which ostensibly was a great success, which had shown that the United Nations could sponsor a major action.

And I think there was a lot of foolishness as a result. Whenever some particularly disagreeable and unexpected problem cropped up, like Somalia and the former Yugoslavia, it seemed easiest to send a UN peacekeeping force. I had been out of the UN by that time for six years.

Problems and Pitfalls that Emerged

I was horrified at the total lack of understanding of what peacekeeping was based on and what the success of it had been due to, which was an extremely careful study of the conditions, of giving mandates that were workable, of nurturing the political support that you need to make these operations work. I think that after "Desert Storm" everybody became obsessed with the idea that you could just go there and everything would be fine - use force sometimes and, at other times, not. Well, that's disaster: if you have to use force, you have to really use force; and that's not a peacekeeping operation.

I think, for example, it was a scandal to put a peacekeeping force into Bosnia. There were no...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT