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Zipper said:BigMC - Your idea that the UN will solve all your problems and thus we (Canada) being only a peacekeeping force is naive. No where has peacekeeping worked in the long run. Yes it has worked in the short term to stop the butchery, but those opposing sides then have no reason to sit down at a table and stop the horror. This is why so many peacekeeping mission of yesteryear are still going on today. In many cases today, the idea of peacemaking and thus heavier hitting forces going in and slapping both sides and "forcing" them to the table works better.
Zipper, excellent point. It reminds me of a paper I read of the point was, historically conflicts between combatants have ended because one side or the other was exhausted or beaten to a pulp, thus the willingness of one side to continue the fight was taken away eventually.
Of course this meant a very bloody conflict, usually and our modern (PC) sensibilities think there is a better way. Now jump to modern times (post WW2) were most conflicts do NOT run their course and exhaust the willingness of one side or the other to continue the fight.
When the UN or some other peace keeping force jumps in the middle of two combatants, this only gives time to one or both sides to rearm and lick their wounds. It does little to remove the compulsion to restart the fight at some later date, thus extending the missery for civilians into another generation.
Take the example of Iraq. The Americans overwhelmed the Iraqi forces so quickly that the hard core Iraqis were not really beaten into submission and were able to regroup and fight back as an insurgent force. Post WW2 Germany, the Germans were so beaten down by the war from all sides that there was not much if any interest in continuing the fight in any form by the hard core elements.
MHO,
Blue Max