sandorski sandorski:
Canadian_Mind Canadian_Mind:
I find the concept of being regarded as a peacekeeper embarrasing. All I have to do is look back at Rwanda and feel shame. But their is more to it then that.
Peacekeeping, as it is now, is a joke. I don't look forward to the day I'm off in some pisspot nation watching women get raped and their kids murdered in some of the most gruesome forms imaginable (think being strangles by your own intestines so some warlord can prove a point), while the ignorant millions back home think that i am making a difference in the world and bettering the Canadian image. Maybe sometimes it works, but I have yet to talk to a Canadian former-peacekeeper who doesn't have some horrible or gruesome story to tell about their peacekeeping days, if they are willing or able to talk about it without being brought to tears.
What's embarrassing about preventing conflict?
Look at the next sentance.
I am fully aware that there was nothing anyone there could do, and it was no fault on their part. They did what they could. But Rwanda has been engrained into my mind as what a useless concept peacekeeping is in its resent form, and I find the participation in the beurocratic, disfigured, self-handcapped mess that peacekeeping is embarrasing.
I also think I would be far more than embarrassed if I was ever limited by my SOPs to simply watch as a woman is raped and her kids killed, probably begging me to help in a language I don't understand. I also find the concept of people wanting their military to be all about participting in what I just described above to be nationally embarrasing; because of the ignorance of the people of what really happens much of the time, because fo what happened much of the time, and because the military is regarded, as Bart describes, as glorified cops.
I joined to be a part of this nations defense, not some warlords babysitter (observer) as he lines a bunch of kids up behind a school and fills them, and the wall, with bullet holes.
If peacekeeping actually worked, it would be something to be damn proud of, like what Pearson did in 1956. What he fostered in Suez was a fucking miracle.
travior travior:
I'm thinking that he means that even by being there he was unable to prevent the violence that was still occuring. Might not have been an external conflict but was damn sure an internal one. And when you are not allowed to interfere because you are "keeping the peace" it kinda makes you want to drag the politicians over and force them to watch the "peace" first-hand.
explained what i wanted to say in not nearly as many words.