September 6, 2008:
The United
Nations has suddenly become more enthusiastic about peacekeeping that is more
policing than military operation. Peacemaking, using force to get warring
factions to stop fighting, does require combat troops. But once the
peacekeepers go in, they find the biggest problem is crime. Soldiers can scare
and scatter the gangsters, but they can't do much to stop the crime.
The UN has long sent in police, but mainly to train new police,
recruited from locals. But what the people need immediately is some policing,
some effort to restore order so the economy can revive and give young men an
alternative to banditry and plunder. In response to this, UNPOL (the UN Police
Division) has gone from 8,000 personnel at the end of 2005, to nearly 18,000
now. UNPOL personnel are drawn from police forces in over a hundred nations,
and are currently deployed in 19 peacekeeping operations.
UNPOL has had to develop new tactics, some which combine police and
military operations. This approach uses troops to bust up the larger gangs, and
prevents new warlords from developing. But then you have lots more smaller
gangs, all hustling and killing. This is where the recent Israeli and American
experience against Islamic terrorists comes in handy. These two countries
developed new intelligence collecting and analysis techniques. The criminals
hide in the shadows, but the new intel methods light up those dark corners. The
gangsters have to spend more time avoiding capture, giving them less time to be
bad guys.
The sooner the gangs and crime rates are brought down, the sooner the
local police and justice systems can be built up. The ultimate solution is
always local. You cannot recruit enough foreign police to shut down the crime
in any of these peacekeeping missions. So you harass the crooks until you can recruit
and train a local police force. This can take years, and all that time, the
crooks are fighting to stay in business.