Tuesday, 12 November 2013

THE UN IS CHANGING DIMENSION OF THERE FORCE

        The UN now make and offensive attack with the newly formed intervention force brigage. in congo thwe goverment troops have been fighting over a rebel group called M23. the rebel who has already took over city goma in the last 18 month,meanwhile the UN interfention force are powerless to interference cause they had know mandate to engage.
        IT all change in mach when 3,00 strong force was giving green light to attack.The balance of the fight shifted and the rebels surrender.CONsider the number of the peace making force has at september 97,00 troops police and order military expert.
       However the force is not a permanent one. they are actually loan from various nation, Pakistan and Bangladesh, with about8,000 each, followed by India, Ethiopia, and Nigeria.each nation are been giving $1,028 for each soldier per month, according to the united state the budget is about 7.5 billion naira and more than have of it is funded by America taxpayer.That's more than the next three top contributors, combined – Japan, France, and Germany. China and Russia are in 6th and 8th places respectively.

Each of these funders has its own agenda. So, for example, if the U.N. were to propose an aggressive role in Syria, China and certainly Russia would likely oppose. Or take another example. U.N. peacekeeping forces could never police parts of Kashmir, the volatile area contested by India and Pakistan. Among other problems, a substantial number of troops are of course actually South Asian.
It's a reminder that everything at the U.N. has to be sanctioned by its member states, and the U.N. cannot act without the political will, resources, and mandate from these countries. And their national interests will often trump any broader international interest.
A  Corporation compared major nation-building operations that were led by the United States with those led by the United Nations. Of the eight American-led missions, only four could be considered a success – Germany, Japan, Bosnia, and Kosovo – while there were four failures, including of course Iraq and Afghanistan.
The United Nations actually had a better track record, seven of its eight missions brought peace. Of course the U.N. tends to get into a situation when the major powers have already reached some kind of agreement; still it's worth giving some credit to these troops, and hoping that they succeed in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where they now are.

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