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About the Brahimi Report The United Nations
was founded to prevent war. The current system of Peacekeeping needs
serious reform. In the past, the UN has deployed all too often into on-going
conflicts when they should be entering to keep the peace in post-conflict
situations. This panel makes the following recommendations to improve the
system.
The first step towards peace is conflict prevention, including
fact-finding missions and humanitarian aid and development.
Peace-building, or rehabilitation after a conflict, is also essential to
peace. The UN needs significantly more support to be able to implement the
rule of law through judicial systems and civilian police in post-conflict
areas.
Clear, executable mandates are fundamental to effective peacekeeping and
maintaining the credibility of the UN. Peacekeepers should be given the
power to defend themselves and civilians. The Secretariat should provide
accurate data regarding what is needed in the field to the Security Council.
The Security Council should, in turn, pass mandates that are unambiguous so
it will be clear how to carry them out.
Peacekeeping needs greater power of analysis and foresight. To accomplish
this, we propose an Information and Strategic Analysis Secretariat
within the Executive Committee on Peace and Security. This Secretariat would
keep databases, analyze policy, create strategy, and act as a watch dog for
potential conflicts.
Mission leaders should plan together before they get to
the field. In order to make this possible the Secretariat should keep
diverse lists of experienced military officers, civilian police leaders,
civilian specialists, and administrative support, all able to leave on short
notice.
The first weeks after a cease-fire are critical for establishing peace and
the credibility of a new mission. The UN should have a mission completely
installed within 30 days for traditional missions and 90 days for complex
missions. Several changes are necessary to be able to accomplish this
goal.
Member States should form partnerships and train troops together in
brigade-size (5000) forces so that they will be accustomed to working
together. The Secretariat should make sure these troops are well trained
and equipped. Civilian Police should also train together in regional
groups.
There should be at least five mission start-up kits in Brindisi, Italy at
all times so that missions have supplies to implement their mandates
quickly. Mission leadership should have more power to spend money to get
supplies throughout the mission.
Peacekeeping Headquarters needs significantly more financial and staff
support. Headquarters should be maintained permanently instead of
trying to rebuild it and find funds every time a new mission arises.
In order to further enhance and clarify Headquarters, Integrated Mission
Task Forces should be created for each individual mission. Those
responsible for political analysis, military operations, civilian police,
electoral assistance, human rights, development, humanitarian assistance,
refugees and displaced persons, public information, logistics, finance and
recruitment would form one body so that field personnel have one source of
synthesized analysis and strategy.
Information Technology is a powerful resource for peacekeeping. For
it to be useful, however, a senior official of peacekeeping information
services should be appointed. A Peace Operations Extranet should also be
established so that missions have access to each other as well as
peacekeeping databases, analyses, and lessons learned.
All of these changes would significantly improve UN peacekeeping, but
attitudes need to shift to make them possible. Unless the UN begins to
base employment on the merit of their employees, these recommendations
will not work. Further, unless Member States show the political will to
support peacekeeping with personnel as well as financially and logistically,
the UN will have no power to carry out any mandate.
+ Summary of the Brahimi Report |