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These in third-generation operations in Somalia and Bosnia, with the disastrous experience
in Rwanda, soon prompted a period of cutback, with reluctance on the part of the five permanent
members of the Security Council (P5) - particularly the United States (US) - to authorize,
implement or finance new peacekeeping operations. These setbacks
resulted from a range of
factors, including not only the overextension of UN resources despite evident, continuing
limitations but also dilemmas inherent in the situations, which the organization was attempting to
address.
The UN was also undermined by a critical discrepancy between mandate and resources,
whereby financial support and political will did not match the complex mandates being authorized
by the Security Council. Soon the "over-credibility" of the early 1990s gave way to a dearth of
confidence in the UN's capabilities. These new imperatives have forced the UN and the
international community to re-think and circumscribe their expectations
of UN-led peace
operations. The United Nations does not have, at this point in its history, the institutional capacity
to conduct military enforcement measures under Chapter VII. Under present conditions, ad hoc
member states in the "coalitions of the wiling" offer the most effective deterrent to aggression or
to the spread of conflict. As in the past, a mandate from the Security Council authorizing such a
course of action is essential if the inform in is to have broad international support and legitimacy.
The Security Council has merely authorized - sometimes after a considerable delay - an
action that has already been completely planned or even initiated. This has especially been the
case with regard to actions by regional or sub-regional organizations, exemplified most recently
by the operation conducted by the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS)
Ceasefire Monitoring Group (ECOMOG) to oust the Armed Forces Revolutionary
Council/Reyo1utionary United Front (AFRCIRUF) junta in Sierra Leone. Times have changed to
the point where traditional peacekeeping no longer address the challenges of either managing or
resolving many complex intra-state conflicts. Between 1989 and 1994, UN peacekeeping
generally expanded its number of missions,
criteria for intervention, and tasks of intervention.
The nature of the intra-state conflicts in cases like Somalia, the former Yugoslavia, Haiti, Liberia,
and Serial Leone, forced additional changes on peacekeeping.
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