What Kind of Peace is There to Keep in Congo? By *Alex
Perry*<javascript:void(0)> Monday,
Nov. 24, 2008
 [image: Congolese government soldiers (FARDC) stand guard next to a U.N.
vehicle, at the Kibati checkpoint, north of Goma, eastern Congo]
Congolese government soldiers (FARDC) stand guard next to a U.N. vehicle, at
the Kibati checkpoint, north of Goma, eastern Congo
Jerome Delay / AP

Few country have exposed the limitations of peacekeeping as much as
Congo<http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1855735,00.html>.
MONUC (the French initials for the United Nations Mission in the Democratic
Republic of Congo) appears overwhelmed as rival military forces, from rebels
to the nation's army, take turns ravaging parts of the country. Alan Doss is
perhaps the world's foremost expert on peacekeeping. In a lifetime career at
the U.N., he has run the peacekeeping operations in Liberia, Cote D'Ivoire
and Sierra Leone before being trasferred to Congo in October 2007. He spoke
to TIME's Africa bureau chief, Alex Perry by telephone, while en route to
U.N. headquarters in Geneva and the U.N. Security Council in New York.
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*TIME: Why are 11,000 of MONUC's 17,000 soldiers outside the area where the
fighting is?
Doss:* We are redeploying. As we speak, there are units being moved into the
area. But we really are stretched to the limit. We are robbing Peter to pay
Paul. South Kivu [a province of Congo] is tense. So is Ituri [another
province in the country], and we have the LRA [Lord's Resistance Army, a
rebel group that originated in northern Uganda] in the northeast. We are
doing short term reinforcements, but we simply do not have an effective
rapid reaction force.

*How problematic is your support for the Congolese army, which seems to be
one of the most destabilizing and brutal elements in the conflict?*
We do not have an alliance with the Congolese army. We are a U.N.
peacekeeping force [acting] in support of the FARDC (Armed Forces of the
Democratic Republic of Congo). But it is clear that the FARDC is becoming
part of the problem, not part of the solution. It's clear the army is
disintegrating. That's one of the big dilemmas for us. We came out to Congo
with a certain function — to reinforce the authority of the state. But now
the [U.N. Security] Council will have to reconsider this. Events of the last
two months have just run over [our mission]. The Congolese army needs root
and branch reform, but security sector reform is a long-term project. So how
do we deal with the situation in the meantime? Protection is our mission.
But if those we are protecting are also involved, it's a very difficult
situation.

*How do you explain the attacks on U.N. compounds in Goma?*
It's a combination of things. There is a huge amount of genuine frustration.
Then there's the recent outbreak of fresh hostilities. Sometimes the popular
frustration is manipulated by political forces to advance their own agenda.
The problem is simply practical. There are 10 million people in North and
South Kivu, and we have less than 10,000 soldiers there. In Liberia, I had
the same amount of troops as I have for Congo, and [Liberia] is less than
one hundredth of the size. Congo is the size of Western Europe, without
roads. That's the scale of the problem. We cannot be everywhere all of the
time. It's not indifference, far from it. We are there as part of a peace
process that has collapsed. That's been made worse by the FARDC. It's a very
difficult situation to manage. It's not indifference or unwillingness or
inability. It's trying to be everywhere at the same time. I think it's also
important to remember that the responsibility to protect is first and
foremost a national responsibility. Armed groups who perpetrate violence
need to be held to account. Look at what happened at Kiwanja [On Nov. 5,
more than 50 people in that village were massacred in two waves, first by
Mai Mai guerrillas then by opposing soldiers from rebel Tutsi leader Laurent
Nkunda's forces.] These are war crimes.

*But people living in the area say they just don't see MONUC, that MONUC is
almost in irrelevance in their lives.*
I would agree with that. We would like to be more present. You have
situations where there is a population of 60,000 and we have 120 soldiers in
a base. In those circumstances, they might well say that they have not seen
us. North Kivu is twice the size of Belgium and a third of our forces are
there, though, for obvious reasons, they are mostly in and around Goma. I
can understand the frustration. But you can see the scale of the problem,
and we're just trying to manage these realities and these operational
dilemmas. The expectations of what we can do are a problem. We cannot meet
them at this stage. I would be less than honest if I said we can guarantee
the protection of every civilian. We were brought in as a peacekeeping
force, and we have now had to take on some dimensions of peace enforcement.
Self-protection is part of the soldiers' motivation — and that's the right
of every armed force. But [MONUC forces] don't just hunker down in their
bases. They are out on patrol. Even so, if something bad is happening in a
house a kilometer away, we cannot really prevent that.

*What implications does the success or failure of MONUC have for other
peacekeeping operations?*
Every case is different. Darfur is very different. Every time a U.N.
peacekeeping force deploys, it raises lots of questions. But yes, there are
issues raised by our experience that will have a long-term effect. There is
a very fine line between peacekeeping and peace enforcement. Our mission was
equipped for peacekeeping. And as one of my officers says, you don't go to
war in blue helmets and white tanks. When we shifted from a monitoring group
to one that takes on military elements, we have to change the way we
operate. We have to acquire different capabilities. We have to ask
ourselves: to what extent are we ready? Were our assumptions wrong? Did we
bank too much on the peace process? There will be lots of post-mortems. But
I think that one should not forget that there have been a lot of
achievements. Three to four years ago, the country was dividing into three
parts. That was overcome. Most of the country now has peace. This is a
country that it literally back from the dead. There is progress.

*The Responsibility to Protect [or R2P, a concept of humanitarian
intervention] was only adopted by the U.N. in 2005. How much is MONUC
feeling its way here? Is MONUC an experiment?*
R2P is a huge step forward... But the question remains: how do we actually
do it? We have come up against the sharp end of R2P. We can claim that
responsibility, but actually doing that in North Kivu, with a collapsing
army, a resurgence of ethnic groups, well, that raises fundamental
questions. When we make these statements, we have to be careful that we have
the means to match our mandate.

*Is peacekeeping a stop-gap solution, rather than a long term one. If so,
does that mean peacekeeping can never have great moments of achievement?*
There are a number of peacekeeping missions. We try to be a help to the
process of national political accommodation. We can never substitute for
that, however, only bolster the forces taking part and help stabilize the
nation. We assist the national process, but we do not replace it. We're not
NATO. We're not an army of occupation. We're not a colonial army. We're
never going to take on points of responsibility that a national power can
do. That's our strength, but it also requires you to think: what can we
expect of a peacekeeping force?
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