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PEACEKEEPIN G After the Cold War
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After the Cold War. Main Topics: Canada’s International Reputation Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.

Dec 17, 2015

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Page 1: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.

PEACEKEEPING

After the Cold War

Page 2: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.

Main Topics:

Canada’s International Reputation

Canada’s Contributions to World Peace

Page 3: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.

Peacekeeping changed radically once the Cold War was over!

More missions

Different types of missions

More peacekeeping organizations

New roles for peacekeepers

Page 4: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.

More Missions

There have been over 40 peacekeeping missions since 1990 .

The UN alone currently has 16 active peacekeeping missions – these cost an average of $5 billion per year.

Currently, over 88,000 peacekeepers from 113 different countries are deployed throughout the world!

Page 5: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.

UN peacekeeping missions - dark blue represents current missions.

Page 6: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.

Different Missions

Peacekeepers now keep the peace within states as well as between states.

Peacekeeping has turned more into peacemaking: it has become a matter of creating peace where it does not exist.

Page 7: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.

More Organizations

The UN is no longer the world’s only peacekeeping organization!

Other peacekeeping organizations:

NATOOrganization for African UnityOrganization for Security and Cooperation in Europe

Page 8: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.

New Roles for Peacekeepers

Train and organize local police

Remove mines

Conduct fair elections

Assist the return of refugees

Protect human rights

Intervene to prevent humanitarian disasters.

Page 9: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.

Peacekeepers distributing rice in East Timor

Page 10: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.

Peacekeeping and Canada

Ever since the end of the Cold War, Canada has been involved in peacekeeping activities throughout the world.

Page 11: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.

Iraq (1991)

In 1991, Canada participated in the first Gulf War as part of a UN force.

Canadians helped to push the Iraqi army out of Kuwait.

We participated with our air force, our army and our navy!

Page 12: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.
Page 13: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.

Yugoslavia (1992-1995)

After the fall of Communism in 1991, Yugoslavia began to break apart.

Yugoslavia was made up of many different ethnic groups, and they all wanted to become independent.

Problem: Some Yugoslavian provinces had ethnically mixed populations. What country would these people belong to?

Page 14: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.
Page 15: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.

Result:

Wars broke out between the Serbs, the Croats and the Bosnian Muslims.

UN peacekeepers were sent to the region in order to force the rival armies apart.

In both Croatia and Bosnia, the peacekeepers were unable to stop massacres and ethnic cleansing from taking place.

Page 16: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.
Page 17: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.

Somalia (1992)

In 1992, soldiers of the Canadian Airborne Regiment were sent to Somalia as part of a very difficult peacekeeping mission:

Somalia had been devastated by civil war and famine.

There was no central government, as gangs ran parts of the country and controlled the distribution of food aid coming from other countries.

Page 18: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.
Page 19: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.
Page 20: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.
Page 21: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.

Somalia (1992)

During this mission, an event took place that permanently harmed the reputation of Canadian soldiers and UN peacekeepers.

The Somalia Affair:

Page 22: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.

Somalia (1992)

Read the handout titled “Death of Shidane Arone” and respond to the following:

Explain why this event harmed the reputation of the entire Canadian military and not just the reputation of those who were directly involved in the crime.

Describe the Canadian government’s response to this event.

Page 23: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.

Rwanda (1994)

In 1994, there was a civil war in the small African nation of Rwanda, as two ethnic groups, the Tutsis and the Hutus fought for power.

The Hutus won and began to organize a genocide against the Tutsis.

Page 24: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.
Page 25: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.

Result:

A UN peacekeeping force was sent to protect the Tutsis.

Problem: UN members contributed only 3,000 troops to this force.

Problem: The UN peacekeepers were attacked, and most counties removed their soldiers.

Result: 500 peacekeepers were left with the task of stopping the genocide.

Page 26: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.

The peacekeeping mission was led by Canadian General Romeo Dallaire.

Dallaire warned the international community that a genocide would take place, but his pleas for help were ignored.

Page 27: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.

Result:

Over 1,000,000 people were killed in the genocide.

Dallaire later wrote a book in which he claimed that “the international community ha[d] blood on its hands.”

Do you agree with Dallaire’s statement? Write a point-from list of reasons to support your position.

Page 28: After the Cold War. Main Topics:  Canada’s International Reputation  Canada’s Contributions to World Peace.
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