Understanding Peacekeeping. Alex J. Bellamy

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is the ongoing and inherently political struggle between proponents of the more limited Westphalian conception of peace operations and the more ambitious agenda of those who understand them in post-Westphalian terms. It is important to recall, however, that even the post-Westphalian approach has some important practical limits, notably most of its advocates suggest that peace operations should deploy only with the consent of the de jure host government except in the rarest of circumstances.

      A related theme is the struggle to conceptualize and respond effectively to the changing character of armed conflict. In particular, the design of peace operations should be based on a sophisticated and accurate understanding of key concepts related to armed conflict, notably globalization, stabilization, counter-insurgency, counter-terrorism and mass atrocities. Ultimately, peace operations will remain little more than band-aids or exercises in damage limitation unless they are based on an accurate theory of change for how their personnel and other international instruments of conflict resolution can turn war-torn territories into zones of stable peace.

      Finally, as we will discuss throughout this book, it is important to remember that the United Nations does not have a monopoly on peacekeeping. Numerous multilateral organizations and states have conducted peace operations. An important part of understanding peacekeeping is therefore understanding the partnerships that have emerged and the ongoing struggle to professionalize and institutionalize the multiple bureaucracies of peace operations. This is not to suggest that peace operations can or should ever become formulaic. They are, by definition, responses to mostly unforeseen crises. But there is value to maintaining a degree of core bureaucratic and institutional predictability and capacity, as long as those mechanisms can remain flexible in responding to unique crises, work with partners, and adapt when circumstances change. This is something with which every organization and actor engaged in peace operations has to struggle.

      In order to explore these issues, this book is divided into four parts. Part I, ‘Concepts and Issues’, provides an overview of the main theoretical debates and technical issues relevant to contemporary peace operations. Chapter 1 investigates different ways of understanding peace operations and their relationship to broader processes and trends within global politics. As the number, range and complexity of peace operations has grown, so too has the number of theories and concepts used by analysts and practitioners alike to explain and understand them. Chapter 2 then develops this approach by identifying different types of peacekeepers (individual states, coalitions of states and international organizations, especially regional arrangements and the UN) and explaining how peace operations are assembled.

      As part II demonstrates, peace operations have not evolved in straightforward ‘generations’ with clear and obvious chronological phases. The reality is far messier and linked to the distinct forms of armed conflict confronting peacekeepers. Part III, ‘The Purposes of Peace Operations’ (chapters 611), therefore offers a conceptual framework supported by short practical case studies that highlight the distinct strategic objectives peace operations are intended to achieve. We focus here on the strategic intent behind these operations rather than on the means employed to achieve them. We identify six strategic purposes for peace operations.

       Prevention: Conducted with the consent of the host state, preventive deployments envisage peacekeepers either preventing the outbreak of violent conflict or avoiding another form of crisis from materializing.

       Observation: This is the hallmark of ‘traditional peacekeeping’ where peacekeepers are deployed to monitor ceasefire agreements and act as a confidence-building mechanism, thereby hopefully facilitating peacemaking between the conflict parties. Such observation missions take place in the period between a ceasefire and a political settlement to the conflict.

       Assistance: These multidimensional operations involve the deployment of military, police and civilian personnel to assist the conflict parties in the implementation of a political settlement or the transition from a peace heavily supported by international actors to one that is self-sustaining. They tend to take place after both a ceasefire and a political settlement have been reached. The mandate of such operations revolves around the implementation of the peace settlement and responding to the negative legacies of the armed conflict, such as humanitarian strife, displaced populations, and disarmament, demobilization and reintegration (DDR) issues.

       Enforcement: Peace enforcement operations aim to impose the will of the UN Security Council upon some or all of the parties to a particular armed conflict. Peace enforcement operations are relatively rare but are the closest manifestation of the collective security role originally envisaged for the UN by the authors of its Charter, though they have tended to depart from that vision in important respects.

       Stabilization: These multidimensional but usually military-heavy operations are intended to facilitate a transition from war to peace in the context of failed or partial peace agreements and where organized violence continues. As part of this remit, they are mandated to degrade and contain designated ‘spoilers’, deliver short-term peace dividends to local populations, and support the extension and consolidation of host-state authority.

       Administration: These are also multidimensional operations deployed after a peace agreement, but they are distinguished by their assumption of sovereign authority over a particular territory. In addition to keeping the peace, protecting civilians, supporting peace agreements, and the other activities associated with large and complex operations, transitional administrations have the authority to make and enforce the law, exercise control over aspects of a territory’s economy, infrastructure and borders, regulate the media, and administer the judicial system. In their liberal variant, they are designed to help establish liberal democratic

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