Tuesday, 13 May 2025

 

Preserving UN Peacekeeping for a Multilateral World


https://usiofindia.org/pdf/FINAL%20USI%20Journal%20-%20Jan-March%202025.pdf

Abstract

The article posits that UN peacekeeping is under an eclipse due to the polarisation in international affairs. This may deepen in case of a retreat to isolationism of a significant supporter of UN peace operations, the United States. To ensure peacekeeping remains fit for purpose in an emerging multilateral world order, the aspirant pole countries must individually and collectively step up to shoulder a heavier peace operations’ burden not only in terms of troop contribution, but also logistics support, doctrinal input and increased proportion of financing. This will not only preserve peacekeeping as the foremost multilateral instrument of choice for the international community but will also usher in such a world order.

 

We recognize that the multilateral system and its institutions, with the United Nations and its Charter at the centre, must be strengthened to keep pace with a changing world.

Pact for the Future

Introduction

United Nations (UN) peacekeeping is at a critical juncture in its chequered history. There have been no UN peacekeeping missions[1] authorized over the past decade. The mission in Mali has pulled out subsequent to withdrawal of consent by the government. The mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo, though in midst of drawdown at the request of the government, has been managing yet another an upheaval in eastern Congo. The African Union is coming into its own on peacekeeping under Charter Chapter VIII in partnership with the UN,[2] with the modalities of the financing of its missions being worked out, its mission in Somalia likely to serve as prototype. The return of President Trump to the White House has begun impacting the UN on the humanitarian and development front,[3] and could also affect the peace and security dimension through attitudes the United States (US) adopts to the UN and to peacekeeping.[4]

It would appear that UN peacekeeping is no longer a ready instrument of choice of the international community. However, the hold up on peacekeeping deployments does not have any marked deficiency in peacekeeping practice at its core. Instead, the UN Security Council (UNSC) dynamics are at its root. The geopolitical positioning of the US, Russia and China – three of the significant Permanent Five (P5) – has been impacted UNSC readiness to use its peacekeeping option. Whereas there is precedent of the General Assembly deploying peace missions under the Uniting for Peace mechanism, it has not stepped up. Polarisation effects peacekeeping.[5]  

The major phenomenon in international affairs is the transition from a post-Cold War unipolar world to a multipolar world. The rise of China led by President Xi Jinping and the return of Russia under President Putin to active involvement in international developments has put the US-led West on notice. While Russian actions in Ukraine have set back Russia-US relations, US-China relations are subject to the inevitable wariness between a hegemonic power and a rising challenger. Adversarial relations imply a return to the Cold War practices in which the P5 privilege respective interests, restricting UN actions to where these do not impact such interests. Alongside, the US is retreating from liberal internationalism, which had driven its post-Cold War engagement with peacekeeping, with no guarantee other powers might step into the void.

The last decade long-hiatus in UN peacekeeping deployments was in the eighties, when resurgence of the Cold War in wake of the Soviet Union intervention in Afghanistan made the UNSC yet another site of the competition. It is no coincidence the last UN mission deployed – to Central African Republic – was in 2014, the year when the Russians wrested Crimea from Ukraine. The situation in Ukraine having only worsened with a war on since 2022, the effect has been on cooperation within the UNSC.

Last time, it took an outbreak of détente with the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan for a resurgence in peacekeeping. The present international situation does not show signs of any such light at the end of the tunnel. Resuscitation of the instrument of peacekeeping cannot be reliant solely on the UNSC, in particular its feuding P5. The international community would be deprived of a potent option to address the myriad conflicts, ongoing and latent, if the peacekeeping instrument is not kept in good repair.[6]

This article argues that with geopolitical positioning potentially impacting the delivery of the UNSC mandate adversely, there is need for the emerging powers to step up and play a proactive role. This will demonstrate their efficacy and create space for multilateralism in line with the theme of the recent UN Summit of the Future: “multilateral solutions for a better tomorrow.” The benefit for the UN is that it would retain its credentials as the principle multilateral forum,[7] while resuscitating its premier multilateral innovation, peacekeeping.

The continuing validity of peacekeeping

For now, some conflicts are being addressed by the UN through the medium of Special Political Missions (SPM).[8] A peacekeeping option on the table helps make for success of SPMs’ peacemaking endeavours by offering peacekeeping as a means to ensure and support implementation of agreements arrived at. A peacekeeping mission, by definition, creates and sustains a secure environment that, to begin with, helps with humanitarian relief, and over time helps sustain a peaceable environment for furthering peacebuilding. Early peacebuilding - known in theory as structural peacebuilding - is enabled by multidimensional peace operations. This is necessary to lay the foundation for prevention of relapse into conflict, setting the stage for development and cultural peacebuilding.[9]

UN peacekeeping, having traversed much ground across multiple conflict zones, now has a thoroughly practiced repertoire.[10] Peacekeeping has come a long way since its beginning at the cusp of the Cold War in what has come to be known as traditional peacekeeping. It has since traversed into second generation or wider peacekeeping at the end of the Cold War and, this century, has been engaged in integrated, multidimensional peace operations. This owed to the shift in the types of conflict from inter-state to internal conflict. However, lately, inter-state conflict appears to have rekindled, which alongside continuing internal conflict, puts a premium on UN’s operational expertise.

To be sure, peacekeeping has had its troughs, but has a credible record of learning alongside.[11] In fact, it was its setback in the mid-nineties that led up to the progressive professionalization of peacekeeping,[12] beginning with the Brahimi report. Training infrastructure and networks are now highly evolved and variegated.[13] Though the last official doctrinal product is some 15 years old, doctrinal evolution has kept the UN peacekeeping doctrine contemporary and adaptable. The command and control aspect, at both strategic and operational levels, has come a long way. Gender balance, geographic representation and enhancing quality of leadership are a continuing focus. Technology and best practices absorption are a key area of upgrades. The civilian component, both substantive and support, now has both expertise and depth. The troop and police contributing countries (T/PCC) are conscious of the quality of capability offered.[14] The Chinese – a P5 member – are upping their game also as a TCC.

A challenge foreseen is the financing of operations.[15] This is attenuated by the fresh approaches that the new US administration may take as it settles in. However, the UN has faced financial troughs earlier, such as in the in the mid-sixties over the costs of the Congo mission. In President Trump’s second term there may be financing issues that unsettle peacekeeping. This could prove an opportunity for the Chinese to up its act. Since opening up space for China might not be in US interest, it is possible that peacekeeping may not see the financial turbulence apprehended. Instead, a competition to stay engaged by both the powers so as not to concede space to the other could benefit peacekeeping. Even so, developing countries with adequate financial muscle, as India, could increase their contribution on a non-reimbursable basis in the form of transportation, supplies and personnel contributions beyond their assessed share.

Even as the unipolar moment is decisively over, fresh winds buoy multilateralism. That a multipolar world is on the horizon is visible in the effervescence of the Global South, in the G20 and the expanding footprint of groupings as the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa). Peacekeeping offers scope for multipolarity advocating countries to show their salience in their peacekeeping presence and contribution.

The UN is looking for enablers and the latest in technology. This is an area for emerging powers to displace UN leaning on Western countries for niche subunits. This would not only be reflective of multipolar world but also usher in the reality. It would help fill in any vacuum that possible US disengagement might create. A case to point is equipment such as surveillance drones, mine clearing innovations,[16] soft-skinned and armoured vehicles from its atmanirbhar program could be offered to the UN or its agencies service in UN missions.  

Making peacekeeping fit-for-purpose in a multipolar world is a potential site for contenders for a permanent seat in the UNSC to make their mark. The UN Charter requires that those selected for the UNSC are distinguished by their contribution. Countries as India could then make credible demands at the intergovernmental negotiations in the General Assembly move to text-based negotiations. Power dynamics, that otherwise mostly have the Western bloc to the fore, will shift to privilege the interests of the non-West. Getting to the horseshoe table needs such fresh pathways.

Ushering in multilateralism

Peacekeeping has demonstrated its flexibility and relevance through all phases of contemporary history. Lately, inter-state conflicts have also been witnessed. Peacekeeping, particularly it’s preventive deployment variant, calls out for a relook in such circumstance. The grievous damage that recent conflicts have wrought makes recovery and reconstruction and peacebuilding all the more necessary. The increased involvement of other states in conflict zones is making peacemaking more complex, putting to naught years of efforts by successive mediators. Cumulatively, the interplay between peacekeeping, peacemaking and peacebuilding has got more complex.[17] A wider ideational engagement than the hitherto reliance on Western sources for doctrinal next-steps is required.

Precedence of peacekeeping flexibility and resilience indicates that it can adapt to the challenges of the times,[18] such as from new domains as information and challenges therein of mis/disinformation and hate speech. It has been able to draw on regional capabilities in sequential, parallel and hybrid operations, such as of the African Union and the African regional communities in southern and western Africa. It has adjusted to out-of-area interventions by bodies as the European Union and the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO). It has managed transitions taking on an interim administrative role. It has been relied on by UN-authorized and arbitrary coalitions, as in Afghanistan and Iraq respectively, and by the NATO in Kosovo, to oversee the aftermath of the peace enforcement. The pragmatism that underpins peacekeeping keeps it resilient and responsive to the nuances of the discrete challenges thrown up over the years. Its record suggests that it must be retained as instrument of choice in a multilateral world.

Multilateral engagement will bring fresh thinking and innovation, especially from the hitherto under-represented ones as Africa and Latin America. Since multilateralism-enthused countries are also rising in economic stature, the financing aspect can be revisited, so as to balance the onus that is currently on developed countries. The adage, ‘he who pays the piper calls the tune,’ is also applicable to the UN. Greater voice for a wider cross-section of powers allow for a larger peacekeeping budget to insulate against financial vagaries. 

A greater sense of ownership in the developing world will revitalize the C34 forum. This can potentially dispel reservations that Russia and China have regards peacekeeping. Their fuller support in the UNSC will then be forthcoming. It would also balance the perceived asymmetry in the Security Council in which three of the P5 are of the Western bloc. It would rekindle UN credibility, that’s taken a beating in Israel’s war in Gaza.

Mutually-empowering engagement of rising powers with peacekeeping helps with democratizing of global governance, even as the structures catch up through UNSC reforms in their own good time. Such engagement distances peacekeeping from the perception that is seemingly an instrument of the West, making it proximate to the developing world and its concerns. This would have a positive tactical level effect on the security of peacekeepers, who may otherwise unwittingly be taken as proximate to the West and liable to be targeted by forces inimical to the West. A broad-basing of support in a larger body of ‘friends of peacekeeping’ will ensure makes for easier accorded host state consent to missions. Host states will be more sanguine that they are not subject to a re-colonising agenda. They would prove less obstructive in terms of imposing movement restrictions on missions or be more forthcoming with consent.

Keeping peacekeeping ticking

Upcoming forums must be appropriated by multilateralism-persuaded countries. The Pact for the Future adopted at last year’s Summit of the Future has mandated a review of peace operations.[19] This is a decade on since the last comprehensive report on peacekeeping, that of the High-Level Panel, popularly known as the ‘Hippo report’.[20] The interested countries, in which number principal TCCs, can participate in the exercise both individually, as also as part of collectives. Placing peacekeeping renaissance on the agenda of collective forums will create momentum and critical mass for broad-basing international peace and security ownership away from being held hostage by powerplay in the UNSC. This will enhance the outcome of the forthcoming biennial Ministerial in Berlin.[21] 

A recent think-piece from the Department of Peace Operations, The Future of Peacekeeping, New Models, and Related Capabilities,[22] lends direction to the reforms ahead, as do publications from think tanks, such as, Future of the Pact.[23] The former study shows the versatility of peace operations in the listed range of the 30 functional capabilities of peace operations. While multidimensional peace operations undertook these functions as mandated, the thrust appears to be to make operations manageable by niche interventions, such as electoral support, security sector reform or disarmament, demobilisation and reintegration (DDR) assistance. This will keep operations modular, nimble, smaller, and so, less costly.

However, multidimensional peace operations with a large footprint must not be thrown out with the bathwater. With countrywide presence and visibility, these serve a purpose in stabilization and extension of state authority. By deterring spoilers, they help with protection of civilians. They serve as an embarrassing witness, helping prevent atrocity crimes. A heavier footprint is necessary to access and surveil remote areas and reduce extent of ungoverned spaces. Peacebuilding activity is given incidental security cover by their very presence and humanitarian protection assured. The peacebuilding architecture is also due for an upgrade, a timely opportunity to rethink the relationship between the two.

Imagining counter factual possibilities

Continued resort to peacekeeping over the past decade could have made a constructive difference to the conflict and their outcomes. To be sure, peacekeeping could not have been applicable in tackling the Islamic State (IS) episode, requiring as it did peace enforcement. However, though a counter factual, it can be argued that the drawdown and departure from both Iraq and Afghanistan of the coalitions could have witnessed successor peacekeeping operations. If a peace operation in Syria had got off the ground after the brief three-month long SPM there, it could have created a new reality supportive of the several rounds of talks as part of the peace process. The long-running conflicts in Libya and Yemen could also have been suitably addressed, with a preventive impact on current-day turmoil in Sahel and in the Red Sea respectively.

If peace operations were not held in abeyance in the UNSC, it was possible to visualize a pre-war insertion also in eastern Ukraine in a preventive deployment mode.[24] Even at this juncture, Ukraine is a candidate location for a peace intervention, as the prospects of a ceasefire have increased lately.[25] Indeed, today, Syria, Yemen and Sudan could benefit from deployment of a multidimensional peacekeeping operation to help recoup their broken societies and polities.

An illustrative case is of the UN Mission in South Sudan.[26] Six years of relative peace since signing of the peace agreement have witnessed a power-sharing in the government, with consensual extensions in the interim period till elections in end 2026. This is plausible response to the financial crisis brought about by the stoppage in oil flows owing to the civil war in neighbouring Sudan. Since the government is balancing the geopolitical extant in Africa, it is pressurized by Western countries over the election timeline. This makes an already fragile security situation, tenuous. Increased engagement with peacekeeping in its operational detail by a larger set of countries persuaded by the multilateral principle would prevent such use of peacekeeping operations by powerful states for their foreign policy purposes by, for instance, weaponizing criticism of the interim government.[27] It will give South Sudan greater breathing space and UNMISS a modified mandate of state capacity building support, arguably more relevant to its current circumstance.

Under the circumstance of the deadlock in the Security Council and the inattention to peacekeeping as a viable and desirable instrument over the past decade, it is possible to visualize that the impunity of Israel’s actions in the areas of operation of the UN inter-positioning operations along the Blue Line and on the Golan. It also explains in part the nonchalance with which the Rwandese trespassed into the area of operations of the stabilization mission in Congo, in close and direct support of the M23 rebel outfit. It would be fair assessment that the dwindling of the UN’s clout has been an enabling condition for such blatant actions. The corollary is stark: the UN needs revitalization.

Conclusion

Peacekeeping is an efficacious peace intervention in conflict environments. It must be preserved from the vagaries of geopolitics reflected in UNSC dynamics. Emerging powers could step up to preserve it as a desirable practice in a forthcoming multilateral world. Doing so will not only see further evolution of peacekeeping but also help construct such a multilateral world. India, as a leading advocate for the UN, peacekeeping and a multilateral future, has a significant role to play in mobilizing support on these lines.[28] It must use the multilateral forums it is part of to energise support for peacekeeping with other likeminded actors. Alongside, it must increase its contribution in all dimensions of peacekeeping beyond its forte of boots on ground. The downswing in UN peace interventions must be taken as an opportunity to forge a desired future.



The author would like to thank the Department of Geopolitics and International Relations, Manipal Academy of Higher Education, for an opportunity to present the thoughts in the paper at a presentation on 13 Feb 2025.



[1] The terms ‘peacekeeping missions’ and ‘peace operations’ are used interchangeably here.

[2] UN, Resolution 2719 (2023) Adopted by the Security Council at its 9518th meeting, on 21 December 2023, https://digitallibrary.un.org/record/4031070?v=pdf&ln=en

[3] Richard Gowan, “Stefanik’s Senate Confirmation Hearings”, 15 Jan 2025,

https://www.justsecurity.org/106397/stefanik-confirmation-hearing/

[4] World Politics Review, “The Trump Administration’s Approach Could Make or Break UN Reform”, https://www.crisisgroup.org/global/trump-administrations-approach-could-make-or-break-un-reform

[6] Richard Gowan, “The U.N. May Regret Getting Out of the Peacekeeping Business”, World Politics Review, 16 Jan 2025, https://www.crisisgroup.org/global/un-may-regret-getting-out-peacekeeping-business

[8] Department of Political Affairs and Peacebuilding, “Special Political Missions and Good Offices Engagements”, https://dppa.un.org/en/dppa-around-world

[9]The 2025 Review of the United Nations Peacebuilding Architecture”, UN,

 https://www.un.org/peacebuilding/content/2025-review-un-peacebuilding-architecture

[13] Koops et. al., “Peacekeeping in the Twenty-First Century” in eds. Koops et. al., The Oxford Handbook UN Peacekeeping Operations (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015), 608-613

[16] UNISFA, “Mine clearing bot”, Blue Sentinels, Vol. 3 (9 Nov 2024), https://unisfa.unmissions.org/beacon-0

[17] Ban Ki-moon, Resolved: UN in a Divided World (Noida: Harper Collins, 2021), 315-328

[18] Berma Goldewijk and J. Soeters, “Peace operations and ‘no peace to keep’”, in Routledge Handbook of Defence Studies (New York: Routledge, 2020), 265-68.

[20] “Report of the Independent High-level Panel on Peace Operations”, UN, 19 Jun 2015, http://www.un.org/en/ga/search/view_doc.asp

[21]United Nations Peacekeeping Ministerial 2025”, UN, https://peacekeeping.un.org/en/united-nations-peacekeeping-ministerial-2025

[22] Department of Peacekeeping Operations, “The Future of Peacekeeping, New Models, and Related Capabilities”, 1 Nov 2024, https://peacekeeping.un.org/en/study-on-future-of-peacekeeping-new-models-and-related-capabilities

[23] SCR, Future of the Pact: Recommendations for Security Council Action”, 20 Dec 2024,  https://www.securitycouncilreport.org/research-reports/future-of-the-pact-recommendations-for-security-council-action.php

[24] Ali Ahmed, “Conflict Prevention-Peacemaking-Preventive Deployment: A triangle whose time has come?,” https://aliahd66.substack.com/p/conflict-prevention-peacemaking-preventive?utm_source=publication-search

[25] The Hindu, “Russia opposes Western peacekeepers in Ukraine”, 30 Dec 2024, https://www.thehindu.com/news/international/russia-opposes-western-peacekeepers-in-ukraine/article69044434.ece

[26] Reconstituted Joint Monitoring and Evaluation Commission (RJMEC), South Sudan: RJMEC Quarterly Report: December 2024”, 20 Jan 2025, https://reliefweb.int/report/south-sudan/rjmec-quarterly-report-status-implementation-r-arcss-1st-october-31st-december-2024

[28] “Letter dated 25 November 2022 from the Permanent Representative of India to the United Nations addressed to the President of the Security Council”, UN, 25 Nov 2022, https://digitallibrary.un.org/record/3996440?v=pdf

 

Monday, 28 April 2025

 https://open.substack.com/pub/aliahd66/p/pahalgam-as-ajit-dovals-cross-to?utm_source=share&utm_medium=android&r=i1fws

Pahalgam as Ajit Doval’s cross to bear


The press release on Ajit Doval’s appointment as national security adviser has it that his tenure would be coextensive with that of Narendra Modi as prime minister. Both are now into their third tenure in respective appointments.

Doval helped with Modi’s image-building as a strong-man at various junctures of Modi’s political journey. Evidently, Modi continues to need Doval for upping his political game.

With Pahalgam, Doval has delivered another Pulwama-sized opportunity to buoy Modi’s political persona and pitch on the cusp of campaigning in the forthcoming elections in Bihar.

With elections in Bengal to follow next year, the scene is being set for gaining a majority in both houses for the ruling party.

Coming as the Pahalgam outrage did close on the heels of the Jaffar train hijack incident and Pakistan Army Chief Asim Munir’s fulminations, Pahalgam is laid squarely at Pakistan’s door.

However, Doval must be arraigned for creating the conditions that led to Pahalgam. Clearly, intelligence operations went overboard on his watch.

Modi has reiterated the ‘harshest response’. Doval is presumably dutifully busy with whistling up a Modi-era Lightning Campaign for ‘unimagined’ punishment.

Just as Pulwama was rather aptly timed for Modi’s political trajectory, Pahalgam may in retrospect turn out to be equally so – if all goes well for India’s military.

It bears reflection that such a momentous decision could stem from a few jihadi terrorists striking lucky at an unguarded meadow.

It should instead be a logical step up from preceding contingency planning, exercises and equipping effort.

Such gigantic national efforts are not predicated on triggers outsourced to the enemy or its proxies.

In other words, a conspiracy theory on Pahalgam cannot be ruled out.

The opportunity has been seized by the military, knowing it would prove cathartic for its showing at Balakot and over Rajauri; and indeed, also in Ladakh.

Since Balakot, its readied itself with the S-400 and Rafales; the latter was sorely missed in the skies over Rajauri by the then Air Chief. It is already softening up Pakistani defences along the Line of Control to also keep Pakistan guessing where the impending blow will fall. It’s started an energetic exercise with the portents of an Exercise Brasstacks.

Though intended for such contingencies, Cold Start – formally termed Proactive Strategy (PAS) - has been a non-starter.

It’s uncertain if the military dithered or if Doval got cold feet, but the fact is that the non-initiation of PAS allows for extended preparation time with the logic of attacking at ‘a place and time of own choosing.’

The upshot is a longer duration revving up for war.

The hiatus furnishes the right-wing ecosystem time to deepen the communal divide, an opportunity for which it never needed any beckoning – though the leisured terror attack was a specifically crafted invite.

For Modi, it could prove useful to pocket the hold-out states along the Ganga waterway – Bihar and Bengal – where tactics deployed in Haryana and Maharashtra may not work since the state governments are not double-engined.

Such a windfall for the right-wing political agenda suggests an alternate truth.

If Baisaran could attract the attention of an itinerant forest-ensconced jihadi outfit, that it missed security scrutiny is inexplicable in any other terms than as an open invitation.

That the jihadis hewed so closely to a script that would gladden right-wing hearts invokes suspicion on who exactly was the script writer.

Consequently, a conspiracy theory on Pahalgam needs to be ruled in.

After all, recall the Pulwama blast was on a convoy that should not have been there in first place.

If Pakistanis had done the outrage at Chattisinghpora, why the elaborate cover-up at Pathribal and Barakpore; not to forget the judicial calisthenics thereafter?

Consequently, given Indian propensity for plausibly deniable intelligence operations and in light of the immense political dividend for the right wing from the Pahalgam strike, Pahalgam cannot readily be taken as a solely fortuitous occurrence.

For now, allowing for Pahalgam as Pakistan’s doing, it’s evident that Pakistani intelligence minds have divined the Indian reality masterfully. Their script for the jihadis ensures India reacted exactly in the manner they wished.

What does this bespeak of India of today? What is Doval’s complicity in the creation of such an India?

That is Doval’s cross to bear in history.

If and since Doval is currently readying the security establishment for a war with potential to go nuclear, he should be faulted for going down this route at jihadi behest.

In other words, if Pahalgam was not a black operation, it really ought to have been one.

And, if it wasn’t, Doval is eminently sackable for being enticed into a war, the end game of which can only be talks in which the status of Munir’s jugular will prominently figure.

The good part is that the opposite number is Asim Munir. Though not a Yahya - he is no drunk - he may instead be high on what was opium to Marx.

Even so, the military must be cautioned that capriciousness of war outcomes can only be tempered by strategic wisdom.

If the military falls short on the latter, poetic justice will catch up with Doval and mentor Modi. But that cannot be any patriot’s wish.