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building
peace
"Post
Taliban Pakistan: A Tentative Recipe for Change"
Kamran Asdar Ali, Anthropology, University of Texas, Austin
"Prospects
for Regional Integration in Central Asia"
Alisher Ilkhamov, Sociology, Expert Center for Social Research,
Uzbekistan
"A
Roadmap for Afghanistan"
Radha Kumar, Peace and Conflict Studies, Council on Foreign
Relations, New York City
"One
Size Doesn't Fit All: Addressing Diversity in the Needs and
Development Capacities of Afghan Women, Short and Long-Term"
Margaret Mills, Near Eastern Languages and Cultures, Ohio
State University
"Networks
of Dissent: Islamism and Reform in Saudi Arabia"
Gwenn Okruhlik, Political Science, University of Arkansas
"Afghanistan
and Threats to Human Security"
Barnett Rubin, Political Science, New York University
"On
War and Peace-Building: Unfinished Legacy of the 1990s"
Susan Woodward, Political Science, The City University of
New York
see
also...
"The
Attack on Humanity: Conflict and Management"
William Zartman
other
topics ...
Globalization
Fundamentalism(s)
Terrorism and
Democratic Virtues
Competing
Narratives
New
War?
New World Order?
Recovery
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On
War and Peace-Building: Unfinished Legacy of the 1990s
Susan Woodward, Professor of Political Science, The Graduate
Center, The City University of New York
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View/print
essay only |
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In the hours
and days after September 11, academics and political commentators
alike seemed agreed on one judgment: "the world will never
be the same again." U.S. President George W. Bush was reported
to have experienced a religious calling in which the event
would shape the rest of his presidency. And for many who were
frustrated with the indecisiveness of the 1990s, a decade
floundering unsuccessfully to replace the Cold War with a
coherent set of principles and goals ordering the international
system, the U.S.-led anti-terrorist campaign seemed to repeat
the elements that had been so decisive in 1947-50 - a new
global alignment of states around a singular enemy and a rhetoric
promising open-ended struggle, inaugurated with a military
campaign led by the world's dominant power. The opportunities
were heralded in many quarters, from the benefits of a U.S.-Russian
rapprochement, a new strategic interest of the United States
in multilateralism, and even possibilities for genuine "global
governance."1
What is striking, however, in the events that have followed
is the influence that experiences of the 1990s are having
on actors and policies in the first two months. If a new order
is being built, it is not a radical break from the past but
grounded on the tough lessons of those tortured conflicts
in the 1990s, such as Bosnia, Somalia, and Kosovo, that frustrated
so many who wanted clarity. Decisions thus far show a remarkable
continuity based on an ongoing, pre-September evolution in
approaches to international conflict and intervention. Unfortunately,
the dramatic shift of attention may delay or even repress
needed debate over that evolution and lessons that remain
contentious - leaving to future revisionist historians tasks
that should be the subject of policy debate now. Issues pushed
aside or under the rug will eventually surface as well. But
the most important of the unfinished business of the 1990s
and the order being shaped by current events are the lessons
that have not been learned.
Lessons Learned
The two most obvious cases of actors whose actions cannot
be understood apart from experiences of the 1990s are the
United Nations and the United States military. The United
Nations Special Representative to the Secretary-General for
Afghanistan, named in the wake of the September 11th attacks,
Lakhdar Brahimi, has more to his credit than deep involvement
diplomatically with the Afghanistan conflict in the 1990s
and universal respect from colleagues, in the U.N. and outside,
for his engagement in a number of the hard civil conflicts
of the 1990s, including Somalia. He knows the terrain. This
applies equally to numerous agencies and personnel of the
United Nations, including the current special envoy for Afghanistan,
Fransesc Vendrell, who have remained involved in humanitarian,
human rights, and peace negotiation work in Afghanistan throughout
the sad decade.
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See also the essay on this site by David
Held addressing global governance.
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But the assignment with which Brahimi's name
is most associated is the Panel on United Nations Peace Operations
tasked in May 2000 "to undertake a thorough review of United
Nations peace and security activities, and to present a clear
set of specific, concrete and practical recommendations to
assist the United Nations in conducting such activities better
in the future."2 It is common knowledge that
the stimulus for such a review and proposed reforms of U.N.
peace operations was the devastating criticism of the U.N.
in Somalia, Rwanda, and Bosnia-Herzegovina. Brahimi chaired
the panel, and its report bears his name. There is surely
no one more suited to draw on the lessons of the 1990s and
to bring them to bear on the task of creating a post-Taliban
government for Afghanistan and designing an internationally
supported transition.
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Click
here for the full text of the Brahimi Report. |
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Already in 1998-99, Afghanistan was chosen
by UN officials as the first test of its efforts to improve
multilateral interventions in conflict situations with a "Strategic
Framework," aimed at strategic coordination of the main agencies
involved on the ground. Brahimi is now actively putting into
practice many of the recommendations of the Brahimi Report,
such as the integrated mission task force already established.3
His warnings, as with those of the Secretary-General, about
the need for speed,4 about matching what the U.N.
can accomplish to the resources member states are willing
to provide, and, above all, a willingness to "say no" to the
Security Council if a mandate cannot be implemented, telling
the council "what it needs to know, not what it wants to hear"
and requiring "clarity,"5 all come directly
from the Report.
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The insistence by Brahimi and other U.N.
officials that they would not begin a U.N. peace-building
operation until a sustainable cease-fire had been obtained
and that security would have to be provided by others, moreover,
was a lesson drawn directly from the perceived failure in
Bosnia. Similarly, Brahimi's firm declaration that the U.N.
will not make Afghanistan a protectorate, filling the vacuum
of state institutions that currently prevails there, and that
it will limit its mission to two years, reflects the lessons
of U.N. missions in Kosovo and East Timor.
The other obvious example is the United States military. Institutionally
best organized to search for lessons through its "after-action"
analyses, the U.S. armed forces have, in fact, been adapting
both doctrine and operations in response to the non-conventional
wars of the 1990s - not only the legacy of Viet Nam but more
recently the experiences of the Gulf War, Somalia, Haiti,
Bosnia-Herzegovina, and Kosovo can be read clearly in current
policy. Many interpret the post-Vietnam fear of "quagmire"
as a reluctance to become engaged in "somebody else's war
in a far away place," including the apocryphal defense against
engagement in Bosnia attributed to then Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, Colin Powell, that "we don't do mountains."
In fact, "quagmire" for Vietnam-era officers like Secretary
of State Powell has a different meaning: sending the military
to a job where the political goal and direction were not clear
and, above all, without the necessary political support at
home. Although the Powell Doctrine on the need for "overwhelming
force" is said to have been the reason for success in the
Gulf War as well as the criterion used in U.S. operations
in Bosnia and Yugoslavia, far more important in all three
cases was the effort spent on creating and maintaining the
international coalition behind the operation and the political
support of the American public. The same priority governed,
and still governs, the actions of Secretary Powell and President
Bush beginning on September 12th.
While many commentators assert the newness of the war against
the Taliban, the signs of U.S. military interventions in Bosnia
in 1995 and Yugoslavia (Serbia, Montenegro, and Kosovo) in
1999 are in full view. Despite continuing skepticism of military
experts, the Pentagon insisted then that a war can be won
from the air, without risking the lives of American soldiers
- as long as it was accompanied by a serious component of
psychological warfare and by a ground component of local troops
(American-trained and equipped, of course, as Croatian soldiers
in Bosnia and Kosovo Liberation Army soldiers in Kosovo).
Bombing a country from the air also now includes a public
relations strategy, including simultaneous air drops of food
packs and a repetitive "line" aiming to distinguish between
victims and enemy. While that strategy also insists on minimizing
"collateral damage," it still includes wide use of cluster
bombs.
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Click here for the UN sites for the missions in Kosovo
and East
Timor. |
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While military strategy makes Kosovo look
like a test case, the political component of this war suggests
lessons learned from Somalia, Bosnia, and Kosovo. There would
be no more delays and complications (as in the Kosovo case)
due to quarrels over a legal basis for the intervention. Immediate
and persistent came the declaration: this was a case of self-defense
- governed by Article 51 of the United Nations Charter. Even
with the unanimous support of the U.N. Security Council, the
American military would also not be constrained by a U.N.
resolution, nor under any circumstances would it allow even
core allies in the coalition to influence military operations.
The American military will continue to insist on separation
of the military and civilian aspects of peace-building, as
it did in Bosnia and Kosovo and as it now insists on taking
all military decisions (such as what targets to bomb and what
pace to follow) solo. They also appear to have won the battle
of the peace operations in Bosnia, Kosovo, and perhaps Haiti,
in what the Brahimi Report calls the need for a "doctrinal
shift" in peace operations: that post-war security is a matter
for policing far more than the military.6 The security
presence in Afghanistan will be heavy on paramilitary police
forces (gendarmerie, carabinieri, civil guard) trained for
this purpose, saving soldiers to secure strategic objects
such as airports for humanitarian deliveries. Multilateralism,
in sum, is both essential to such operations and has very
clearly defined limits for the U.S.
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Click here
for the full text of Article 51 of the UN Charter. |
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A third, less public but no less important
an actor in this evolving drama is the World Bank. Discovering
in the course of the 1990s that a majority of countries in
arrears to the Bank were countries in conflict, and under
mounting external criticism for what appeared to be a connection
between state failure and violent conflict, on the one hand,
and development assistance and economic reform packages from
the international financial institutions, on the other, the
Bank began its own adjustments. In the mid-1990s it created
a Post-Conflict Unit, became active in peace negotiations
to coordinate post-war reconstruction with peace processes
better, and insisted on greater lead time (preferably two
years) to prepare reconstruction plans. By 2000, Watching
Briefs were required for countries in conflict or in danger
of conflict, including Afghanistan, and the classic infrastructure-based
approach to reconstruction was beginning to yield to the lessons
of the 1990s - the neglect of human and social capital, gender
relations, and institutions. In the case of Afghanistan, moreover,
U.N. special envoy Francesc Vendrell had already requested
in 2000 that the Bank begin planning for reconstruction, resulting
in an initial plan by early 2001. At the same time, the well-known
problem of donor competition is already apparent in multiple
conferences to plan Afghan reconstruction. Experts on post-conflict
reconstruction operations, from Mozambique and Kosovo, are
rushing to influence the planning at the U.N., in bilateral
development agencies, and in the European Union in hopes that
the Afghan case will provide the opportunity to learn from
past mistakes.
Lessons Not Learned
For all the lessons that have been learned,
there are as many or more, however, that have not. This can
be seen particularly by comparison with the interventions
in former Yugoslavia - above all Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kosovo,
and Macedonia - which have had such great influence over the
thinking, habits, instincts, and actions of key actors now
engaged on Afghanistan. The similarities between the Balkans
and Afghanistan, despite the fundamentally different policy
objective, make the unfinished business of these unlearned
lessons even more significant.7
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The first lesson is widely recognized,
and widely ignored. Indeed, a prominent place is given in
the Brahimi Report, as in the Secretary-General's report
to the Millenium Summit, to conflict prevention. The wars
in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kosovo, and Macedonia, like the disintegration
of former Yugoslavia itself and the wars that resulted,
were not inevitable; they could have been prevented. This
lesson is so universally accepted from all wars of the 1990s
that the Carnegie Foundation under its then President, David
Hamburg, created a special commission, the Carnegie Commission
for the Prevention of Deadly Conflict, to put prevention
on the international agenda. Yet the chain of events from
the U.S. arming and training of Afghan and Pakistani mujahideen
to fight the Soviets in Afghanistan, to the Taliban and
Al-Qaeda and its international network, including fighters
sent to Bosnia-Herzegovina, Chechnya, and Central Asia,
is direct. The "lift and strike" policy that used covert
operations to arm the Bosnians and then the Kosovo Albanians
was an intentional copy of the original Afghan policy, with
the consequence in both instances of spreading the instruments
of war (arms, trained soldiers, military equipment) far
beyond their initial geographical focus and undermining
a Western policy of containment. The intelligence failure
of September 11th reveals a comprehensible, rational pattern
of attacks beginning in 1993 and periodic warnings from
the director of the Central Intelligence Agency and other
U.S. officials that terrorism against the United States
was its primary security threat. Yet millions have been
spent by the US government for research on "early warning."
Those who argue on the basis of actual outcomes that the
problem is not early warning, but early action, have had
little effect.
A second lesson from those earlier cases is that the logic
of war wins out every time over other concurrent policies,
particularly diplomatic negotiations and humanitarian goals.
The evolution from a military strike of revenge, demanded
by an outraged public opinion in the United States, to a
war against Osama bin Laden, then to a war against the Taliban,
and therefore eventually to create an entirely new state
and the security and economic bases of its survival is also
a pattern we have seen before. Familiar also is the underestimation
by the U.S. military of the enemy's will and ability to
resist such that tactics, timing, and even goals have to
be rapidly adjusted once the air war has begun. In the Balkans,
the effort to combine three objectives simultaneously -
a humanitarian operation, a war (dominated by air power
and intelligence, in particular), and political negotiations
- proved time and again that the logic of war comes to dominate
all the other objectives. The war creates more refugees
and internally displaced persons, makes aid workers hostages
or forces them to flee the country entirely, and creates
conflicts over communication and transportation routes between
the military and humanitarian operations, which hinder both.
Similarly, the American strategy of relying on air power
and using local factions and warlords to provide the ground
component of the military campaign can only undermine the
political goals of diplomatic negotiations for a post-war
state. Those troops gain overwhelming advantage in any post-war
settlement, from the terms of negotiations, their timing,
and even the extent to which any diplomatic agreement can
prevail over reality on the ground. Part of the military
campaign itself becomes driven by the locals' fight for
such advantage and bargaining leverage. Efforts to negotiate
a political agreement for a post-war reality while the war
is being waged become progressively undermined - the pace
of negotiations is inevitably slower than that of war, and
no warlord with any real possibility on the ground will
negotiate sincerely while it is in play. Control over territory
trumps all normative theories about the best political arrangements
to achieve post-war reconciliation and stable government.
A third lesson regards economic strategy. A fatal flaw in
all "post-conflict" economic policy is the prior need of
a functioning government and functioning proper financial
and legal institutions - to absorb the aid delivered, adopt
the necessary policies, and implement those decisions.8
Such governments and administrations do not exist under
conditions of war and severe war damage - human capital
is the scarcest commodity after wartime, but the Afghan
case may well be the worst - and the intense political conflicts
and maneuvering that characterize the first post-war years
leads necessarily to extensive delays in their creation.
Recent revisions in economic strategy aimed at improving
the record of post-conflict assistance give far more recognition
than in the past to the importance of institutions to economic
development. Nonetheless, experience thus far has not succeeded
in creating the necessary employment, agricultural revival,
and basic social services (education, health care, safe
water and sewers, food distribution, roads, public safety)
that are essential to sustaining the peace, rebuilding the
state, protecting human rights, and returning refugees and
the internally displaced population. That almost all economic
activity in Afghanistan is done illegally - surreptitious,
smuggled, or criminal - as a result of a decade of war will
force this need of donors for sovereign counterparts and
functioning (if devastated) economies into harsh focus very
soon. Reconstruction programs assume, moreover, that a political
agreement, which they insist must come first, will produce
such a government. They can then proceed. In fact, the reverse,
were it possible, is more likely to succeed - using a reconstruction
program to generate incentives for political agreement and
cooperation and thus for peace.9
World Bank planning during 2000-2001 will not, moreover,
have taken into account the consequences of the current
war such as its population displacement, destruction of
roads and other infrastructure, and additional layers of
mines and unexploded munitions on the ground. In addition,
no economic strategy yet exists for the specific stage of
peacebuilding between relief and development. Bosnia-Herzegovina
provides a clear object lesson because there is unlikely
ever to be such a high level of donor financing. A fully
successful five-year World Bank-led program of recovery
and reconstruction has not yet, six years after the peace
agreement, generated economic development.
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Click
here
for the full report of the Secretary General to the Millenium
Summit.
Click here for the home
page of the Carnegie Commision.
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A fourth lesson concerns the assumptions
behind power-sharing as the basis for creating a post-war
government. Although power-sharing is now the dominant method
favored by diplomats and many scholars for war termination,
its success in generating a functioning government and sustainable
peace is thin indeed. Failures tend to be blamed on "spoilers"
- politicians (and warlords) who are identified as having
not been sincere in the political negotiations and who choose
for reasons of self-interest to undermine their implementation.
But the concept of power-sharing is based on a concept in
the literature of political science called consociationalism
to explain the stability of democracy in ethnically or religiously
divided societies - the original case being the Netherlands,
a stable, wealthy country for centuries.10 Application
of the concept to Lebanon was quietly removed when the country
disintegrated into war. Another contribution to the belief
in the principle of power-sharing is a political science literature
on elite "pacts" as successful mechanisms for transition from
authoritarian to democratic rule, as in Latin America and
Iberia, but where governmental structures function throughout
the transition and there is no war. Where the choice is to
give up control over armed groups and materiel to a government
ministry, when it is unclear that others will also disarm
or that a cease-fire will be obtained and last and under circumstances
that no government exists, power sharing is unlikely to take.
Where such agreements are made, power sharing becomes a method
of sharing the spoils and gaining monopoly over one's own
community to the exclusion of rivals and therefore institutionalized
competition (that is, democracy) within the group. Even the
premise that the problem to be solved by power sharing is
ethnic conflict is wrong in most cases. As Rubin and his colleagues
wrote about Afghanistan in June 2001, "The origin of the war
is not ethnic, and the solution will not be ethnic, but the
conduct of the war is ethnic, which has had corrosive effects
on the potential for national reconstruction."11
The effort to create a power-sharing agreement on which government
can be built is another example of the ultimate victory of
the logic of war over other processes.
The focus on a power sharing agreement, in fact, is most likely
to occur when a country is enmeshed in a regional dynamic
in which neighbors have strong and assertive interests. Weak
buffer states, either in the interstices of imperial and major
power alliances or in a regional security complex, such as
Bosnia and Herzegovina, Macedonia, Somalia, and Afghanistan,
are most likely to have power sharing agreements imposed as
a way of satisfying the interests of neighbors. Their outcome
is more often, as currently seen in Bosnia and Somalia, a
de facto partitioning of the country's territory among regional
spheres of influence and a resulting partitioning of the state
itself. In the case of Bosnia-Herzegovina, the result has
been political stalemate since its peace agreement of November
1995 and a continuation of local conditions that are favorable
to illegal trafficking, organized crime, and terrorist networks.
This last lesson, the fifth, is the most significant of the
unfinished legacy of the 1990s. Most internal conflicts of
the kind that bred the Taliban are not internal - as the Brahimi
Report emphasizes, they are "transnational," or as Rubin and
his colleagues elaborate for Afghanistan, its "conflict forms
the core of a regional conflict formation."12
Military campaigns, political negotiations, and economic reconstruction
that ignore the regional embeddedness of such cases cannot
succeed. Cease-fires may even be locally stable, as long as
international military and police forces remain, but their
most common outcome is spill-over into some other part of
its region, such as, in the case of Bosnia-Herzegovina, to
Kosovo and Macedonia. Surely this should be a concern in the
case of Afghanistan. As Rubin and his colleagues write even
before September 11th, "The war is not a civil war but a transnational
one. The transnational links are too deep to be untangled
and will have to be transformed. ... A more desirable policy
goal [than 'peace'] would be reconstructing the country as
part of the interstate and economic structure of an entire
region."13
Footnotes
1 This latter
was the optimism of Greek foreign minister George Pappandreou,
in conversation with the U.S. talk show host, Charlie Rose.
2 Letter of the Secretary-General to the President
of the General Assembly and the President of the Security Council,
dated 21 August 2000 (announcing the receipt of the report on
17 August of the panel convened on 7 March 2000), A/55/305-S/2000/809,
United Nations.
3 On the recommendation, see Part IV, Section B,
paragraphs 198-217, of the Report of the Panel on United
Nations Peace Operations.
4 On the importance of "rapid and effective deployment,"
see Part III, especially Section A, paragraphs 86-91, of the
Report.
5 Executive Summary for paragraphs 48-64 of the
Report of the Panel on United Nations Peace Operations.
6 This lesson received serious attention as well
from the Brahimi Report, which recommends a doctrinal shift
in regard to civilian policing and rule-of-law issues in peace-building.
7 UN officials in Somalia as well as experts on both
Somalia and Afghanistan see even greater parallels, and need
to learn lessons, from that case. See Mark Turner, "Somalia
provides lesson in non-interference," Financial Times,
November 19, 2001, p. 3.
8 For more elaboration of the issues of economic
strategy, see Susan L. Woodward, "Economic Priorities for Successful
Implementation," chapter 7 in a forthcoming volume edited by
Stephen Stedman on implementing peace agreements to end civil
wars (Lynne Rienner: 2002) and, separately, as a policy paper
to be published by the International Peace Academy.
9 This proposal was made in the excellent paper of
June 2001 by Barnett R. Rubin, Ashraf Ghani, William Maley,
Ahmed Rashid, and Olivier Roy, Afghanistan: Reconstruction
and Peace-building in a Regional Framework (KOFF Peacebuilding
Reports, No. 1, 2001, Center for Peacebuilding of the Swiss
Peace Foundation), see especially page 40.
10 Arendt Lijpart, Democracy in Plural Societies
(New Haven: Yale University Press, 1977) and Timothy Sisk,
Power Sharing and International Mediation in Ethnic Conflicts
(Washington, DC: United States Institute of Peace Press, 1996).
11 Rubin, et al. Afghanistan, pp. 8-9.
12 Rubin, et al., Afghanistan, p. 5.
13 Rubin, et al., Afghanistan, p. 5 (and see also
pp. 44-46). |
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