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U.N.
Peacekeeping More Assertive,
Creating Risk for Civilians
By
Colum Lynch
Washington Post Staff Writer
UNITED
NATIONS -- On July 6, about 1,400 heavily armed U.N. peacekeepers
from Brazil, Peru and Jordan, backed by Argentine and Chilean
helicopters, marched into a Haitian slum for an early-morning
raid on the home of Emmanuel "Dread" Wilme, a
gang leader who was agitating for the return to power of
former Haitian president Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
Operation
Iron Fist killed Wilme and at least six other gang members,
according to a confidential U.N. account of the raid. But
the bloody gun battle between the U.N. forces and Wilme's
followers failed to dislodge the gang from its Port-au-Prince
slum turf and led to the injury of dozens of civilians,
primarily women and children, according to U.N. officials
and an American doctor who tended the wounded.
The 12-hour U.N. operation in Cité Soleil signaled
an escalation of force in Haiti, where the Brazilian-led
U.N. mission had been criticized for months by the United
States and others for its failure to confront Haiti's armed
gangs.
It
also reflected a shift in tactics for U.N. peacekeeping
troops, who by the mid-1990s were going out of their way
to avoid combat. Now, the blue-helmeted troops are showing
a renewed willingness to use considerable firepower against
armed groups that they deem a threat to peace efforts.
"There
has been a fundamental shift in peacekeeping that very few
people have noticed, where U.N. peacekeepers are actually
taking proactive, offensive preemptive action against threats,"
said Nancy Soderberg, a former U.S. ambassador who oversaw
U.N. peacekeeping for the U.S. mission to the United Nations
from 1997 to 2000. "The United States learned this
when they invaded Haiti in 1994. Basically someone tried
to attack them, [the Americans] blew them away and that
was the end of that."
The
United Nations largely retreated from offensive combat operations
after the troubled U.N. operation in Somalia in the early
1990s, when a hunt for Somali warlord Mohamed Farah Aideed
contributed to 113 U.N. combat deaths and raised questions
about the capacity of peacekeepers to quash even ill-equipped
armed factions. The confrontation also resulted in a disastrous
U.S. raid on an Aideed stronghold in Mogadishu that left
18 U.S. soldiers dead and triggered a U.S. pull-back from
U.N. peacekeeping.
More
recently, the United Nations has used more aggressive offensive
tactics in Haiti, Congo and Sierra Leone. In Congo, U.N.
troops supported by Indian-piloted attack helicopters killed
more than 50 rebels in a raid on a marketplace in March.
The
fighting has received relatively scant attention at a time
when U.S. forces are engaged in more extensive conflicts
in Iraq and Afghanistan. But it has contributed to an increase
in U.N. combat fatalities over the past two years. The death
toll for U.N. peacekeepers increased from 64 deaths in 2003
to 91 in 2004. The count reached 64 in the first six months
of this year. There have been 22 combat fatalities in Haiti
and Congo, including nine Bangladeshi peacekeepers killed
February in an ambush in Ituri, Congo.
Soderberg,
now a vice president of the nonprofit International Crisis
Group, said her organization has urged the Security Council
to explicitly authorize peacekeepers in Congo to use force
preemptively to counter possible threats from armed groups.
But she said the United Nations will have to balance such
assertiveness against the potential for civilians to become
caught in crossfire.
The
U.N. Stabilization Mission in Haiti was established in April
2004 to maintain peace after a U.S. military force withdrew
from Haiti. U.S. forces had gone to Haiti to restore peace
after armed opponents of the government launched an insurrection
against President Aristide. The United States pressed Aristide
to flee into exile or face likely death at the hands of
the insurgents.
Confronted
with violent opposition from Aristide loyalists, the U.N.
mission has stepped up its military tactics in recent months
to ensure stability in advance of elections.
Operation
Iron Fist began at 4:30 a.m. as an advance unit of Peruvian
peacekeepers slipped into the neighborhood of Bois Neuf
in Cité Soleil to launch a surprise attack on Wilme's
residence. But the force quickly encountered resistance
from well-armed and -trained followers of Wilme, who opened
fire from three directions. The Peruvians responded forcefully,
blasting 5,500 rounds of ammunition, grenades and mortars
at Wilme's residence.
A
Brazilian mechanized company providing perimeter security
for the Peruvians, meanwhile, was attacked by 30 to 40 gang
members. Wilme's fighters pinned the U.N. peacekeepers down
for seven hours, targeting them with sniper fire and Molotov
cocktails as they struggled to extract two armored personnel
carriers from the mud. Battling their way out, the Brazilians
fired more than 16,700 rounds of ammunition in the densely
populated neighborhood.
David
Olson, an American physician who recently served in Haiti
with the French medical agency Doctors Without Borders,
said Operation Iron Fist caused "a lot of collateral
damage." Olson said that 27 Haitians, mostly women
and children, streamed into his clinic after the July 6
operation. Olson said that he could not establish who was
responsible for the injuries, but he said that as many as
half the victims said they had been wounded by the U.N.
peacekeepers.
He
said one woman in her 26th week of pregnancy suffered a
bullet wound in her uterus that killed her baby. He recalled
tending another woman who had been struck by a bullet that
sliced through a wall in her home. "I asked her who
shot her and she said, 'Minustah,' " a French acronym
for the U.N. Stabilization Mission. "She was sitting
in her house going about her day and got a bullet in the
back."
The
United Nations does not compile records on civilian deaths
during peacekeeping operations, but the top peacekeeping
official, Jean-Marie Guéhenno, conceded that "there
may have been some civilian casualties" during the
raid. "We have been looking very closely at those accusations,"
he said. There is no reliable tally of civilians or gang
members killed.
A
U.N. account of the operation concluded afterward that "the
area remains under gang control. Security forces are still
unable to enter into the inner areas of Cité Soleil
or conduct foot patrols."
Still,
Guéhenno said it was necessary to stand up to armed
groups that threaten to undermine peacekeeping missions.
But he said U.N. commanders had to strike a balance between
engaging in all-out warfare and resorting to the passive
military posture that characterized U.N. operations in Srebrenica,
where Dutch peacekeepers stood down as Bosnian Serb troops
killed thousands of unarmed civilians. "You don't want
any Srebrenica, and you don't want Mogadishu," he said.
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