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Journal Article

Citation

Sanderson JM. Int. Migr. Rev. 2001; 35(1): 117-123.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2001, Center for Migration Studies, New York, Inc., Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/j.1747-7379.2001.tb00006.x

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

I have been a keen student of international intervention since long before my command of the United Nations forces in Cambodia. My military career has spanned much of the Cold War years and has taken me to places like Malaysia during the period of confrontation over its formation, Vietnam, Europe at the height of the strategy of Mutually Assured Destruction, and most of Southeast Asia. I was an instructor at the British Army Staff College at the time of the establishment of UNIFIL – the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon – a serious aberration in the determinedly passive international peacekeeping approach to that time. The earlier intervention in the Congo in the 1960s seemed to have warned the UN off anything forceful in disrupted states, leaving it to former colonial powers to extract themselves from their former areas of engagement with as much saving grace as they could muster. Many of them did not do this very well.

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