Drones are heading to eastern Congo as part of an intervention force to root out the
rebel groups that have destabilized the region for years. Meanwhile, the UN is
mulling the idea of unarmed drones sent to Ivory
Coast as the country recovers from nearly a decade of civil unrest.
Experts say unarmed drones could give
often-beleaguered peacekeepers an edge in missions where they can be outfoxed
by guerrillas, who often have greater numbers and more local knowledge than UN
forces possess.
“It’s an essential tool that’s ideal for many
missions,” says Walter Dorn, a professor at the Royal Military College of Canada and a former consultant to
the UN.
Already officials are looking at whether drones may
be useful for peacekeeping in South
Sudan, he says. “It can also be very valuable if you’re sending out a
patrol to have a UAV [unmanned aerial vehicle] in advance so you can tell the
conditions of the road, if bridges are washed out, or even if there are
ambushes on the road.”
In Ivory Coast, militants loyal to former President Laurent
Gbagbo are using the dense forest along the country’s border with Liberia
to hide out and stage attacks. Peacekeepers often show up at the sites of these
attacks too late, or are victims themselves. Seven blue helmets from Niger were
killed last June in an attack blamed on the militants.
In a report sent in March to the Security Council, Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon proposed sending drones to Ivory Coast even as he planned to
pull out several hundred blue helmets.
The secretary-general also proposed the deployment
of drones during the planning stages of the Congo intervention force.
The force’s conception came after the M23 rebel
movement’s takeover of the provincial capital, Goma. Peacekeepers initially
fought back against the rebels but later retreated.
“In the DRC [Congo], the UN has been condemned on
numerous occasions for not knowing when rebels were attacking civilians (even,
sometimes, a few kilometers from UN camps),” writes Lise Morje Howard, an
expert on peacekeeping at Georgetown
University, in an e-mail.
“In the regional neighborhoods of the DRC and Cote
d'Ivoire [Ivory Coast], war spreads across borders like a disease. The ability
to monitor borders and conflict areas from the air could very well help stem
the spread of war,” she added.
The UN has lacked a reliable surveillance strategy
since the days of the Rwanda genocide in 1994, Dr. Howard says. The general in
charge of UN troops during the genocide lamented that he had no idea what was
going on in much of the country during the slaughter.
Drones could help solve that.
“They can just stay in the air for a long time. They
can cover a lot of distance, and remain on station possibly tens of hours,”
says Douglas
Barrie, a military aerospace analyst at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London.
“In the UN context, I would imagine those being a particular attraction.”
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