{"id":30054,"date":"2017-01-04T06:00:10","date_gmt":"2017-01-03T19:00:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=30054"},"modified":"2016-12-19T12:33:12","modified_gmt":"2016-12-19T01:33:12","slug":"editors-picks-2016-un-peacekeeping-time-build-upon-australias-history","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/editors-picks-2016-un-peacekeeping-time-build-upon-australias-history\/","title":{"rendered":"Editors\u2019 picks for 2016: ‘UN peacekeeping: time to build upon Australia\u2019s history’"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/em><\/p>\n Originally published 31 May 2016.<\/em><\/p>\n This past weekend marked the International Day of United Nations Peacekeepers<\/a>, a day established by the UN General Assembly in 2002 to pay tribute to military, police and civilian peacekeepers and honour those that have lost their lives in the cause of peace.<\/p>\n Australia has an incredibly proud history<\/a> of deploying personnel to UN peacekeeping operations. Next year will mark 70 years since Australia first deployed personnel under UN auspices to the Dutch East Indies. Since then Australians have served in dozens of UN peacekeeping missions across the globe, in locations ranging from Rwanda to Somalia, and Cambodia to Timor-Leste. ADF and AFP personnel continue that service today in difficult and challenging environments in South Sudan, Liberia, Cyprus and the Middle East.<\/p>\n Yet we remain a small contributor for a country of our size and influence in the global order. Take countries in the G20 as an example. Only two countries deploy less UN peacekeepers than Australia: Mexico, which only recently re-engaged in UN operations, and Saudi Arabia, which deploys none. And Australia\u2019s numbers are set to decline even further. The last contingent of AFP police peacekeepers (currently 10 personnel) serving in Cyprus are set to withdraw by 30 June 2017<\/a>. That means Australia is likely to have no police deployed to a UN peacekeeping operation for the first time in over 50 years. That\u2019s an unfortunate development when you consider Australia\u2019s leadership in spearheading the first UN Security Council resolution on the role of police in peace operations (2185).<\/p>\n Just over five years ago UN officials suggested<\/a> that UN peacekeeping was entering a period of consolidation. Yet despite that prediction, the number of peacekeepers has increased again in recent years, with new missions in Mali and the Central African Republic, and an increase in the size of the mission in South Sudan. Although there are expected drawdowns in missions in Liberia, Cote d\u2019Ivoire and Haiti on the horizon, history has shown that there\u2019s often an unexpected need for UN missions. Syria, Libya and Burundi may be among some of the potential candidates for a UN peacekeeping mission in the near future.<\/p>\n In recent years, high-levels of demand for UN peacekeepers created a situation where demand often outstripped supply. The Security Council kept authorising new missions, but the UN couldn\u2019t generate commitments from countries quickly enough to respond. In Mali and the Central African Republic, the UN re-hatted already deployed African Union missions, despite concerns that troop and police contributors didn\u2019t meet performance standards, were known to have questionable human rights records, and often didn\u2019t have the necessary equipment. Consequently, those peacekeeping missions haven\u2019t been as effective as they might have been in implementing their mandates, particularly when it comes to protecting civilians.<\/p>\n Several reforms are underway to improve force generation processes in light of a high-level review<\/a> last year. However, in order for UN missions have a broader base of capabilities to draw on, it also requires well-equipped and trained countries\u2014such as those previously engaged in NATO operations in Afghanistan\u2014to re-engage in UN peacekeeping. Several of those countries are in the process of stepping up their commitments to UN peacekeeping. The Netherlands and Sweden have deployed personnel and enablers to Mali in substantial numbers. The UK has just started deploying personnel<\/a> to assist with capacity building in Somalia, and is expected to increase its deployment in South Sudan. And Canada\u2019s Trudeau government is considering options<\/a> to re-engage more substantively in UN peacekeeping.<\/p>\n Even the US has been utilising its political weight to improve the supply of peacekeeping personnel and capabilities the UN has to choose from. President Obama co-chaired a leaders\u2019 summit on peacekeeping in September 2015. At the summit, more than 50 countries pledged<\/a> an additional 40,000 troops and police to UN peacekeeping missions. China, Cambodia, Fiji, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Malaysia and Thailand were among those countries in our region committing to deploying more personnel.<\/p>\n