Gateway to Think Tanks
来源类型 | REPORT |
规范类型 | 报告 |
How to Get the UN/AU Hybrid Force Deployed to Darfur | |
John Prendergast; Colin Thomas-Jensen; Julia Spiegel | |
发表日期 | 2007-10-04 |
出版年 | 2007 |
语种 | 英语 |
概述 | Experts outline a plan for deploying a UN/AU hybrid force to Darfur to prevent UNAMID from failing before it even really exists. |
摘要 | ![]() Read the full report (pdf) Now that the United Nations Security Council has authorized a UN/AU hybrid peacekeeping force for Darfur, problem solved, right? The UN, in consultation with the AU, is moving quickly to amass and deploy UNAMID’s 26,000 military personnel and civilian police, attain sophisticated military hardware, and assemble facilities and infrastructure in the harsh, isolated terrain of Darfur. Yet UNAMID faces immediate impediments:
Having gained Khartoum’s consent on the deployment of UNAMID, international attention has shifted back to peace talks between Darfur’s many rebel factions and the Sudanese government that are scheduled to begin in Libya on October 27. Concerned nations rightly realized that while peacekeepers can help protect civilians and potentially improve stability in the short-term, only a fair, workable, and inclusive peace agreement can ultimately end the crisis and allow millions of displaced people to return to their homes and rebuild their lives. The difficulties that are compromising UNAMID’s prospects remind us that progress on peacekeeping and on the political process for a durable settlement must occur in parallel, and must both receive continuous international attention. Take the spotlight off either, and Khartoum works in the shadows to undermine previous pressure and sabotage previous progress. That has been the case with UNAMID since the adoption of Resolution 1769. To prevent UNAMID from failing even before it really exists, the international community must accompany the push for a peace agreement with more support for, and closer monitoring of, its deployment, including targeted sanctions against persons or parties intentionally impeding the operation. 1. Khartoum’s Roadblocks
As should have been expected, Khartoum is systematically impeding UNAMID’s deployment at every turn. To date, regime officials have taken the following actions:
A full-court diplomatic press is needed to force the Sudanese government remove these obstacles. The Security Council, particularly the five permanent members and the three African members, should highlight Khartoum’s dilatory tactics and set a clear deadline for the Government of Sudan’s acquiescence. If the government fails to meet that deadline, the Security Council should move to mandatory sanctions against the regime officials most responsible. Movement earlier this year by the U.S. and the United Kingdom to introduce a draft resolution in the Council imposing such targeted sanctions was halted by Khartoum’s purported unconditional agreement to the deployment of UN/AU peace-keepers to Darfur, and its promises to facilitate that deployment. However, continued flagrant transgressions by the Government of Sudan, coupled with serious diplomatic pressure, could be enough to compel China, Russia, and others to support (or at least not oppose) a new round of targeted sanctions—including asset freezes and travel bans—that would be lifted when all parties to the conflict are demonstrably cooperating fully with the deployment of UNAMID. Diplomacy must be given a reasonable time to succeed, but the international community must also maintain the threat of even further targeted sanctions as leverage to compel the government and the rebels to agree to a ceasefire and participate in peace talks. If that is to be achieved, it is critical that the UN Secretariat assertively record and publicly report to the Council on major violations by any party. Resolution 1769 requires monthly reporting to the Security Council on progress on implementation. Secretary-General Ban must make use of that vehicle to oblige member states to exercise their leverage with the Sudanese government. 2. Donor Letdowns
The UN has had little difficulty in finding countries willing to contribute troops to UNAMID. It has been less successful, however, in obtaining the logistical support and military equipment to deploy a force with the capacity to protect themselves and Darfur’s civilians from an array of armed groups spread across nearly 200,000 square miles of challenging, nearly trackless terrain. The United Nations does not have equipment stockpiled for peacekeeping missions—including the sophisticated hardware needed in such a logistically challenging mission—and relies on its member states for contributions. Moreover, there is a clear division of labor in these kinds of missions. The countries that contribute troops usually cannot afford to provide equipment, logistics, and money; those contributions come from major donors, such as the U.S., European powers, Japan, and others. However, these donors’ track record in Darfur is already abysmal. The inexcusable September 29 attack on the AU demonstrates just how, despite international promises of support, poorly equipped their forces are and highlights the need for immediate equipment contributions to UNAMID. As a leading member of the UN Security Council and a vocal supporter of the Hybrid force, the U.S. should bolster the mission now by doing the following:
3. Hybrid Hiccups
The African Union’s continued equivocation over the deployment of non-African forces to Darfur and cooperation gaps between the AU and UN threaten to severely impede full deployment of UNAMID. The Security Council has agreed that UNAMID will have an “African character,” but AU Commission Chairman Alpha Oumar Konare has since insisted on an all-African force, going so far as to reject units from Uruguay, Thailand, and Norway, all of which have significant peacekeeping experience and capacity. Chairman Konare’s resistance has undermined the cooperation needed between the UN and the AU to establish UN command and control of peace-keepers in Darfur by the end of 2007. His position is also troubling given that he first enunciated it in Khartoum after meeting with President Omer al-Bashir in August, and is being ever more sharply matched by Sudanese government statements also rejecting non-African peacekeepers. Many African countries have served admirably in UN peacekeeping missions, past and present, and several African countries, including Nigeria, Rwanda, and Ethiopia have volunteered forces for UNA-MID. However, the appalling attack on September 29 demonstrates the fundamental limitations of an all-African force in an environment like Darfur. African forces often lack basic equipment and requisite training for peacekeeping operations and, equally important, the logistical capacity to deploy quickly to remote regions. By contrast, traditional UN troop contributors such as India, Pakistan, and Malaysia can more quickly deploy large numbers of trained and equipped troops. At the planning and operations levels, the re- sources at the UN’s Department of Peacekeeping Operations dwarf and threaten to overwhelm the AU secretariat’s nascent peacekeeping unit. The Security Council, in particular the five permanent members and the three African members, should work assiduously behind the scenes to cement agreement from Chairman Konare on the participation of non-African forces and affirmation of the UN’s command and control role. Left to fester, these critical issues could undermine the mission’s effectiveness down the road. 4. A Sense of Urgency Needed
As if we needed any reminders, the recent violent escalation in Darfur and the direct full-scale assault on AU peacekeepers demonstrate the urgent need for a robust UNAMID. Shortly after President al-Bashir agreed to an immediate cessation of Humanitarian workers also continue to come under attack—gunmen recently shot and critically wounded three workers from the American NGO World Vision—and access to vulnerable populations is decreasing. Even in some displaced persons camps, malnutrition rates have reached 30 percent—twice the emergency threshold. The world’s largest humanitarian response—upon which more than 4 million Darfurians now depend—is under serious threat. A swift and fully supported deployment is critical to providing protection for vulnerable civilians, bolstering the peace process and showing Khartoum that it cannot give the international community the run around—yet again with impunity. With the Security Council’s deadline for the UN to assume command and control of peacekeeping operations in Darfur on December 31, international attention must focus now on securing land, water, and Khartoum’s full commitment to the speedy deployment of the force. Darfur’s civilians have waited far too long for adequate protection. Further delays will only deepen their frustration and leave them unprotected at a time when the threats are multiplying at the local level in Darfur. Read the full report: The mission of ENOUGH, a joint initiative founded by the International Crisis Group and the Center for American Progress, is to end crimes against humanity in Darfur, northern Uganda and eastern Congo, and to prevent future mass atrocities wherever they may occur. For more information, visit www.enoughproject.org |
主题 | Foreign Policy and Security |
URL | https://www.americanprogress.org/issues/security/reports/2007/10/04/3588/how-to-get-the-unau-hybrid-force-deployed-to-darfur/ |
来源智库 | Center for American Progress (United States) |
资源类型 | 智库出版物 |
条目标识符 | http://119.78.100.153/handle/2XGU8XDN/434381 |
推荐引用方式 GB/T 7714 | John Prendergast,Colin Thomas-Jensen,Julia Spiegel. How to Get the UN/AU Hybrid Force Deployed to Darfur. 2007. |
条目包含的文件 | 条目无相关文件。 |
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