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Commentary


Warning: NATO-UN record is bad news for Canada


JAMES BISSETT 

 

>From Wednesday's Globe and Mail

February 6, 2008 at 7:28 AM EST

 

John Manley's Afghan report focuses rightly on the willingness of our NATO
allies to send additional combat troops to Kandahar as a condition of our
remaining in Afghanistan, but there is a broader issue for Canadians: the
poor track record of NATO and the United Nations in bringing peace, order
and good governance to the countries they have occupied after a military
intervention.

The most obvious example is Kosovo. It has been almost nine years since UN
Resolution 1244 brought an end to the NATO bombing of Slobodan Milosevic's
Serbia. That resolution, which laid down the parameters for the future of
Kosovo by providing for a functioning civil society with democratic
institutions, called for the return of all refugees and the disarming of the
Kosovo Liberation Army, provided for a limited number of Serbian security
forces to patrol Kosovo's borders and to guard Christian holy places, and
reaffirmed Serbia's sovereignty over Kosovo while guaranteeing the Albanian
community a high degree of local autonomy. It was a blueprint for success.

Sadly, none of the provisions of 1244 were fulfilled by NATO and the UN.
Under the watchful eyes of 40,000 NATO troops and UN officials, the
Albanians were allowed to expel almost all of the non-Albanian population
from Kosovo and to destroy 150 Christian churches and monasteries.

Notwithstanding billions of dollars in development aid, Kosovo remains the
poorest area of Europe. There is massive unemployment, the per capita income
is $1,600 a year and infant mortality is the highest in Europe. It has
become a "black hole" where crime, corruption and violence flourish.


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Kosovo is a small territory in southern Serbia, less than twice the size of
Prince Edward Island; it has a population of about two million. Yet, after
eight years of occupation, NATO and the UN have proved incapable of bringing
law and order. In other words, they have made a mess of it.

Afghanistan is a vast and mountainous country about the size of Alberta. It
has a population of 32 million with a long history of resisting foreign
invaders. NATO forces, now numbering 15,000, are facing a fanatical enemy
determined to force them to withdraw, and even though these forces are
supplemented by 28,000 U.S. soldiers, it is doubtful that any military force
is large enough to bring peace and stability to the country.

The Kosovo failure should serve as a warning that NATO and the UN are
institutions ill-equipped to carry out the multifaceted task they have taken
on in Afghanistan. The Manley report has pointed out that UN personnel in
Kabul suffer from a "lack of leadership, direction and effective
co-ordination from UN headquarters in New York." That is nothing new:
Mismanagement has been a chronic problem characterizing UN operations
everywhere.

An added problem is that NATO itself is an organization that has not yet
found its role in a post-Soviet world. When it was founded in 1949, it was
designed as a purely defensive group with two goals: Defend the West from
any possible Soviet attack; and uphold the principles of the UN Charter
while never using, or threatening to use, force in the resolution of
international disputes.

With the collapse of the Soviet Union, NATO lost one of its primary reasons
for existence. The second reason - to act in accordance with the UN
Charter's principles - was seen by some NATO members as an inhibiting factor
in dealing with issues involving human-rights abuses or rogue states.

The turning point for NATO came with its military intervention in Kosovo
allegedly for humanitarian reasons. The bombing of Serbia was done in
violation of the UN Charter and NATO's Article 1. During the bombing
campaign, in April of 1999, on the occasion of NATO's 50th birthday, Bill
Clinton announced a new "strategic concept" for NATO. The new role
essentially meant the alliance could and would intervene wherever and
whenever it felt necessary to preserve peace and security. Its days as a
purely defensive organization had ended.

As with any multinational organization, NATO has become difficult to manage.
Its new role is not clearly defined, and decision-making is slow and
cumbersome. Not all of its members are enthusiastic about the Afghan
mission, where the chances of success are slim and the cost in blood and
gold may become prohibitive. Others see it as a multinational facade to mask
the unilateral aims of the Bush administration. This is not a formula for
success.

Like it or not, Canada must fulfill its NATO obligations. But let us be
clear about what those obligations are and the price we pay to fulfill them.

James Bissett is a former Canadian ambassador to Yugoslavia

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