Peacekeeping
Cate Malek
Research Assistant, Conflict
Research Consortium
University of Colorado
Based on a longer essay on Peacekeeping, written by Julian Oeullet and the Conflict Management Program at SAIS for the Intractable Conflict Knowledge Base Project
Definition:
When a ceasefire has been negotiated, but conflict remains, peacekeeping
forces come in to try to reduce tensions between conflicting parties and prevent
violations of the ceasefire.
Users:
Anyone wishing to support a peace process for a violent conflict.
Description:
Violent conflicts that require U.N. intervention generally have three phases.
First, violent conflict between parties is ongoing. In this stage, peacemakers
attempt to end the violence. In phase two, a ceasefire has been established, but
peacekeepers are needed to enforce it. In phase three, peacebuilding efforts
attempt to rebuild infrastructure, political institutions, and trust in order to
prevent future conflict. These phases can overlap-peacekeeping and peacemaking,
for example, can go on at the same time. But generally, peacekeeping occurs
after a fragile peace has at least been negotiated.
Peacekeeping forces have six characteristics:
- neutrality (impartiality in the dispute and nonintervention in the
fighting)
- light military equipment ยท use of force only in self-defense
- consent from all parties
- prerequisite ceasefire agreement
- voluntary contribution of troops and other peacekeepers
Peacekeeping operations (PKOs) usually perform the following missions:
- Preventive deployment to conflict zones
- Verifying cease-fire agreements, safe areas, and troop withdrawal
- Disarming and demobilizing combatants
- Clearing mines
- Providing security for humanitarian aid and peacebuilding
No PKO has a chance at success without all parties agreeing to participate.
To promote peace, combatants must be willing to consider peace as an option, and
external powers to consider peace as valuable and worthwhile. There is evidence
that if major powers will it, then warring parties can be forced to the
bargaining table. Thus, the role of the international community is to create
peace and the role of the conflicting parties is to legitimize it.
Peacekeeping has not been an overwhelming success. The United Nations is the
most experienced in peacekeeping missions. Since 1945, the U.N. has deployed 55
PKOs. Depending on one's criteria, the number of successful U.N. missions ranges
from none to almost all of them. A standard evaluation of success is based not
just on peacekeeping, but also on peacebuilding. Peace, according to these
criteria, is first, the temporary absence of violence, and second, the
possibility that it will last. Most people agree that peacekeeping forces are
effective for the first criteria, but have difficulty with the second.
The ideal peacekeeping mission would have a clear entry plan, establish a
lasting peace, and leave behind a set of stable institutions for ensuring that
peace, all in about three years. Currently, of the 55 U.N. PKOs, 15 are ongoing.
At least 10 have been going on for more than 10 years and five of these have
been going on for more than 20 years. Five of the 15 are too recent to be
evaluated. Of the remaining 40 cases, very few qualify as unmitigated successes.
Nevertheless, peacekeeping is generally superior to what would have happened
without any such efforts. The goal of PKOs is admirable and even partial
successes in violent conflicts are desirable. However, the goal of PKOs should
not be to establish an unstable, short-lived peace, e.g.,. Liberia or Zimbabwe,
but to provide a stable environmental for peacebuilding, which will ultimately
establish a lasting peace, e.g,, Mozambique. The only hope for successful
peacekeeping operations requires sustained interest from the international
community, along with detailed plans for peace and state building. These ideals
have been clearly set out in Boutros Boutros-Ghali's Agenda for Peace, but have
yet to be realized.
Examples:
Cyprus is a good example of how difficult it is to judge a peacekeeping
mission. Civil war broke out in Cyprus in 1963. In 1964 a U.N. Peacekeeping
Force was deployed. Besides a coup d'etat in 1974, the peacekeeping force in
Cyprus has kept the peace, but hasn't reconciled the combatants. The
peacekeeping force remains today.
Applications:
Peacekeeping is widely utilized in the international sector after a peace
agreement has been signed in highly visible conflicts. But since it costs a lot
of money and the costs are generally borne by countries who do not stand to
benefit directly from the peace, it can be hard to raise the necessary forces.
The lack of apparent success of PKOs also makes their establishment and
maintenance a challenge.
Links to Related Articles:
Peacebuilding
Peacemaking
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