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ID134390
Title ProperFutility of force
Other Title Informationstrategic lessons for dealing with unconventional armed groups from the UN’s war on Haiti’s Gangs
LanguageENG
AuthorCockayne, James
Summary / Abstract (Note)Confronted by non-conventional non-state military forces enjoying high – but very localized – social legitimacy, the United Nations Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH) struggled between 2004 and 2007 to embed the use of force in a larger strategy of state consolidation. The article explores the confrontations between MINUSTAH and unconventional armed groups in Haiti during this period. It traces MINUSTAH’s operations against criminal gangs, and the resulting process of strategic learning. It explores how tactical innovations allowed MINUSTAH to defeat the gangs, but also highlights that the larger political objective – breaking the connection between the gangs and Haiti’s political-business elite – remained unarticulated and elusive – and perhaps ultimately unfeasible, given the necessity of Haitian state consent for continued UN operations in the country. In a final post-script the article reflects on the return of the gangs after the earthquake of 12 January 2010, and what it signals about the limited impact of tactical force on the presence and power of political-criminal networks.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Strategic Studies vol. 37, No.3; Oct.2014: p.736-769
Journal SourceJournal of Strategic Studies Vol: 37 No 5
Key WordsUse of force ;  organized crime ;  Haiti ;  Six Day War ;  Gangs ;  MINUSTAH ;  JMAG ;  Strategic learning ;  Tactical Innovations ;  Unconventional networked threats ;  United Nations


 
 
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