Title: New PARADIGM presentation
1PEACE OPERATIONS
ROLE OF THE MILITARY IN UN OPERATIONS
John Otte
2 PEACE WAR
CONFLICT
- War Fighting
- Real Enemy
- Rules well known
- Unlimited application of force
- Doctrinal preparation
- Clear Military Objectives
- Complete training
- Fight to win - as units
3PEACE WAR
CONFLICT
Peacekeeping
- Civil/Political operations
- No enemy
- No rules (factions)
- Restricted application of force
- Individuals impact on mission
- High levels of civilian components
- Mediation - negotiation
- Financial Constraints
- War Fighting
- Real Enemy
- Rules well known
- Unlimited application of force
- Doctrinal preparation
- Clear Military Objectives
- Complete training
- Fight to win-as units
4PEACE WAR
CONFLICT
Peacekeeping
- Communication
- Negotiation
- Presence
- Potential
- Fire Movement
Fire Movement
5Military RoleAchieving Peacekeeping Mission End
State Objectives
Direct
- Achieve assigned military objectives
Indirect
- Cause related military objectives to be achieved
- Support other components as directed
- Assist other components achieve their objectives
Priorities and sequence of military
activities will be determined from these roles
6OPERATIONAL GUIDANCE TO THE FORCE COMMANDER
- Issued to Military Force Commander
- Derived from UN Security Council Resolution
Mandate - Strategic- Political Guidance
- Developed by Military Advisor
- Signed by Under Secretary General Peacekeeping
7REPORTING CHAIN
- Force Commander reports through SRSG
Head of Mission (HOM) - Mandated Activities Military Component
- Consults with SRSG areas with political or policy
consequences - Technical link Military Advisor DPKO for military
matters (informing SRSG) - Does not deal with Member States
8Security Council
Secretary-General
Special Representative of the Secretary-General
Deputy SRSG
Human Rights
Force Commander
Head Civilian Police Component
Head Election Component
Chief Military Observer
Chief Administrative Officer
Head Humanitarian Assistance Component
9COALITION OR LEAD NATION PEACEKEEPING STRUCTURE
Security Council
UN HQ
Lead Nation
Military Force HQ
Coalition Nations
Lead Nation Forces
Other Nation Forces
Other Nation Forces
Other Nation Forces
10COALITION OR LEAD NATION PEACEKEEPING STRUCTURE
Security Council
UN HQ
Lead Nation
Military Force HQ
Coalition Nations
Lead Nation Forces
Other Nation Forces
Other Nation Forces
Other Nation Forces
11CONCURRENT UN MISSION COALITION PEACEKEEPING
FORCE STRUCTURES
Security Council
UN HQ
SRSG
Deputy SRSG
Lead Nation
Human Rights
Military Force HQ
Coalition Nations
Humanitarian
Lead Nation Troops
Police
Other Nation Troops
Administrative
Other Nation Troops
Election
Other Nation Troops
Observer Force
12Military Role in Peace Operations
SRSG
Manage the Mandate
Coordinate Effort of Components
Deputy
Provide Unity of Effort
Elections
Humanitarians
CIVPOL
Military Force
Reconstruction Development
Assigned/ Derived Military Tasks
13Strategic Level Issues in International
Peacekeeping
- Each mission varies in structure evolves over
time - Functionally UN not always lead organization
- National contingents often respond first to
national chains of command - Partners will have different strategic control
processes - Multi-agency relationships complex
- Tension between multiple contending international
organizations - Coordination, consensus, cooperation
best built from bottom
14COMMAND RELATIONSHIPS
15National Command
- The exercise of command by National authorities
over National forces deployed in support of peace
operations - Nations never cede full command authority over
deployed forces except in unusual circumstance
16Operational LevelCommand Control Issues
- Modern peacekeeping - complex, non-traditional
military missions, qualitatively different from
war-fighting - Involve civil/political action as much as
military - Success depends on working effectively with a
wide variety of institutions/organizations - Requires equally effective command control (C2)
as combat missions - Traditional C2 language, concepts, approaches
doctrine may not be appropriate for
organizational institutional arrangements in
peace operations
17Multi-National Peacekeeping ForcesProblems Areas
- Added complexity to operations
- Generating Multi-National HQs
- National command issues create difficulties
- Generally exceed span of control
- Decision making is slow
- Consensus creation takes time
- Standards, force capability levels of military
training vary - Differences in language, tradition, doctrine
culture impact on operations
18When There Is a Lack of Confidence
- Forces will
- Operate under variety employment restrictions
- Maintain direct contact with national governments
for direction - Negotiate missions not accept assigned ones
19Keeping It Simple
- Watchword in peacekeeping operations
difficult to achieve - Use a combination of tools
- Assign geographical functional responsibilities
- Assign forces together with history of working
together - Assign missions that task to capacities
- Be sensitive to home governments concerns
- Making simple plans within a coalition requires
sophisticated and complex decision making and
coordination
20Command and Control Problems
- Staffs will often work at multiple levels
- Span of control often exceeded
- Multiplicity of lines of command
- Consultation with national authorities
- Size of headquarters
- Absence of standards and common doctrine
- Variation in forces capacities
21Future Peace Operations
- Complexity of all aspects of peace operations
will remain prominent feature - Military C2 part of a larger set of command
arrangements - Command arrangements will remain cumbersome and
decentralized - Assigned forces may not share common doctrine,
language or standards
22Future Peace Operations(continued)
- Complex non-traditional missions as much
political as military - To achieve success need to work effectively with
- Wide variety of institutions and organizations
- Foreign governments
- Non-national political actors
- International organizations
- NGO/PVOs
- National government agencies
- Foreign military forces
- Require sound command and control
- Traditional C2 concepts, approaches and doctrine
may not be well suited
23PEACE OPERATIONS
ROLE OF THE MILITARY IN UN OPERATIONS
John Otte
24Role of the Military in UN Operations