training for peace operations. “peacekeeping is not a job for soldiers…but only soldiers can do...
TRANSCRIPT
TRAINING FORPEACE OPERATIONS
TRAINING FOR PEACE OPERATIONS
“PEACEKEEPING IS NOT A JOB FOR SOLDIERS…BUT ONLY
SOLDIERS CAN DO IT.”
TRAINING FOR PEACE OPERATIONS
• Fifty years of peacekeeping experience by the United Nations
But
• Lesson learned from review of peacekeeping in Brahimi Report in 2000 and New Horizons in 2009 have refined UN peacekeeping.
– “One major weakness of forces operating there is poorly equipped and trained soldiers.”
Lessons Learned report from Sierra Leone
TRAINING FOR PEACE OPERATIONS
• Many facets of normal military training and skills apply to peace operations
HOWEVER
– Peace operations require training in selected special skills, and
– An adjustment of attitude and approach to tasks
PEACE OPERATIONS DOCTRINE
“Fundamental principles, practices and procedures that guide the military component of UN mandated operations.”
“Such military doctrine provides a body of thought that will guide a common approach by member states in their preparation for un peacekeeping activities. The desired result is a consistency that enhances collective effectiveness and develops confidence between troop contributors when operating together in the field in support
of those mandated UN objectives.”
FUNDAMENTAL DOCTRINAL PRINCIPLES FOR PEACE OPERATIONS
Principles of war (US)
• Mass• Maneuver• Offensive • Objective• Unity of command• Simplicity• Security• Economy of effort• Surprise
Principles of peace operations (UN)
• Consent of Parties• Impartiality• Non-use of force – except in
self-defense and defense of mission
• Legitimacy• Credibility• National/local ownership
ObjectiveSimplicitySecurity
• Legitimacy• Perseverance• Restraint
TRAINING FOR PEACE OPERATIONS
Doctrine and training are dynamic
• Methods and practices of conducting peace operations must be adaptive:
– New environment
– New procedures
– New technology
– New training methodologies & devices
– Lessons learned
Core Pre-Deployment Training
• Varies by role of UN peacekeeper and specific mission– Observer– Formed military unit– Staff officer– Police– Civilian
9
MILITARY TRAINING AND EDUCATION
HOLISTIC APPROACH– Training
• Individual• Military unit
– Education• Special skills• Leader development
– Training support• Doctrine, tactics, techniques & procedures• Facilities • Qualified instructors
UN TRAINING REQUIREMENTS
• UN Charter
• UN Systems
• Code of Conduct
• Fundamentals of Peacekeeping
• Code of Conduct
• History and evolution of Peacekeeping
UN MISSION TRAINING REQUIREMENTS
• Chapter VI and VII operational and tactical level training– Cultural and historical awareness– Use of force– Rules of Engagement– Refugees and displaced persons– Civil affairs and language– Communications, command structure and logistics– Dealing with the UN, NGO’s and regional organizations – Public affairs– Precautionary medical– Tactical training in operations– Information (intelligence) gathering
TRAINING FOR PEACE OPERATIONS
• Training for Peace Operations is a national responsibility
• United Nations provides training support– Policy Evaluation and Training (PET) Division
provides training guidance and certification.• Training publications & materials
• Training assistance
• Training information data base
• Certification of training
National Peacekeeping Training Centers
• Over 50 countries have national peacekeeping training centers
• Some of the more established institutions include: Sweden, Norway, Ireland, Ghana, Kenya, India, Bangladesh, Malaysia, Canada, Argentina, Brazil and Chile
• International Association of Peacekeeping Training Centers (http://www.iaptc.org/)
SWEDINTSweden
SADC RPTC South Africa
KAIPTCGhana
CAECOPAZArgentina
PEACEKEEPING INFORMATION DATA BASE
• Wide array of information on peacekeeping training world-wide– Sharing of information
• Information available on training in all 190 member states
• Some information on training from 88 troop contributing countries
• Specific information from 63 countries about their training activities
• Some specific training course material
OTHER PEACEKEEPING EDUCATION AND TRAINING RESOURCES
• Self-funded, not-for-profit organisation focused on peacekeeping training
• Has provided self-paced, distance training in PSO since 1995
• 103,373 enrolments; active students body of 31,100; 164 nations represented
• 23 courses in four languages
An Introduction to the UN SystemCivil-Military Coordination (CIMIC)Commanding UN Peacekeeping OperationsHumanitarian Relief OpsDisarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration Ethics in PeacekeepingGender PerspectivesHistory of Peacekeeping 1945–87History of Peacekeeping 1988–96Human Rights and PeacekeepingHistory of Peacekeeping 1997–2006
Courses offered
Implementation of SCR 1325 (2000) in AfricaHuman RightsImplementation of SCR 1325 (2000) in LACInternational Humanitarian LawLogistical Support to UN Peacekeeping OperationsOperational Logistical SupportAdvanced Topics in United Nations LogisticsMine ActionPeacekeeping and International Conflict ResolutionPreventing Violence Against WomenPrinciples and GuidelinesUnited Nations Military ObserversUnited Nations Police
Courses offered (continued)
Mission Status: 2/3 of POTI’s students have served on a peacekeeping mission
“The Special Committee (on Peacekeeping, C34) welcomes the free and multilingual delivery of e-learning courses on peacekeeping provided by the Peace Operations Training Institute, and encourages Member States to support, including through the provision of voluntary financial contributions, the creation of additional courses.”
United Nations Special Committee on Peacekeeping Operations (C-34). Its official recommendations for 2011, appearing in UN document A/65/19
UNITED NATIONS INSTITUTE FOR TRAINING AND RESEARCH (UNITAR)
• Self-paced correspondence courses and classroom courses– Each course contains all needed materials– Courses range from 4-16 lessons– Each lesson contains learning objectives,
study material, and self-scoring quiz– End of course examination submitted for
grading to UNITAR
UNITAR CORRESPONDENCE COURSES
• Representative courses – United Nations military observer: methods
and techniques– Security measures for United Nations
peacekeepers– Logistical support – Demining
Method to Set-up Trainingon UN Peacekeeping
• Contact your military advisor in New York
• Review and prepare lessons in accordance with UN standards
• Ask for certification of training by the UN
• Send personnel to other nations’ training centers
UN TRAINING ASSISTANCE
• Provided by United Nations training assistance team(s) (UNTAT)– On-call experts
• Pre-selected
• Pre-trained
– “Train the trainers”
– Coordinated through DPKO
– Specific type training based on consultation between DPKO & member state’s permanent mission to UN
TYPES OF UN TRAINING ASSISTANCE
• Assistance to national and regional peacekeeping training centers
• Pre-mission training for specific missions
• Training assistance to established mission
• Monitor & assist in-mission training
UN TRAINING SUPPORT INITIATIVES
• Establishment of in-mission training cells in established missions
• Movement for standardization and evaluation in peace operations training– Standardized peacekeeping training guidelines
– Assessment criteria
• Focus change from “train the trainer” to assisting established regional and national training centers
INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF PEACEKEEPING TRAINING CENTERS
(IAPTC)
• Facilitates communication and exchange of information among people responsible for PK
• Promotes/advertises well-tested practices• Provides information to PK countries which
lack PK training centers– Goal: To establish an information exchange that
allows PK Training Centers to minimize duplication in their efforts, share workload and promote common standards.
http://vodpod.com/watch/1212932-courage-for-peace-peacekeeping
PEACE OPERATIONS TRAINING
SUMMARY
• PK training remains a national responsibility• UN DPKO Policy, Evaluation and Training
Division is the focal point for training assistance– UNTAT– Publications & other materials– Maintains electronic data base