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Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93 Prof. Theo Farrell King’s War Studies
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Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

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Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93. Prof. Theo Farrell King’s War Studies. Humanitarian Interventions?. India in East Pakistan (1971) Tanzania in Uganda (1978) Vietnam in Cambodia (1978). Post CW interventions. Northern Iraq (1991) Somalia (1992-93) Bosnia (1992-94) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Prof. Theo FarrellKing’s War Studies

Page 2: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Humanitarian Interventions?

India in East Pakistan (1971)

Tanzania in Uganda (1978)

Vietnam in Cambodia (1978)

Page 3: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Post CW interventions

Northern Iraq (1991) Somalia (1992-93) Bosnia (1992-94) Rwanda (1994) Haiti (1994-95) Kosovo (1999) East Timor (1999)

Page 4: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Impact of end of CW

Created new opportunities and imperatives

New view of 3rd world conflict

Growing public pressure for HI

Unlocked the UNSC

Page 5: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

UN peacekeeping budget

1988: $230 m

1990s: $800-1,600 m

Page 6: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Post CW interventions

Northern Iraq (1991) Somalia (1992-93) Bosnia (1992-94) Rwanda (1994) Haiti (1994-95) Kosovo (1999) East Timor (1999)

Page 7: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Somalia: the essentials

Two missions(i) UNITAF: Dec 92 – May 93(ii) UNOSOM: up to Feb. 1995

Three UNSC resolutions794: UNITAF mandate814: UNOSOM II mandate837: Declaration of war

Page 8: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Somalia on the map

Page 9: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Background: Somalia

Cold War legacy: economic ruin and country awash with weapons

1991: USC overthrow Siad Barre

1992: Somali state collapses

Page 10: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

1992: Death of Somalia

USC splits in warring factions(a) President Ali Mahdi(b) Gen. M. Farah Aideed

Growing humanitarian crisis: war and famine

UN agencies flee Somalia

Deployment of UNOSOM (Aug)

Page 11: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Somalia: war and famine

Page 12: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

1992: Death of Somalia

USC splits in warring factions(a) President Ali Mahdi(b) Gen. M. Farah Aideed

Growing humanitarian crisis: war and famine

UN agencies flee Somalia

Deployment of UNOSOM (Aug)

Page 13: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

1991: brave new world

The Gulf War (w/Soviet help) Kurdistan Collapse of Soviet Union

New BOP and emerging normative order

Page 14: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Agenda for Peace (Jan. 1992)

Peace-keeping is the deployment of a United Nations presence in the field, hitherto with the consent of all the parties concerned, normally involving United Nations military and/or police personnel and frequently civilians as well.

Page 15: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Pressure builds in DC

Ismat Kittani report to UNSC (25 Nov): 70-80 of food aid not reaching the hungry

CARE USA leads alliance of INGOs calling for intervention

Debate within deputies group: “our helicopters don’t work in deserts.”

Page 16: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

NGOs divided

For: CARE USA and Oxfam-USA

Against: MSF and Save the Children

Unsure: Concern Worldwide and Oxfam-UK

Page 17: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Pressure builds in DC

Ismat Kittani report to UNSC (25 Nov): 70-80 of food aid not reaching the hungry

CARE USA leads alliance of INGOs calling for intervention

Debate within deputies group: “our helicopters don’t work in deserts.”

Page 18: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

What’s this then…?

Page 19: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Operation Restore Hope

VCJCS says “yes”

3 Dec: UNSCR 794

9 Dec: Marines hit the beaches

Why?(a) public opinion(b) Clinton and Bosnia

Page 20: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Weinberger-Powell Doctrine

Clear (doable) goals

Success likely

Decisive and overwhelming force

Clear (quick) exit strategy

Page 21: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

UNITAF

37,000 strong, over 20 nations

28,000 = US forces (10 Mt Div and 1 MEF)

Also large and capable contingents from France (2800), Canada (2200), Italy (1300) and Belgium.

Page 22: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

UNITAF: rapid deployment

Robert Oakley clears the path

9-16 Dec: secured Mogadishu, Kismayo, Baidoa, and Baledogle

16-28 Dec: completed full deployment, one month ahead of schedule

Page 23: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Somalia: major urban centres

Page 24: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

UNSCR 794

Based on Chap VII

UNITAF was to use “all necessary means to establish as soon as possible a secure environment for humanitarian relief operations in Somalia.”

Page 25: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Secure environment

Disarmament?

Guarding NGOs?

Creating secure zones and corridors

Page 26: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Disarmament?: not likely

Bush (5 Dec): UNITAF to “open supply routes, to get the food moving, and to prepare the way for a UN peacekeeping force.”

Boutros-Ghali letter to Bush (8 Dec).

CJCS Powell: “Disarmament is not possible in a country where everybody has a weapon.”

Lt. Gen. Johnson: “totally naïve.”

Page 27: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Creating security?

UNITAF engaged in haphazard disarmament (French/Belgium v US)

Guarding NGOs:* disarming NGO guards!* practice changes in Mogadishu after March* Australian (Baidoa) & Belgian (Kismayo)

Patrolling: US “human tanks” v French in

skirts

Page 28: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Disarmament agreements

7 point agreement btw Aideed and Ali Mahdi (11 Dec 1992)

Addis Ababa agreement by 15 factions (8 Jan 1993)

Addis Ababa Conference on National Reconciliation (27 March 1993)

Page 29: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

UNOSOM II

28,000 troops from 30 nations

Major contingents from Pakistan, Belgium, France and Italy

US force stays on: logistics (3,000) and QRF (1,150)

Chaotic handover: Pakistanis and Italians ill-equipped, Indians late, “exhausted and demoralised” HQ

Page 30: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

UNSCR 814

Prevent resumption of violence

Take action against peace spoilers

Control heavy weapons and seize small arms

Secure aid and protect UN/NGOs

all under Chap VII

Page 31: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Adm Jonathan Howe

Page 32: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Road to war

Early shows of force in Jan

SNA sneak heavy weapons back into Mogadishu

May: Belgians repulse SNA from Kismayo

Possible op against Radio Mogadishu

5 June: SNA ambush Pakistan unit, killing 24 and injuring 57

Page 33: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

UNSCR 837

UNSOM II to “take all necessary measures against those responsible for the armed attacks.”

Including those responsible for inciting the attacks

Page 34: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

The UN-SNA war

June: UNOSOM offensive

July: UN under siege

August: hunt for Aideed(led by Task Force Ranger)

Page 35: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

UN’s obsession

Page 36: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Mission over

Page 37: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

UNOSOM II collapses

3 Oct: 18 killed, 78 injured

7 Oct: Clinton ceases offensive ops, and US to pull out by March 1994

Europeans follow suit

India, Malaysia, and Pakistan left holding the fort until Feb. 1995

Page 38: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Myth of mission creep

Boutros-Ghali & Albright pushing the HI agenda

UNOSOM II mandate: overly-ambitious from the start

BBG backed Howe’s gunboat diplomacy

Page 39: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Public opinion

CNN effect:- policy: certainty v uncertainty- political: unity v disunity

Body-bag syndrome:- cause and time- political v public tolerance

Page 40: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Force protection v protecting civilians

US “human tanks” in Mogadishu

Haiti (Sept 1993):* 10 Mt Div in Port-au-Prince v US Marines in Cap Haitien* MNF CO Maj. Gen. Meade v CJSC Gen. Shelton

Page 41: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

The shadow of Somalia

Gen. Sir Michael Rose (UNPROFOR): “the Mogadishu Line”

PDD-25: don’t call us

Agenda for Peace 1995: consent, impartiality and non-use of force

Rwanda: April-July 1994

Page 42: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93
Page 43: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Bosnia 1992-1995

Page 44: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Haiti 1994-1995

Page 45: Humanitarian Intervention: Somalia, 1992-93

Inducing consent

“Escalating to success”

Request for armour and AC-130s turned down

Danish tanks in Bosnia

Getting heavy in Kosovo