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Report to the Chairman, Committee on International Relations, House of 
Representatives:

United States General Accounting Office:

GAO:

September 2003:

U.N. Peacekeeping:

Transition Strategies for Post-Conflict Countries Lack Results-
Oriented Measures of Progress:

U.N. Peacekeeping:

GAO-03-1071:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-03-1071, a report to the Chairman, Committee on 
International Relations, House of Representatives 

Why GAO Did This Study:

The United Nations responded to the failure of some past peacekeeping 
operations by developing a strategy to help peacekeeping operations 
move a country from conflict to sustainable peace. It has attempted to 
apply this strategy to the large and costly peacekeeping operations in 
Sierra Leone, East Timor, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo 
since 2001. As a contributor of over 25 percent of the cost of U.N. 
operations, the United States has a stake in the successful 
application of this strategy. The strategy also has implications for 
the conduct of international peace operations in other post-conflict 
countries. GAO was asked to (1) identify the elements of the U.N. 
transition strategy; (2) assess the extent to which the United Nations 
has applied the strategy to operations; and (3) assess the challenges 
to implementing the strategy in these three countries.

What GAO Found:

The United Nations has developed a transition strategy for its 
peacekeeping operations that takes a comprehensive and long-term view 
and focuses on the causes of the conflict. The U.N. strategy for 
making effective peacekeeping transitions has three elements: (1) 
establishing conditions for sustainable peace, (2) coordinating 
efforts among the United Nations and other international organizations 
to establish these conditions and sustain assistance after 
peacekeepers withdraw, and (3) developing objectives and results-
oriented measures of progress to help manage and decide when a 
country’s conditions warrant the withdrawal of peacekeepers.

The United Nations is attempting to apply the elements of this 
strategy to help Sierra Leone, East Timor, and the Democratic Republic 
of the Congo transition from conflict to sustainable peace, but it 
faces enormous challenges. Establishing security often takes longer 
and can be more expensive than originally planned in countries where 
rival factions may continue to fight. Developing participatory 
governance is also difficult in countries with little experience of 
accountable government. Coordinating with independent international 
organizations and donor nations with different priorities is also a 
challenge. The United Nations has not yet developed results-oriented 
measures of progress for the three peacekeeping operations.

Although the United Nations uses some indicators to manage the 
withdrawal of peacekeeping troops, they did not have results-oriented 
measures to assess the security situations in Sierra Leone and East 
Timor and subsequent events in each country showed that the situation 
was not as secure as available measures indicated. The U.N. Department 
of Peacekeeping Operations acknowledges that it needs better 
indicators by which to measure the progress peacekeeping operations 
are making in attaining sustainable peace. However, the department has 
not yet developed these indicators.

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-03-1071.

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click 
on the link above. For more information, contact Joseph A. Christoff 
at (202) 512-8979 or christoffj@gao.gov.

[End of section]

Contents:

Letter:

Results in Brief:

Background:

U.N. Peacekeeping Transition Strategy Consists of Three Elements:

United Nations Is Trying to Apply the Transition Strategy:

United Nations Confronts Significant Challenges to Implementing 
Transition Strategy:

Conclusions:

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation:

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology:

Appendix II: U.N. Objectives and Measures of Progress, by Mission:

Appendix III: Crises and International Response in Sierra Leone, East 
Timor, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo:

Sierra Leone:

East Timor:

Democratic Republic of the Congo:

Appendix IV: Comments from the U.N. Department of Peacekeeping 
Operations:

Appendix VGAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments:

GAO Contacts:

Staff Acknowledgments:

Tables:

Table 1: U.N. Peacekeeping Transition Objectives:

Table 2: U.N. Peacekeeping Transition Security Objectives and Measures 
of Progress in Sierra Leone:

Table 3. Objectives and Measures for the Department of Justice Program 
for Overseas Prosecutorial Development and Training:

Table 4: U.N. Objectives and Measures of Progress in Sierra Leone:

Table 5: U.N. Objectives and Measures of Progress in East Timor:

Table 6: U.N. Objectives and Measures of Progress in the Democratic 
Republic of the Congo:

Figures:

Figure 1: U.N. Peacekeeping Operations in Sierra Leone, East Timor, and 
the Democratic Republic of the Congo, as of June 30, 2003:

Figure 2: U.N. Troops and Civilian Police Man a Security Checkpoint 
with East Timorese Police:

Figure 3: Modified Timetable for Drawdown of U.N. Peacekeepers in 
Sierra Leone:

Figure 4: Revisions in U.N. Peacekeeping Troops and Police Drawdown 
Schedule in East Timor:

Figure 5: French Soldier in Bunia in the Democratic Republic of the 
Congo:

Figure 6: Sierra Leone Soldiers on Guard near the Volatile Border with 
Liberia:

Figure 7: Map of Sierra Leone:

Figure 8: Map of East Timor:

Figure 9: Location of Countries Aligned with and against the Kabila 
Government in 1998, and the Location of Major Antigovernment Groups and 
Natural Resources in the Democratic Republic of the Congo as of 2003:

Abbreviations:

DPKO: Department of Peacekeeping Operations:  

DRC: Democratic Republic of the Congo: 

ETPS: East Timor Police Service:  

RUF: Revolutionary United Front:  

U.N.: United Nations:

United States General Accounting Office:

Washington, DC 20548:

September 26, 2003:

The Honorable Henry J. Hyde 
Chairman, 
Committee on International Relations 
House of Representatives:

Dear Mr. Chairman:

The United Nations, in partnership with other international 
organizations, has undertaken peace operations to establish security 
and the rule of law in war-torn countries such as Somalia, Cambodia, 
and Bosnia. However, years after these operations began, some of these 
countries do not have a sustainable peace or fully abide by the rule of 
law.[Footnote 1] The U.N. Security Council has since authorized other 
peace operations that have challenges comparable to previous efforts. 
By June 2003, U.N. costs for operations in East Timor, Sierra Leone, 
and the Democratic Republic of the Congo exceeded $6 billion, with the 
United States contributing over 25 percent of these funds. To ensure 
greater success in such peace operations, the U.N. Secretary General 
developed a strategy for effective peacekeeping transitions--the 
process peace operations use to move a country from immediate conflict 
toward long-term sustainable peace. This strategy was to apply to 
countries with complex emergencies--countries confronting civil war, a 
humanitarian crisis, and a breakdown of civil order.

You asked us to assess the U.N. strategy for peacekeeping transitions 
in countries with complex emergencies. In this report, we (1) identify 
the elements of the U.N. transition strategy; (2) assess the extent to 
which the United Nations is attempting to apply the strategy in Sierra 
Leone, East Timor,[Footnote 2] and the Democratic Republic of the 
Congo; and (3) assess the challenges to implementing the strategy in 
these countries.

To identify the elements of the peacekeeping transition strategy, we 
reviewed U.N., GAO, and other organizations' reports about 
peacekeeping. We met with officials at the United Nations, the World 
Bank, and other international organizations to discuss their 
peacekeeping and assistance strategies in countries with complex 
emergencies. We performed fieldwork at U.N. operations in East Timor 
and Sierra Leone, which are in the initial drawdown phase. We conducted 
limited work at the U.N. operation in the Democratic Republic of the 
Congo, which is expanding operations. We selected these peace 
operations because they are the only U.N. operations begun in countries 
with complex emergencies since the United Nations developed a new 
peacekeeping strategy. Appendix I details our scope and methodology.

Results in Brief:

The U.N. Secretary General's strategy for making effective peacekeeping 
transitions focuses on achieving tangible results within a country and 
consists of three elements that U.N. peacekeeping operations and other 
international stakeholders are to carry out, including:

* establishing conditions for sustainable peace in the country, 
including adequate security, rule of law and participatory governance, 
and economic and social reform;

* coordinating efforts among the United Nations and other international 
organizations to establish these conditions and sustain assistance 
after peacekeepers withdraw; and:

* specifying objectives (linked to the country conditions sought) and 
developing results-oriented measures of progress toward achieving these 
conditions to help manage the withdrawal of peacekeepers.[Footnote 3]

The U.N. Security Council has noted its support for the strategy but 
decides on a case-by-case basis whether to authorize the peacekeepers 
and resources required to implement it.

The United Nations Secretariat is attempting to apply the elements of 
this strategy to help Sierra Leone, East Timor, and the Democratic 
Republic of the Congo transition to sustainable peace. First, to 
establish the conditions for sustainable peace, the United Nations and 
other stakeholders have deployed thousands of peacekeepers, police, and 
international administrators in Sierra Leone and East Timor to 
establish security, reform government institutions, and undertake 
economic reforms. In the Congo, efforts are less extensive, but in July 
2003 the Security Council began expanding U.N. activities. Second, the 
United Nations, World Bank, and donor countries are trying to 
coordinate their work through joint planning and other mechanisms. 
Third, U.N. peacekeeping operations have developed objectives and 
results-oriented measures to a limited extent to plan drawdowns of 
peacekeepers. The Security Council, however, makes the final decisions 
on the drawdown or termination of peacekeeping operations based on 
factors such as political and budgetary considerations.

The United Nations confronts significant challenges to implementing 
each element of the new strategy. First, establishing the conditions 
for sustainable peace has taken longer and been more costly than 
expected. Achieving adequate security in Sierra Leone and East Timor 
took more time than expected because rival factions opposed the peace 
operation and continued fighting. Continued fighting remains a problem 
in the Congo. And developing rule of law and participatory governance 
has proved difficult because the countries had limited experience with 
democratic governance, traditions, and institutions. Second, the United 
Nations must effectively coordinate efforts with other international 
organizations working in complex emergencies, but each has its own 
priorities. Third, the United Nations has not developed meaningful 
results-oriented measures of progress for most objectives. For example, 
a primary measure for East Timor's capacity to provide internal 
security has focused on the number of police to be trained, rather than 
how well they control crime and violence. U.N. mission staff in the 
field stated that they had not been directed to develop or use results-
oriented measures. Moreover, they stated they lacked the staff 
resources necessary to gather the needed data and report it to U.N. 
headquarters.

This report contains no recommendations. We provided a draft of this 
report to the Departments of Defense, Justice, and State; the U.S. 
Agency for International Development; and the United Nations. We 
received verbal comments from the State Department and written comments 
from the U.N. Department of Peacekeeping Operations. The remaining 
agencies did not provide comments. The State Department generally 
agreed with our findings and provided technical comments and 
clarifications, which we incorporated where appropriate.

The United Nations also generally agreed that the report identified key 
issues facing peacekeeping operations. The United Nations further 
commented that the report (1) did not fully discuss its efforts to 
apply results-oriented performance measures for its operations, (2) did 
not acknowledge numerical measures of progress in mission reporting, 
and (3) did not fully explain the mandate of the peacekeeping operation 
in the Congo or progress made. In response, we added information to the 
report about recent and ongoing U.N. efforts to develop results-
oriented performance measures. We state in the report that the 
peacekeeping operations use numerical measures of progress but note 
that most of these are measures of output or tasks rather than measures 
of results. We discuss the broader security and economic objectives of 
the U.N. mandate in the Congo in several locations in the report, 
including table 2. We report on progress made in the Congo, 
particularly in appendix III, however, much of the progress is very 
recent.

Background:

The U.N. Security Council authorizes all peacekeeping operations as a 
means to further international peace and security.[Footnote 4] The U.N. 
Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO) is responsible for the 
planning, management, and logistical support of U.N. peacekeeping 
operations worldwide. From 1948 through August 2003, the Security 
Council authorized 56 peacekeeping operations. Fourteen of these 
operations were ongoing as of August 2003.

Most current U.N. peacekeeping operations have relatively narrow 
mandates that authorize peacekeepers to monitor or supervise cease-
fires and peace agreements between formerly warring parties. Three 
ongoing operations--those in East Timor, Sierra Leone, and the 
Democratic Republic of the Congo--have broader, multidimensional 
mandates that address complex emergencies.

Earlier multidimensional peacekeeping operations in Somalia, Cambodia, 
and Bosnia tried to address governance, human rights, and humanitarian 
affairs, but they initially lacked long-term transition strategies. For 
example, the peace operation in Somalia did not clearly link security 
with efforts to rebuild the country. In Bosnia, a coalition of nations 
led by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization formed an international 
force to provide security, which was initially planned to last 1 year. 
But 2 years later, troop withdrawal was linked to the achievement of 
broad objectives for the overall peace operation. In Cambodia, there 
was no clear plan for effectively developing the rule of law after the 
peacekeeping operation left. The Security Council recognized the 
shortcomings in these operations and began to consider better 
strategies to plan and manage operations for sustainable peace.

In 1999, the need to address such shortcomings gained greater urgency 
as the Security Council mandated new U.N. operations to address complex 
emergencies in Sierra Leone, East Timor, and the Democratic Republic of 
the Congo. (App. III describes in more detail the crisis each of these 
countries faced and the United Nations' response.) The council debated 
the need for a new approach to planning, conducting, and concluding 
multidimensional peacekeeping operations in countries with complex 
emergencies. The council examined the lessons learned from these past 
failures and the process for closing a peacekeeping operation. In 2000, 
the council requested that the Secretary General make recommendations 
about how to effectively launch, close, or significantly alter a U.N. 
peacekeeping operation. Figure 1 provides more information on each 
country and the U.N. operation there.

Figure 1: U.N. Peacekeeping Operations in Sierra Leone, East Timor, and 
the Democratic Republic of the Congo, as of June 30, 2003:

[See PDF for image]

Note: U.N. fiscal years begin July 1 and end June 30 of the following 
calendar year.

[End of figure]

U.N. Peacekeeping Transition Strategy Consists of Three Elements:

Since the late 1990s, the United Nations has developed a general 
strategy for peacekeeping transitions in complex emergency countries. 
The U.N. strategy consists of three elements:

* establishing the conditions for sustainable peace, including 
security, rule of law, and economic and social reform;

* coordinating and sustaining the efforts of international 
organizations and donor states; and:

* developing objectives and results-oriented measures of progress to 
manage the peace operation and make troop withdrawal decisions.

The Security Council has stated that it is supportive of this strategy 
but also notes that it decides whether to authorize the troops and 
resources needed to carry it out on a case-by-case basis. The U.N. 
Secretariat, particularly DPKO, has strengthened its planning and 
management to help implement this strategy.

Strategy Focuses on Achieving Security, Rule of Law, and Economic 
Reform:

In 2001, the U.N. Secretary General stated that the ultimate purpose of 
peacekeeping is to help countries achieve sustainable peace. To do 
this, the U.N. transition strategy for complex emergency countries 
guides the United Nations, other international organizations, and donor 
countries to (1) establish and maintain security, (2) develop 
institutions that provide rule of law and participatory governance, and 
(3) create conditions for economic and social recovery and reform.

Establishing and maintaining security are priorities for U.N. 
peacekeeping operations. However, when armed interventions have been 
necessary, the United Nations generally has authorized alliances--such 
as the North Atlantic Treaty Organization--or coalitions of nations to 
undertake military operations to restore security. U.N. peacekeepers 
then have responsibility for maintaining secure conditions so that 
other aspects of the peace operation, including humanitarian efforts, 
can move forward. In the longer term, maintaining security may include 
demobilizing and reintegrating ex-combatants into society, training a 
fair and impartial police force, and building a professional army that 
is accountable to the national government.

The transition strategy emphasizes that sustainable peace is most 
likely if the country establishes rule of law and participatory 
governance. To support this, the peacekeeping operation and many other 
partners undertake programs to reform a country's justice system so 
that it is fair, transparent, and equitable. Other activities include 
strengthening or building government institutions to ensure 
transparency, equal access, and accountability to all citizens. Other 
efforts, when authorized by the Security Council, may include 
supporting broad-based political parties, overseeing or administering 
free and fair elections, and supporting efforts to combat corruption.

Creating the conditions for economic and social recovery and reform is 
also important in the transition strategy. Efforts to create these 
conditions include reconstruction of infrastructure and utilities and 
activities to promote national reconciliation and human rights, such as 
supporting war crimes tribunals or truth and reconciliation panels. 
Other efforts in this area include support for resettlement of refugees 
and displaced persons.

Several studies have similarly found that the earlier operations did 
not focus on obtaining comprehensive results needed for sustainable 
peace. For example, a Department of Defense-sponsored study determined 
that past failures in restoring peace were highly correlated with the 
failure to restore public security, political rights, and honest 
government and with the facilitation of economic reconstruction. A 2002 
guide developed as a tool for U.S. policy makers reached similar 
conclusions.[Footnote 5] The guide noted that a peacekeeping operation 
must undertake a range of military and political tasks to achieve a 
sustainable outcome in a complex emergency situation. These tasks 
include demobilizing armed groups, reforming the police, establishing 
rule of law, and rehabilitating the economy. The guide concludes that 
assessment of progress toward restoring stability in the country should 
identify measures to be relied upon (such as disarming ex-combatants or 
holding elections) and/or transforming conditions on the ground (such 
as reducing the level of violence in the country and increasing 
confidence in elected officials). Our observations on lessons learned 
from our survey of 32 previous reports on peacekeeping operations in 16 
countries came to similar conclusions about the need for comprehensive 
transition planning in complex emergency situations.[Footnote 6] The 
Security Council recognized the shortcomings in the earlier missions 
and began to consider better strategies to plan and manage operations 
for sustainable peace.

In February 2001, the Security Council endorsed this broad approach for 
effective transitions. The council stated that achieving a sustainable 
peace requires a comprehensive approach that includes political, 
humanitarian, and human rights programs to foster sustainable 
development, eradication of poverty, and transparent and accountable 
government and rule of law.[Footnote 7] However, the council qualified 
this endorsement by noting that it decides on a case-by-case basis the 
extent to which to authorize the troops, funding, and other resources 
needed to carry out these activities.

Strategy Emphasizes Coordination with Other Organizations and Donor 
States:

The transition strategy recognizes that U.N. peacekeeping operations 
cannot undertake all transition activities. Thus, transition efforts 
must be closely coordinated among U.N. peacekeeping offices; U.N. 
development, humanitarian, and human rights agencies; international 
financial institutions; bilateral agencies; host nation governments; 
and nongovernmental organizations. The Secretary General has observed 
that peacekeepers should establish close working relationships with 
these other stakeholders and begin transition planning during the 
operation's earliest stages. The Security Council has also strongly 
encouraged cooperation among all stakeholders to monitor and develop an 
integrated response to the specific conditions in each country.

As part of the transition strategy, other international organizations 
and individual donor countries are expected to lead some efforts. For 
example, the host government; international financial institutions, 
such as the World Bank; and bilateral development agencies have 
responsibility for economic recovery. These stakeholders continue 
efforts after the peace operation ends.

Strategy Focuses on Developing Objectives and Results-Oriented 
Measures:

The U.N. transition strategy also calls for developing objectives, 
linked to the country conditions sought, and measures of progress 
toward achieving those conditions. The objectives and results-oriented 
measures are intended to help manage the peace operation and help make 
decisions about drawing down the numbers of peacekeepers based on 
objective data. The emphasis on using objectives and results-oriented 
measures is part of the U.N. decision to implement results-based 
budgeting. Approved by the General Assembly in 2000, results-based 
budgeting links program objectives, outputs (the final product or 
service delivered to the client or users), outcomes (the results of a 
program compared with its intended purpose), and measures of impact 
(the result from achieving the program's objectives). According to the 
Secretary General, this approach is intended to ensure that U.N. 
programs are designed to achieve results and to ensure that the United 
Nations can measure performance.

U.N. Reforms Support Implementation of Strategy:

The U.N. Secretariat has begun to reform its planning and management 
capabilities to more effectively carry out peacekeeping operations and 
transitions. These initiatives were adopted based on recommendations 
made by the Panel on United Nations Peace Operations, a group of 
experts convened by the Secretary General in 2000 to assess the 
shortcomings of the existing system for managing peace 
operations.[Footnote 8] Some key initiatives included the following:

* In 2002, the United Nations consolidated all peacekeeping 
responsibilities into DPKO. Previously, the Department of Political 
Affairs was responsible for developing and proposing the mandates of 
potential peace operations, and DPKO was responsible for planning and 
logistical support.

* In 2001, the U.N. General Assembly approved a 50 percent increase in 
staff for DPKO, allowing it to better plan and manage operations. By 
January 2003, DPKO had largely met its recruiting goals in key areas. 
For example, it had increased the military planning group from 7 to 18 
and increased the civilian police division from 2 to 9 staff, which 
enabled it to provide useful input in planning individual operations.

* DPKO revised its overall process and guidance for planning peace 
operations. This revised guidance requires planners to clarify long-
term aims in the country and develop plans that identify objectives, 
tasks to be undertaken, resources required, expected timetables, and 
criteria for measuring success.

* As recommended by the Panel on United Nations Peace Operations, DPKO 
has begun using integrated mission task teams to plan operations. The 
task force membership varies but should include core military and 
police planners from DPKO and representatives of all involved U.N. 
humanitarian and development agencies. Representatives of the World 
Bank and the International Monetary Fund would also be invited to 
participate as appropriate.

* In 2001, DPKO merged two existing analysis units to create a best 
practices unit and attached it directly to the Under Secretary General 
for Peacekeeping Operations. The new unit's mission is to analyze past 
experiences and apply the results of that analysis to new operations. 
The unit is also supposed to help develop guidelines and 
recommendations for the conduct, management, and support of these 
operations. Unit officials stated that they are beginning to make 
recommendations on the implementation of the United Nations' revised 
approach to transition planning.

United Nations Is Trying to Apply the Transition Strategy:

The United Nations is trying to apply all the elements of the 
transition strategy to help move countries from conflict to sustainable 
peace. First, the United Nations and other stakeholders have provided 
thousands of peacekeeping troops and other international workers to 
establish and maintain secure environments in East Timor and Sierra 
Leone and to help develop rule of law. U.N. peacekeepers have also 
supported efforts by the World Bank and others to begin development 
planning and to address human rights issues. In the Democratic Republic 
of the Congo, U.N. efforts are more limited, but as of July 2003, the 
Security Council authorized more peacekeepers and approved other 
efforts. Second, the United Nations and international organizations 
have tried to coordinate transition efforts with each other, host 
country governments, and donor countries. Third, each U.N. peacekeeping 
operation has begun to identify objectives and results-oriented 
measures of progress and, to a limited extent, uses these to manage 
drawdowns of operations. The Security Council, however, makes the final 
decision on the drawdown and withdrawal of a peace operation.

U.N. Peacekeeping Operations Seek to Establish Conditions for 
Sustainable Peace:

In countries with complex emergencies, U.N. peacekeeping operations and 
other stakeholders seek to establish basic conditions for sustainable 
peace by (1) providing and maintaining security, (2) developing 
institutions that provide rule of law and participatory governance, and 
(3) creating conditions for social and economic reforms. Table 1 
illustrates the transition objectives associated with U.N. and other 
stakeholder efforts to achieve these conditions in Sierra Leone, East 
Timor, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Table 1: U.N. Peacekeeping Transition Objectives:

Results needed for sustainable peace: Establish and maintain security; 
Sierra Leone: * Ensure security, freedom of movement; * Strengthen 
police capacity, accountability, and loyalty; * Strengthen Sierra Leone 
armed forces; * Support reintegration of ex-combatants; * Restore 
control over diamond mining; * Address external security challenges 
(Liberia and Guinea); East Timor: * Establish secure environment; * 
Provide executive policing authority; * Develop local police capacity; 
* Support strengthening of external security capability; * Assist in 
development of border control; Democratic Republic of the Congo: * 
Support the cease-fire agreement; * Support border security and 
national sovereignty; * Assist with the disarmament, repatriation, or 
reintegration of foreign-and Congolese-armed groups; * Strengthen local 
police training capacity; * Support reform of security forces.

Results needed for sustainable peace: Develop institutions that ensure 
rule of law and participatory governance; Sierra Leone: * Consolidate 
state authority; * Restore local governance; * Strengthen rule of law; 
East Timor: * Create and support national government and rule of law; * 
Supervise and support elections; * Support development of public 
administrative capacity; * Develop local governance; Democratic 
Republic of the Congo: * Assist in the creation of a unified national 
government; * Support establishment of an interim government; * Foster 
political reconciliation.

Results needed for sustainable peace: Create conditions for economic 
recovery and social reform; Sierra Leone: * Facilitate reintegration of 
refugees and internally displaced persons; * Reduce poverty, encourage 
economic growth; * Encourage national reconciliation; * Promote human 
rights and justice; East Timor: * Help institute national development 
plan; * Support international poverty reduction efforts; * Assist in 
investigations of and proceedings for serious crimes; * Facilitate 
provision of humanitarian assistance; Democratic Republic of the Congo: 
* Support reopening of internal waterways for free movement of goods 
and people; * Facilitate humanitarian assistance and human rights 
monitoring.

Source: GAO analysis of United Nations documents and official 
interviews.

[End of table]

U.N. Peacekeeping Operations Make Establishing and Maintaining Security 
a Priority:

The Security Council mandates for the U.N. peace operations in Sierra 
Leone, East Timor, and the Congo made establishing and maintaining 
security a priority to facilitate other mission objectives, such as 
reestablishing government authority. For example, to assist in carrying 
out provisions of the Lomé Peace Agreement, the initial mandate for the 
U.N. Assistance Mission in Sierra Leone authorized 6,000 military 
personnel to provide security at key locations, government buildings, 
and disarmament sites.[Footnote 9] The mission also facilitated the 
free flow of people, goods, and humanitarian assistance. In May 2000, 
the Security Council expanded the U.N. mission's mandate in response to 
renewed violence and by March 2001 had increased the military force to 
17,500 troops. According to the force commander, the operation's 
priorities since the election of a new government in May 2002 have 
shifted from maintaining security to improving the capacity of the 
local police and government officials.[Footnote 10] The British 
government has also played a major role in achieving these objectives. 
It deployed 4,500 troops to the region in 2000 to support the 
government and U.N. peacekeepers and is helping to train Sierra Leone's 
armed forces and police.

The Security Council applied similar measures in East Timor. In 
September 1999, the council sanctioned the deployment of an 
international force led by 5,400 Australian troops to stop the 
widespread violence perpetrated by pro-Indonesian militias. According 
to members of the Australian parliament, the government led the 
coalition because it had a strong national interest in ensuring a 
stable East Timor. The Security Council subsequently authorized (1) the 
U.N. Transitional Administration in East Timor in October 1999, with an 
authorized force level of 9,150 troops and 1,640 international police, 
and (2) the U.N. Mission of Support in East Timor in May 2002, with a 
force level of 5,000 troops plus 1,250 police. According to the deputy 
force commander and other U.N. officials, these missions have 
suppressed sporadic violence and have continued to patrol along the 
boundary with Indonesian West Timor, begun training a local police 
force, and supported donor nation efforts to train a small East Timor 
military force (see fig. 2).

Figure 2: U.N. Troops and Civilian Police Man a Security Checkpoint 
with East Timorese Police:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

The Security Council has not yet applied similar security measures in 
the Democratic Republic of the Congo. As of May 2003, the U.N. force 
had about 4,600 troops; the mission was mandated to monitor the cease-
fire and oversee the disarmament and repatriation of foreign fighters. 
In May 2003, the council authorized the French government to lead a 
separate 1,500-strong force on a limited mission to protect U.N. 
peacekeeping troops and suppress violence between rival militias 
fighting in and around the city of Bunia in the northeastern district 
of Ituri. In July 2003, the council increased the strength of the U.N. 
force to 10,800 and for the first time authorized peacekeepers to use 
force to protect civilians in selected locations.

U.N. Efforts to Develop Rule of Law and Participatory Governance:

U.N. peacekeeping operations in Sierra Leone and East Timor have 
undertaken tasks to begin establishing the rule of law and 
participatory governance. In Sierra Leone, the peacekeepers, in 
coordination with the U.N. Development Program, the World Bank, and 
others, have worked with the Sierra Leone government to reestablish the 
court system, rebuild courtrooms throughout the country, and develop 
projects to train judges and prosecutors. In 2002, the U.N. operation 
provided transportation, supplies, and security and monitored the 
conduct of national elections that observers characterized as "free and 
fair." Mission officials also plan to provide security, logistics, and 
technical assistance for local government elections in 2004. 
Furthermore, according to U.N. plans and reports, the priority is to 
improve the work of government officials in structures throughout the 
country.

In East Timor, U.N. efforts to develop the rule of law and 
participatory governance have been extensive. For example, in 1999, the 
Security Council empowered the peacekeeping operation to exercise all 
legislative and executive authority for the country, including the 
administration of justice. In this capacity, the operation established 
a national consultative council to help make decisions about the future 
government and set up a transitional judicial commission. According to 
U.N. officials, international staff and advisors also provided on-the-
job training to allow the East Timorese to gradually assume more 
responsibility for running the government. The U.N. mission also 
supervised East Timor's first popular election of members to the 
constituent assembly in 2001 and the presidential elections in 2002. 
Since East Timor attained independence and the end of the U.N. 
transitional administration in May 2002, the follow-on peace operation 
has focused on advising and training government officials and on 
extending a national system of justice to outlying districts.

In the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the U.N. peacekeeping 
operation's support for governance has been largely limited to 
supporting the intermittent peace negotiations between the warring 
parties to establish an interim government. A new government of 
National Unity and Transition was formed in June, and, on July 28, 
2003, the Security Council expanded the peacekeeping operation's 
mandate to help the government restore stability, including support for 
security sector reform, elections, and rule of law, in coordination 
with other international actors.

U.N. Peacekeeping Operations Support Economic and Social Recovery 
Efforts:

U.N. peacekeeping operations assist other stakeholders in working 
toward conditions for economic and social recovery. For example, in 
2002 in East Timor, the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank, the 
U.N. peacekeeping operation, and the U.N. Development Program helped 
the government develop a 20-year national development plan. The plan 
described short-and medium-term strategies for the country's economic 
recovery and growth, and was used by the international community to 
determine their economic support programs. Although the U.N. 
peacekeeping operation provided funding for some projects, other donors 
provided major funding for programs to reduce poverty, increase power 
generation, and support private sector development.

U.N. peacekeeping operations also support efforts to provide social 
reconciliation in both Sierra Leone and East Timor. In both countries, 
the government, United Nations, and donor countries decided that 
leaders of rival factions had to be held accountable for human rights 
violations. In Sierra Leone, the United States and other donors helped 
establish and fund an independent Sierra Leone international tribunal 
to prosecute those bearing "greatest responsibility" for violations of 
international humanitarian law during that country's civil 
war.[Footnote 11] The U.N. operation assists the tribunal by providing 
security, transportation, and supplies. In East Timor, the U.N. 
operation established a unit to assist in the investigation of the most 
serious atrocities committed in 1999. The United Nations also provides 
technical support and other assistance to commissions in both countries 
investigating human rights violations and fostering reconciliation. 
Similarly, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees coordinates refugee 
repatriation and return efforts in Sierra Leone, East Timor, and the 
Congo. The peace operations assist these efforts by providing security 
and logistical support.

U.N. Peacekeeping Operations Attempt to Coordinate and Sustain 
Assistance:

The U.N. peacekeeping operations have undertaken several efforts to try 
to coordinate with other international organizations and donor nations. 
These include early planning efforts, donor meetings and conferences, 
and the establishment of a high-level position in the mission to 
coordinate security and economic recovery efforts.

In East Timor, attempts to coordinate efforts among donor countries and 
international organizations occurred before the peacekeeping operation 
deployed. A joint assessment mission began in the autumn of 1999, 8 
months before the start of the peacekeeping operation. The assessment 
mission included members from five donor countries, four U.N. agencies, 
the European Commission, the Asian Development Bank, and the World 
Bank. The International Monetary Fund also conducted a concurrent 
mission to assess East Timor's budgeting capabilities. DPKO used the 
core plans for reconstruction and budgeting from the joint assessments 
in its planning. The joint assessment mission was a response to 
experiences in other post-conflict countries, where lack of 
coordination had delayed efforts and caused inefficiencies and 
duplication in the use of external resources.

The U.N. peacekeeping operations in Sierra Leone and East Timor also 
coordinated with other international organizations through regular 
donor meetings and conferences. For example, during 2002, the 
government of Sierra Leone, the World Bank, the U.N. Office for the 
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, and the peacekeeping mission 
completed revised strategic plans for that country. U.N. organizations 
working in Sierra Leone (including the peacekeeping mission and the 
World Bank) subsequently collaborated in preparing an overall strategy 
for their national recovery and peace-building efforts. At an 
international donors conference in November 2002, U.N. organizations 
and other donors agreed to work together to support the government's 
comprehensive national recovery strategy, restructure the government 
unit responsible for national aid monitoring and coordination, and hold 
bimonthly coordination meetings.

Several mechanisms are used in the field to increase coordination among 
U.N. agencies and other international organizations in carrying out 
peacekeeping transitions. The Secretary General created the position of 
Deputy Special Representative of the Secretary General, the second 
highest ranking position at each mission, to ensure coordination 
between security and economic reform efforts. According to the deputy 
representative in East Timor, his dual responsibilities for 
peacekeeping operations and U.N. development programs allow him to 
better manage the process of transitioning the mission's emphasis from 
peacekeeping to longer term peace building.

United Nations Is Beginning to Use Objectives and Results-Oriented 
Measures in Peacekeeping Operations:

DPKO has specified objectives for its peacekeeping operations and 
identified some results-oriented measures of progress. The operations 
in Sierra Leone and East Timor are using the measures to a limited 
extent to plan the drawdown of troops and other activities, but the 
Security Council makes the final transition decisions.

Peace Operations Are Making Efforts to Specify Objectives and Measures:

The U.N. operations in Sierra Leone, East Timor, and the Democratic 
Republic of the Congo have specified their objectives, based on 
mandates from the Security Council, and have developed measures of 
progress, some of which are results oriented. (App. II lists the 
objectives and measures for the three missions.) For example, in Sierra 
Leone, one objective is to reduce poverty and encourage economic 
growth. Measures of progress include increasing (1) the percentage of 
households with access to safe drinking water, (2) the percentage of 
women who are AIDS aware, and (3) the growth in gross domestic product 
(to 6 percent annually). Another objective is to ensure security and 
freedom of movement. Measures of progress for this objective include 
minimizing and containing cease-fire violations and opening roads and 
removing roadblocks. Although some measures for the peacekeeping 
operations are quantifiable, the United Nations faces challenges in 
developing results-oriented measures about conditions in the country 
that the peace operations are supposed to improve. This issue will be 
discussed in the last section of this report.

Peace Operations Use Measures of Progress to a Limited Extent in 
Planning Drawdown:

The Security Council weighs political and budgetary considerations as 
well as the conditions in each complex emergency country when making 
the final decision to draw down and withdraw peacekeeping forces. 
Nonetheless, the United Nations has to a limited extent used some 
measures to plan the withdrawal of peacekeepers in Sierra Leone and 
East Timor. (The operation in the Democratic Republic of the Congo is 
not at a stage to begin withdrawing.) U.N. officials in Sierra Leone 
developed and modified plans for withdrawing peacekeepers based on an 
evaluation of progress in strengthening the police and armed forces, 
reintegrating ex-combatants, and restoring government control over 
diamond mining. Mission staff used some of these measures when they 
reviewed the security risks and capabilities of Sierra Leone security 
forces in each region to ensure that peacekeeping troops were withdrawn 
from lower security risk areas first and retained longer in higher risk 
areas along the Liberian border. U.N. military staff acknowledged, 
however, that the force was being drawn down more quickly under the 
current plan because of the council's budgetary and political pressure 
to end the peacekeeping mission and not because the mission's measures 
pointed to a reduced threat to the country's security and stability. In 
March 2003, the council requested that the Secretary General provide 
faster and slower options for the drawdown based on the security 
situation and the ability of Sierra Leone security forces to take 
responsibility for external and internal security functions. Figure 3 
illustrates the proposed timetable for withdrawal that the Secretary 
General presented to the council in September 2002, as well as a 
revised drawdown option recommended by the Secretary General based on 
his review of these factors and adopted by the council in July 2003.

Figure 3: Modified Timetable for Drawdown of U.N. Peacekeepers in 
Sierra Leone:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

In East Timor, the Secretary General and Security Council have used 
measures to plan the drawdown of its peacekeepers. However, although 
the United Nations is retaining greater numbers of peacekeepers and 
international police in response to unexpected security threats and 
lack of sufficient progress in developing the capabilities of the East 
Timor police service, the Security Council did not change the final 
withdrawal date of June 2004. (Fig. 4 illustrates the alterations in 
the drawdown schedule for the troops and police.) According to U.N., 
U.S., and Australian officials, this end date is a political compromise 
developed in consultation with the United States and key council 
members. Senior military officers in the peacekeeping mission said that 
the failure to meet objectives, such as having a judicial system in 
place by mid-2003, will not change the withdrawal date.

Figure 4: Revisions in U.N. Peacekeeping Troops and Police Drawdown 
Schedule in East Timor:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Security Council Bases Transition Decisions on Several Factors:

Although objectives and measures of progress provide information to 
help manage the withdrawal of peacekeepers, other factors influence 
council decisions. According to U.N. officials, U.S. officials, and 
members of the council, the following factors are involved in these 
decisions:

* Peacekeeping missions are intended to provide a limited window for 
countries to resolve internal differences and take advantage of the 
opportunity to rebuild their country with broad international support.

* The United Nations must set deadlines to maintain pressure on the 
country's leaders and political factions to take responsibility for 
their country and fulfill their commitments.

* Each peacekeeping mission must compete for the attention of the 
Security Council, which often must respond to new crises and 
emergencies as it devotes resources to ongoing operations.[Footnote 12]

* The cost and resources needed for peacekeeping operations are high. 
Security Council members face domestic pressures to limit their 
support, particularly if an operation is not a priority national 
interest.

United Nations Confronts Significant Challenges to Implementing 
Transition Strategy:

The United Nations confronts significant challenges to implementing 
each element of the transition strategy. First, achieving the 
conditions for sustainable peace establishing the conditions necessary 
for sustainable peace is a challenge. Maintaining security is difficult 
because the rival factions in a country may oppose the peacekeepers or 
continue their internal disputes, regardless of the peacekeepers' 
presence. Further, establishing rule of law and democratic governance 
is problematic in countries with little or no tradition of accountable 
government and democratic principles. In this regard, peacekeeping 
transitions have taken longer and have been more costly than initially 
expected. Second, the United Nations has not been able to coordinate 
its efforts and priorities with those of other independent 
international organizations and donor states to the extent necessary to 
meet transition objectives. Third, developing clear objectives and 
meaningful results-oriented measures of progress is difficult. DPKO 
acknowledges that it needs better measures by which to assess the 
progress that peacekeeping operations are making in attaining 
sustainable peace. However, the department has not made developing or 
using these measures a priority.

Achieving Security, Rule of Law, and Economic and Social Reform Is 
Difficult:

Establishing security in war-torn countries is difficult because of 
uncertain and volatile environments. For example, despite peace 
agreements among opposing factions in Sierra Leone, peacekeepers were 
initially threatened by one of the rival groups in the country, which 
restricted their movements, took more than 400 peacekeepers hostage, 
and continued to commit human rights atrocities. The armed intervention 
of 4,500 British troops was needed to help establish security. Through 
June 2003, 49 peacekeepers had died through accidents or hostile acts. 
Similarly, in East Timor, despite a free and fair referendum rejecting 
integration with Indonesia in favor of independence, the pro-
integration militia created widespread violence to stop East Timor from 
becoming independent. A military coalition of 8,000 troops led by 
Australia was necessary to restore security. Through June 2003, 19 
peacekeepers had died.

Establishing security in the Democratic Republic of the Congo has 
proven extremely difficult. Despite numerous cease-fire agreements, the 
two large rebel groups; five foreign governments with armed forces 
within the country; and numerous foreign and domestic armed groups, 
many aligned with neighboring states, did not cooperate with the U.N. 
peace operation. The operation has not maintained a secure environment, 
and cease-fires frequently have been violated. The government's forces 
only have control over half of the country's territory. After 
violations of several cease-fire agreements, France led a coalition 
force to help U.N. peacekeepers control large-scale violence in the 
northeastern city of Bunia in the Ituri region (see fig. 5).

Figure 5: French Soldier in Bunia in the Democratic Republic of the 
Congo:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Maintaining security in war-torn countries is also a problem. In East 
Timor, pro-Indonesian militia groups conducted armed attacks from 
Indonesian West Timor in January and February 2003, even after U.N. 
military officials stated that the militia no longer posed a threat to 
East Timor. The Secretary General concluded that U.N. peacekeeping 
troops should be maintained along the border.[Footnote 13] In April 
2003, Sierra Leone peacekeepers expressed concern about ongoing 
violence in Liberia, a state that recently supported Sierra Leone 
rebels. (Fig. 6 illustrates Sierra Leone soldiers on duty near the 
border with Liberia.) U.N. officials also noted that large 
concentrations of ex-combatants, unemployed youths, corruption, and 
illegal mining in Sierra Leone's diamond mining areas continue to be 
ongoing threats to security.

Figure 6: Sierra Leone Soldiers on Guard near the Volatile Border with 
Liberia:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Limited Progress in Establishing Rule of Law:

Developing rule of law and participatory governance is difficult 
because countries with complex emergencies may have little or no 
experience with transparent accountable governments or democratic 
traditions and institutions. For example, the U.N. strategy for 
restoring local government to Sierra Leone included reestablishing both 
hereditary chieftaincies and elected district councils. According to a 
British government analysis, however, Sierra Leone's reliance on 
hereditary chieftains has always compromised transparency and 
accountability and provided a means for the central government to 
control local affairs. Moreover, this reliance limits democratic 
participation because only candidates meeting hereditary lineage 
requirements were eligible to run in recent elections to fill 61 tribal 
chieftaincies left vacant during the war. Additionally, local civic 
leaders in one district stated that the Speaker of the National 
Parliament arbitrarily replaced the locally selected candidate for 
chief. A 2002 U.K. study characterized the Sierra Leone justice system 
as unresponsive, unaccountable, and corrupt. Furthermore, the Anti-
Corruption Commission, a body specifically created in 2000 to 
investigate corrupt practices among government officials, has been 
ineffective, according to U.S. and U.K. officials. In light of these 
serious deficiencies, the World Bank and the U.K. government are 
planning a 5-year effort to improve the justice system beginning in 
late 2003.

In East Timor, U.N. and other international officials told us that 
years of mistrust of the Indonesian-imposed court system and the rural 
population's isolation have created reliance on traditional laws and 
informal courts. These courts show little regard for the rights of 
women, according to U.N. and other international officials. These 
issues present a significant obstacle to applying Western norms of 
judicial conduct and respect for human rights. In addition, the East 
Timor government has not passed laws identifying the number of 
locations or the villages that will serve as political jurisdictions, 
nor has it extended authority and services beyond the capital. We saw 
limited evidence of government services or representation in villages 
beyond Dili, the national capital.

In the Democratic Republic of the Congo, government and rule of law 
have almost completely collapsed after years of warfare, according to 
U.S. government and U.N. officials. In 1999, the Secretary General 
noted that the substitution of armed force for the rule of law in much 
of the territory was a key factor in making the Democratic Republic of 
the Congo a difficult environment for peacekeeping. In June 2003, the 
parties to the peace agreement formed a national unity government with 
the assistance of the U.N. peacekeeping operation.

Economic Recovery Is a Long-Term Effort:

U.N., international agency, and host and donor government officials 
have noted that the time frames for peacekeeping operations are shorter 
than those for economic recovery programs. Australian officials 
estimated that developing the economy of East Timor and redressing its 
serious poverty will take 20 to 50 years. As of December 2002, a study 
by the U.N. Children's Fund estimated that 25 percent of the East 
Timorese population is below the poverty level. The most recent U.N. 
health survey indicated that 30 percent of children below age 5 were 
malnourished.

Economic stabilization objectives can be difficult to achieve. In 
Sierra Leone, for example, the government has made limited progress in 
regaining legal and regulatory control over the diamond trade, a vital 
sector in its economy. The value of legal exports of diamonds (as 
opposed to smuggling) has increased from just over $1 million in 1999 
to $41 million in 2002. A January 2003 analysis commissioned by the 
British government estimated that the annual value of diamond exports 
could rise to as much as $180 million by 2006 if the industry was 
properly regulated and effective anticorruption measures were 
implemented. However, Sierra Leone government, U.N., and other 
international officials agree that government systems for regulating 
the diamond industry remain weak and impractical.

Implementing Overall Transition Takes Longer and Is More Costly than 
Originally Planned:

Because of the difficulties in achieving conditions for sustainable 
peace, overall peace efforts in countries with complex emergencies take 
more time and are more costly than originally planned. In Sierra Leone, 
international efforts to restore stability have been under way since 
the early 1990s. Recent efforts have also taken longer than originally 
planned. Although signatories of the Sierra Leone peace accord (July 
1999) anticipated holding an election in 2001, conditions for a free 
and fair election were not achieved until May 2002, and peacekeepers 
will not exit until the end of 2004. In East Timor, the United Nations 
approved a limited operation in June 1999 to oversee a referendum to 
determine whether the nation would become an autonomous but integrated 
part of Indonesia or an independent country.[Footnote 14] The U.N. 
mission of 325 civilian police and military observers was expected to 
last about 4 months, but following violence over the results of the 
vote in favor of independence, the United Nations sanctioned 
intervention by a multinational force and later deployed thousands of 
U.N. peacekeeping troops to oversee the transition to independence. The 
peace operation is now scheduled to end in 2004. In the Democratic 
Republic of the Congo, a U.N. observer and peace mission has been 
ongoing since 1999, but numerous cease-fire violations have occurred. 
Congolese parties to the conflict did not form the interim government 
called for in the 1999 peace agreement until June 2003. In July 2003, 
the Security Council expanded the mandate to support the new government 
and increased the authorized force level to 10,800 troops.[Footnote 15]

Because of the difficulties in achieving conditions for sustainable 
peace, implementing the transition strategies in these countries has 
cost over $6 billion:

* The estimated total cost of the operations in Sierra Leone is over 
$2.6 billion through June 2004. Annual costs have risen from $263 
million for the U.N. fiscal year ending June 2000 to $670 million for 
the U.N. fiscal year ending June 2003. This increase reflects the 
Security Council's decision to almost triple the size of the 
peacekeeping force in response to continued fighting and other 
problems. The estimated cost for the current fiscal year is about $544 
million.

* The estimated total cost of the operations in East Timor is about 
$1.8 billion through June 2004. The initial U.N. observer mission sent 
to organize and conduct the referendum in East Timor in 1999 was 
expected to cost about $53 million. The current operation's annual cost 
is $292 million for the U.N. fiscal year ending June 2003, and the 
estimated cost for the current fiscal year is $193 million.

* The estimated annual cost for the operations in the Democratic 
Republic of the Congo is about $1.9 billion through June 2004. Annual 
costs have risen from $55 million for the U.N. fiscal year ending June 
2000 to an estimated $608 million for the current fiscal year. However, 
the latter estimate does not include costs associated with the Security 
Council's recent decision to expand the operation's mandate and 
authorize a larger U.N. force.

There are also costs above and beyond the peacekeeping operation that 
are needed to fund overall transition efforts. These costs are often 
not funded. For example, in 2002, the United Nations requested about 
$69 million for humanitarian assistance in Sierra Leone, including the 
reintegration of refugees and internally displaced people and improved 
access to health, water, and education services. International donors 
funded less than 50 percent of this request. Similarly, the 
peacekeeping operation in East Timor faced a significant shortfall in 
additional donor resources. In 2002, the East Timor government and the 
U.N. Development Program identified the need for 228 donor-funded 
international advisers to begin to help manage government and economic 
development programs once the U.N. operation withdraws. As of April 
2003, donors had provided 48 advisers and promised another 83, leaving 
a shortfall of nearly 100 positions.

Coordination among Multiple Organizations Is Sometimes Ineffective:

Despite the numerous efforts at coordination--early planning, donor 
conferences, and other field representation--the United Nations, 
international organizations, nongovernmental organizations, and donor 
nations face difficulties in effectively working together on the 
ground. Part of the problem results from the multiple independent 
agencies in the country, each with its own mandates, funding, and 
priorities. This can create a variety of problems on the ground.

In Sierra Leone, for example, officials of several agencies commented 
that efforts to coordinate the work of numerous development and 
humanitarian agencies were not effective. One donor agency official 
described donor efforts to work together as chaotic. Donor officials 
and Sierra Leone government representatives stated that neither the 
government nor the United Nations has an adequate system to track the 
amount and the impact of external aid, especially aid provided through 
nongovernmental organizations. Nor did any organization have the 
overall authority to direct the work of donors and thereby avoid 
duplication or overlap in specific locations.

In East Timor, early efforts to coordinate U.N. peacekeeping operations 
with donors did not address critical needs in the governance and 
security areas. According to World Bank officials and assessments, U.N. 
officials planned activities to rebuild East Timor's governance and 
security sectors largely outside of the coordinated needs assessments 
conducted by the international community in 1999. This situation 
contributed to some conflicts and hindered overall efforts. For 
example, one of the first World Bank projects was to help villagers in 
outlying regions establish local governing councils using traditional 
law. However, according to the Deputy Special Representative, this 
effort complicated outreach efforts by the peace operation, as it began 
establishing central government authority and providing consistent 
regulations throughout East Timor.

Developing Meaningful Results-Oriented Measures Poses Difficulties:

The United Nations has had difficulty in developing results-oriented 
measures to help manage and make decisions about its peacekeeping 
transitions. In addition, the United Nations has not fully staffed 
DPKO's Best Practices Unit, which is charged with developing tools for 
peacekeeping transitions, such as meaningful and quantifiable results-
oriented measures of progress.

Measures of Progress Often Focus on Tasks Rather than Conditions:

Although U.N. missions are using measures of progress for their 
operations, most measures are tasks and outputs rather than measures of 
underlying conditions in the country that the peace operation is to 
improve. For example, a U.K.-led coalition of donor nations in Sierra 
Leone is working to strengthen the armed forces. Some measures of 
progress in this area are the number of troops trained, reorganization 
of the armed forces, and restructuring the Ministry of Defense. (Table 
2 shows some objectives and measures for security in Sierra Leone.):

Table 2: U.N. Peacekeeping Transition Security Objectives and Measures 
of Progress in Sierra Leone:

Results needed for sustainable peace: Establish and maintain security; 
Objective: Strengthen police capacity, accountability, loyalty; 
Measures of progress: * Progress toward increasing force to pre-war 
level (from current 6,500 to 9,500 personnel); * Strengthen strategic 
management; * Enhance training, expand police training school capacity; 
* Provide essential transport and communication equipment; * 
Rehabilitate key infrastructure.

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peace: Strengthen Sierra 
Leone armed forces; Measures of progress: Results needed for 
sustainable peace: * Accelerate training; * Restructuring of armed 
forces and Ministry of Defense; * Ensure sustainability of army 
deployments; * Reduce combined government and rebel force to 10,500.

Objective:  Support reintegration of ex-combatants; Measures of 
progress: * Offer reintegration opportunities to all registered ex-
combatants (57,000).

Objective: Address external security challenges (Liberia and Guinea); 
Measures of progress: Results needed for sustainable peace: 
* Accelerate training and restructuring of armed forces, and the 
Ministry of Defense; * Encourage regional political dialogue and 
collaboration; * Enhance national capacity to respond to refugee 
influxes; * Develop regional arms collection and destruction 
program.

Source: United Nations documents.

[End of table]

According to U.K. military trainers in Sierra Leone, other measures, 
such as ensuring the sustainability of army deployments, are not 
clearly defined or taken into account. These military trainers also 
said that measures for this area do not provide meaningful indications 
of the capability of the Sierra Leone armed forces. For example, 
military trainers noted that while the U.N. operation focuses on such 
performance measures as the speed at which units can deploy, it 
overlooks such measures as troop discipline, loyalty to the government, 
and the effectiveness of unit leadership. Subsequent events revealed 
problems in troop discipline, loyalty, and effectiveness. The Secretary 
General reported in December 2002 that the armed forces were "much 
improved" and were effectively patrolling the country's border. He also 
stated that U.N. troops were supporting army units deployed along the 
Liberian border. However, the Secretary General reported in March 2003 
two incidents that took place in January 2003 that lowered public 
confidence in the security forces and exposed shortcomings in their 
capability and training. First, Sierra Leone army troops retreated and 
left behind some of their equipment when about 70 Liberian raiders 
attacked a village near the border. Second, a police investigation into 
an attack by former soldiers and civilians on an armory implicated 
several active-duty soldiers in a plan to destabilize the government 
and prevent the operation of the international tribunal.

A key objective of the peacekeeping operations in Sierra Leone, East 
Timor, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo is the increased 
capacity of the national police force to provide internal security. 
However, these missions use output-oriented measures. For example, in 
East Timor, the peace operation originally intended to train 2,830 
police by 2004. However, the operation established this target using a 
standard European police-to-population ratio and relied on outdated 
population estimates. Moreover, the number of police does not measure 
the quality of their training and whether they are improving security 
in the country. In December 2002, riots occurred in the capital city, 
Dili, but the fully staffed police force could not restore order. In 
the aftermath of the riots, the United Nations resumed direct control 
over crowd control units, lengthened and revised its training program 
to incorporate more human rights and crowd control training, and 
increased the number of East Timor police officers by 500.

The missions also use output measures to measure progress in creating 
governance and restoring the economies. In Sierra Leone, the number of 
district officials and magistrates placed in office is a measure of 
progress toward consolidating state authority. In addition, U.N. 
analysts in Sierra Leone reported that the reestablishment of courts in 
many areas was having a positive impact on public attitudes toward the 
rule of law. However, these analysts did not indicate that evaluations 
of the operations of these institutions had applied any systematic 
measures or criteria, such as the ability of those filing suit to 
obtain satisfactory resolution of their cases within a reasonable 
period of time.

In 2002, DPKO tried to use the missions' objectives and measures to 
develop results-based budgets for peacekeeping but was unable to do so. 
U.N. officials said that the missions' measures were process-oriented 
and did not measure changes in country conditions that the peacekeeping 
operations were working to improve. A U.N. report in late 2002 
acknowledged that it was difficult to shift from inputs and outputs to 
objectives and measures. Our past reports have also noted the 
difficulties in developing results-oriented measures.[Footnote 16]

An example drawn from a Department of Justice international assistance 
program could be useful, however. Justice's framework for overseas 
prosecutorial training and development identifies an overall objective 
of strengthening judicial independence, lists several subobjectives 
such as decreasing corruption, lists tasks such as getting legislative 
approval for an anticorruption task force, and then identifies several 
measurable measures of progress. The measures include an output, 
funding for the corruption task force. They also include measures of 
actual results, including the percentage increases in convictions for 
corruption and percentage increases in public confidence in judicial 
honesty. Such measures help demonstrate that program objectives are 
being met (see table 3).

Table 3: Objectives and Measures for the Department of Justice Program 
for Overseas Prosecutorial Development and Training:

Sample strategic objective: Strengthen judicial independence in a host 
country; Objectives/Results sought[A]: Identify needs of the host 
country: * Decreased organized crime and corruption; * More efficient 
case processing; * Increased regard for human rights; * Justice for 
victims of mass crimes; Sample measures of output[A]: Facilitate 
development of anticorruption task force by: * Securing legislative 
approval; * Assisting task force formation; * Delivering joint courses 
on corruption and surveillance; Sample measures of outcome/impact[A]: * 
Percentage increase in host country budget for anticorruption efforts; 
* Percentage increase in corruption complaints filed, investigated, and 
leading to convictions; Sample measures of impact on underlying 
conditions[A]: Percentage increase in public confidence in government 
and judicial honesty.

Source: Excerpted from the Department of Justice Handbook for Overseas 
Prosecutorial Development and Training.

[A] Definitions (under the terms of the Government Performance and 
Results Act):

Output measure: A tabulation, calculation, or recording of activity or 
effort that can be expressed in a quantitative or qualitative manner.

Outcome measure: An assessment of the results of a program compared 
with its objective.

Impact measure: Measures of the net effect or consequences of achieving 
program objectives.

[End of table]

United Nations Has Not Yet Developed Results-Oriented Measures of 
Progress:

U.N. officials stated that identifying measures of progress useful in 
past missions would be helpful in developing results-oriented measures 
for future missions. Moreover, the Under Secretary General for 
Peacekeeping Operations stated that to develop and apply the transition 
strategy, his department needed to develop better measures by which to 
assess the progress peacekeeping operations are making in attaining 
sustainable peace. He also stated that developing systematic measures 
of results was an important task.

Despite the importance of developing results-based measures, the 
peacekeeping operations in East Timor; the Democratic Republic of the 
Congo; and, to a lesser extent, Sierra Leone have not developed these 
measures. Although DPKO's revised planning process for peace operations 
would require mission planners to clarify long-term aims in the country 
and identify criteria for measuring success, the head of the DPKO 
military planning group stated that it would be up to the individual 
missions to develop results-oriented measures. Mission staff and DPKO 
desk officers for each of the three operations noted that they have 
received only general guidance on developing results-oriented measures. 
Moreover, they stated they lacked the staff resources necessary to 
develop such measures and collect the data. Status reports from the 
missions that we reviewed were largely narrative accounts of daily or 
weekly events and did not use results-oriented measures. Beginning in 
late 2002, DPKO and mission staff attempted to implement results-based 
budgeting for peacekeeping operations for fiscal year 2003-04. 
According to one DPKO official, however, this effort to did not succeed 
because peacekeeping operations staff had not made it a priority to 
develop results-oriented measures linked to their peacekeeping mission 
strategies. U.N. officials noted that DPKO and mission staff are 
working to develop results-oriented measures in order to implement 
results-based budgets for most peacekeeping operations by fiscal year 
2004-05. They also indicated that the lessons learned and best 
practices from this planning and budget preparation process will be 
reflected in the 2005-06 budget. Nevertheless, DPKO has only recently 
begun to provide the resources necessary to develop these measures. In 
2001, DPKO combined its units for policy and analysis and peacekeeping 
lessons learned and to create a best practices unit to systematically 
review the results of past U.N. peacekeeping operations and develop 
guidelines and general measures of progress to better plan and conduct 
future operations. DPKO did not provide a director for the unit until 
April 2003, however, nor had it fully staffed the unit as of August 
2003.

State Department officials in the Bureau of International Organization 
Affairs and at the U.S. Mission to the United Nations are responsible 
for providing oversight of peacekeeping operations and budgets. For 
example, they monitor the progress of the 14 U.N. peacekeeping missions 
and track the budgetary costs, of which the United States contributes 
27 percent. They also brief Congress monthly on these peacekeeping 
missions. According to these State officials, they have not focused on 
U.N. efforts to develop results-based measures. However, they follow 
the progress of the missions through U.N. reports and U.S. 
intelligence. Nonetheless, they said more systematic measures of 
results would be useful to monitor the progress of peacekeeping 
operations and would help in deciding whether they were helping a 
country move toward sustainable peace. They cautioned, however, that 
results were difficult to quantify and that the United Nations was not 
responsible for all aspects of rebuilding a country and helping it move 
toward sustainable peace.

Conclusions:

The United Nations and other international stakeholders face an 
enormous challenge in helping countries that have been recently 
involved in internal conflicts and that have no rule of law or 
experience of accountable government transition to sustainable peace. 
The development of a general transition strategy for U.N. peacekeeping 
operations is a positive step in overcoming this challenge. The 
strategy takes a comprehensive and long-term view and focuses on 
addressing the causes of the conflict. The strategy further recognizes 
that the peacekeeping operation must specify results-oriented measures 
of progress to effectively manage operations and the withdrawal of 
peacekeepers.

However, the United Nations has not yet developed quantifiable results-
oriented measures of progress to help the Security Council make 
peacekeeping transition decisions. Although the United Nations uses 
output measures to manage the drawdown of peacekeepers, these measures 
did not provide useful information about results, such as progress in 
improving security in Sierra Leone and East Timor. The U.N. Department 
of Peacekeeping Operations has not yet developed results-oriented 
measures. It created a best practices unit to systematically review the 
results of past U.N. peacekeeping operations and develop measures of 
progress to plan and conduct future operations, but the unit did not 
have the resources necessary to begin these tasks until recently.

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation:

We provided a draft of this report to the Departments of Defense, 
Justice, and State; the U.S. Agency for International Development; and 
the United Nations. We received verbal comments from the State 
Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development, and 
written comments from the U.N. Department of Peacekeeping Operations 
(see app. IV). The remaining agencies did not provide comments.

The State Department generally agreed with our findings and provided 
technical comments and clarifications, which we incorporated where 
appropriate. The U.S. Agency for International Development provided 
technical comments, which we also incorporated where appropriate.

The United Nations also generally agreed that the report identified key 
issues facing peacekeeping operations. The United Nations was 
concerned, however, that the report (1) did not fully recognize its 
efforts to apply results-oriented performance measures for its 
operations, (2) did not acknowledge numerical measures of progress 
included in routine peacekeeping operations reports to headquarters, 
(3) did not fully explain the mandate of the peacekeeping operation in 
the Congo, and (4) did not reflect progress made in the Congo over the 
past year and a half. We have added information to the report about 
recent and proposed U.N. efforts to develop results-oriented 
performance measures. We describe in the report a number of instances 
where the peacekeeping operations have used numerical measures in their 
reporting, but these are largely measures of tasks or outputs rather 
than the measures of outcomes called for by the United Nations' 
results-based budgeting system. The report provides an accurate 
portrayal of the comparatively narrow focus of mandate of the 
peacekeeping operation in the Congo as it pertains to U.N. efforts to 
develop rule of law and participatory governance. Nonetheless, the 
report fully explains the mandate for the operation in the Congo in 
table 1 and appendix II. The report also notes that in July 2003 the 
Security Council voted to expand the operation's mandate. However, this 
operation's limited focus is especially clear compared with the other 
two operations we examined in detail for this report. Our report 
discusses the progress attained in the Congo to date, but notes that it 
is very recent. The Congolese parties to the conflict only formed a 
government in late June 2003, for example, and as of September 2003, 
the United Nations had yet to fully execute its plans to disarm, 
demobilize, and repatriate Rwandan ex-combatants.

We are sending this report to interested congressional committees, the 
Secretary of State, the Administrator for the Agency for International 
Development, and the U.N. Secretary General. We will also make copies 
available to other parties on request. In addition, this report will be 
made available at no charge on the GAO Web site at http://www.gao.gov.

If you or your staff have any questions concerning this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-8979, or at christoffj@gao.gov. Other GAO 
contacts and staff acknowledgments are listed in appendix V.

Sincerely yours,

Joseph A. Christoff 
Director, International Affairs and Trade:

Signed by Joseph A. Christoff: 

[End of section]

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology:

To identify the elements of the U.N. transition strategy, we obtained 
and examined documentation on Security Council deliberations on 
peacekeeping policies and reform initiatives, including relevant 
reports to the council from the United Nations' Secretary General. To 
obtain additional detail, we interviewed and obtained documents on 
planning and operational management from officials of the U.N. 
Department of Peacekeeping Operations, as well as officials in the 
Department of Political Affairs who are responsible for contributing to 
planning peace operations. We also interviewed and obtained documents 
from officials from other U.N. bodies, such as the Office for the 
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs and the U.N. Development Program, 
that contribute to overall U.N. efforts to restore stability in complex 
emergency countries. To obtain other perspectives on U.N. policies and 
initiatives and peacekeeping operations in general, we interviewed and/
or obtained critical evaluations and analyses from government and 
nongovernment analysts, including officials from the U.S. mission to 
the United Nations; the Departments of State, Justice, and Defense; the 
U.S. Agency for International Development; the World Bank; the 
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development; the Henry L. 
Stimson Center; and others.

To assess the extent to which the United Nations is attempting to apply 
the strategy in Sierra Leone, East Timor, and the Democratic Republic 
of the Congo, we obtained information from the Department of 
Peacekeeping Operations on the substance and status of initiatives to 
strengthen its operations in these countries. We reviewed efforts by 
this department to implement the United Nations' commitment to applying 
results-based budgeting principles as a management tool. We performed 
fieldwork in Sierra Leone and East Timor to examine peacekeeping 
operations in those countries. These trips included visits to U.N. and 
national government military and police posts, ex-combatant 
reintegration centers, justice institutions, and reconstruction 
projects. We interviewed and obtained documentation from U.N. and host 
government officials, bilateral and multilateral agencies and 
nongovernmental organizations supporting U.N. peace efforts, and local 
citizens participating in or observing internationally supported 
programs. In conjunction with these trips, we visited and interviewed 
government officials in the United Kingdom and Australia, the major 
bilateral supporters of the peace operations in Sierra Leone and East 
Timor, respectively. Our work in these two countries allowed us to 
assess overall transition planning and actual execution of initial 
troop reductions, since the operations in these countries have 
completed substantial portions of their work and are beginning to 
withdraw. In the Democratic Republic of the Congo, we interviewed U.N. 
peacekeeping officials about the demobilization and reintegration 
programs and their efforts to provide humanitarian assistance. However, 
due to unsettled security conditions and the early stage of the United 
Nations' activities, our fieldwork in the Congo was not as extensive as 
it was in Sierra Leone and East Timor.

To assess challenges faced in applying the U.N. strategy in these 
countries, we reviewed our own substantial body of work on peacekeeping 
operations over the last decade (including reviews of U.N. operations 
in Cambodia and the Balkans) and included discussion about relevant 
issues in our interviews with U.N. headquarters and field-level staff, 
U.S. government officials, and other experts in the United States and 
abroad, as previously described. Our findings regarding U.N. efforts to 
develop meaningful measures and criteria for assessing progress were 
informed by our prior work on U.S. government efforts to develop and 
apply similar frameworks, including efforts to apply the principles 
advanced by the Government Performance and Results Act. To examine 
whether consistent and quantifiable measures were used to assess 
progress, we examined progress reports sent from the U.N. missions in 
Sierra Leone, East Timor, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo to 
the Department of Peacekeeping Operations headquarters in New York 
between November 2002 and May 2003.

We conducted our work from October 2002 through August 2003, in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards.

[End of section]

Appendix II: U.N. Objectives and Measures of Progress, by Mission:

Table 4: U.N. Objectives and Measures of Progress in Sierra Leone:

Results needed for sustainable peace: Establish and maintain security; 
Objective: Ensure security and freedom of movement; Measures of 
progress: * Cease-fire violations minimized and contained; * Roads 
opened, checkpoints removed.

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peace: Strengthen police 
capacity, accountability, and loyalty; Measures of progress: Results 
needed for sustainable peace: * Progress toward increasing force to 
prewar level (9,500); * Strengthen strategic management; * Enhance 
training; * Provide essential equipment, rehabilitate key 
infrastructure.

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peace: Strengthen Sierra 
Leone armed forces; Measures of progress: Results needed for 
sustainable peace: * Restructure and reduce combined government and 
rebel forces to 10,500 troops; * Forces accept responsibility for 
security in areas vacated by U.N. peacekeepers.

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peace: Support reintegration 
of ex-combatants; Measures of progress: Results needed for sustainable 
peace: * Offer reintegration opportunities to all registered ex-
combatants (57,000).

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peace: Restore control over 
diamond mining; Measures of progress: Results needed for sustainable 
peace: * Support for enforcement of mining regulations; * Increase 
value of legal exports.

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peaceDevelop institutions 
that ensure rule of law and participatory governance: Address external 
security challenges (Liberia and Guinea); Measures of progress: Results 
needed for sustainable peaceDevelop institutions that ensure rule of 
law and participatory governance: * Accelerate training, restructuring 
of armed forces, Ministry of Defense; * Ensure sustainability of army 
deployments; * Encourage political dialogue, collaboration in the Mano 
River Union[A]; * Enhance national capacity to respond to refugee 
influxes; * Develop regional arms collection and destruction program.

Results needed for sustainable peace: Develop institutions that ensure 
rule of law and participatory governance; Objective: Consolidate state 
authority; Measures of progress: * Restore basic administrative 
capacity; * Increase number of District officials in office.

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peace: Restore local 
governance; Measures of progress: Results needed for sustainable peace: 
* Enhance decentralization for improved public service delivery; * 
Enhance decentralization for community participation in decision 
making, oversight; * Build capacity; * Hold local chieftain and 
district council elections.

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peaceCreate conditions for 
economic recovery and social reform: Strengthen rule of law; Measures 
of progress: Results needed for sustainable peaceCreate conditions for 
economic recovery and social reform: * Support rebuilding of impartial, 
transparent, and independent judiciary; * Rehabilitate courts; * Train 
magistrates; * Judicial coverage, legal aid in all districts; * 
Rehabilitate essential elements of penal system; * Support 
anticorruption measures (accountability, transparency).

Results needed for sustainable peace: Create conditions for economic 
recovery and social reform; Objective: Facilitate reintegration of 
refugees, internally displaced persons; Measures of progress: * 
Facilitate return of Sierra Leonean refugees; * Support completion of 
assisted resettlement program for Internally Displaced Persons; * 
Numbers of refugees and internally displaced persons returned home; * 
Support shelter programs; * Improve food security; * Strengthen child 
protection.

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peace: Reduce poverty and 
encourage economic growth; Measures of progress: Results needed for 
sustainable peace: * Increase in percentage of households with access 
to safe drinking water to 63 percent; * Increase in percentage of 
children enrolled in primary school; * Stimulate economic revival--
increase annual gross domestic product growth to 6 percent; * Malaria: 
Increase in treated bed net use by pregnant women and children; * 
Health care: Increase in percentage of health units rehabilitated and 
functional; * HIV: Increase in percentage of women who are AIDS aware 
to 20 percent aware.

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peace: Encourage national 
reconciliation; Measures of progress: Results needed for sustainable 
peace: * Land disputes mechanism functioning; * Foster policy of 
inclusion at local level; * Promote reconciliation initiatives; * Truth 
and Reconciliation Commission functioning.

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peaceObjective: Promote human 
rights, justice; Measures of progress: Results needed for sustainable 
peaceMeasures of progress: * Reinforce national human rights 
institutions; * Increase capacity of local human rights groups; * 
Harmonize domestic and international human rights instruments; * 
Promote culture of peace, tolerance, and human rights; * Special Court 
functioning; * Observed decrease in human rights violations.

Source: GAO analysis of United Nations documents and official 
interviews.

[A] The Mano River Union is a customs and economic union between 
Liberia, Guinea, and Sierra Leone.

[End of table]

Table 5: U.N. Objectives and Measures of Progress in East Timor:

Results needed for sustainable peace: Establish and maintain security; 
Objective: Establish secure environment; Measures of progress: * 
Reduction and containment of militia threat.

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peace: Continue to provide 
executive policing after independence; Measures of progress: Results 
needed for sustainable peace: * Gradual handover of executive policing 
by district; * Hand over five districts, eight specialized units by the 
end of 2002 from U.N. to Timorese authority, remaining districts by 
November 2003; * U.N. review and monitoring of handed over districts; * 
Hand over headquarters by January 2004; * Downsize U.N. police from 
1,250 to 325 in January 2004.

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peace: Support the 
development of the East Timor Police Service (ETPS); Measures of 
progress: Results needed for sustainable peace: * Train 3,330 police 
officers (including 230 border police) at Police College; * On-the-job 
mentoring by international experts; * ETPS is able to provide all basic 
functions; * Specialized training for ETPS in human rights and 
management skills.

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peace: Support external 
security and territorial integrity; Measures of progress: Results 
needed for sustainable peace: * East Timor defense force at full 
operational capability by June 2004; * June 2004 defense force assumes 
responsibility for external security.

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peaceDevelop institutions 
that ensure rule of law and participatory governance: Assist in the 
development of border security and control; Measures of progress: 
Results needed for sustainable peaceDevelop institutions that ensure 
rule of law and participatory governance: * Border demarcated by June 
2003; ETPS to assume patrolling and immigration responsibilities; * 
National government to normalize its customs service.

Results needed for sustainable peace: Develop institutions that ensure 
rule of law and participatory governance; Objective: Supervise and 
support elections; Measures of progress: * Presidential elections 
conducted April 2002.

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peace: Support development of 
the post-independence public administration and rule of law; Measures 
of progress: Results needed for sustainable peace: * Civilian Support 
Group to assist in 100 core functions of government administration; * 
Civilian Support Group to complete essential services and legal systems 
activities by November 2003 and remaining functions by May 2004; * 
Ensure application of general public service standards and systems 
throughout the public administration.

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peaceCreate conditions for 
economic recovery and social reform: Create local governance; Measures 
of progress: Results needed for sustainable peaceCreate conditions for 
economic recovery and social reform: * Government established in all 13 
districts.

Results needed for sustainable peace: Create conditions for economic 
recovery and social reform; Objective: Facilitate provision of 
humanitarian assistance; Measures of progress: * Refugees returned home 
and reintegrated.

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peace: Support international 
poverty reduction efforts; Measures of progress: Results needed for 
sustainable peace: * U.N. Development Program coordinating 228 donor-
funded international social and economic development advisers to the 
national government.

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peace: Help institute 
national development plan; Measures of progress: Results needed for 
sustainable peace: * 10-year plan adopted in 2001; interim targets met.

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peaceObjective: Assist in the 
conduct of serious crimes investigations and proceedings; Measures of 
progress: Results needed for sustainable peaceMeasures of progress: * 
Conclude investigations in 10 priority cases and 5 other investigations 
by the end of 2002; * Successful completion of trials throughout 2003.

Source: GAO analysis of United Nations documents and official 
interviews.

[End of table]

Table 6: U.N. Objectives and Measures of Progress in the Democratic 
Republic of the Congo:

Results needed for sustainable peace: Establish and maintain security; 
Objective: Support cease-fire agreement; Measures of progress: * 
Parties to conflict participate in Joint Military Commission; * Cease-
fire violations investigated.

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peace: Assist disarmament and 
repatriation or reintegration of foreign and Congolese armed groups; 
Measures of progress: Results needed for sustainable peace: * Up to 
90,000 Rwandan combatants and dependents voluntarily disarmed and 
repatriated; * Congolese combatants disarmed and reintegrated; * 
Establish ban on supply of weapons or any military assistance to armed 
groups in Ituri and Kivus areas in northeastern Congo.

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peace: Support border 
security and integrity and national sovereignty; Measures of progress: 
Results needed for sustainable peace: * Verify withdrawal and monitor 
continued absence of Rwandan, Ugandan, and other foreign military 
forces from the Congo; * Establish functional joint Uganda-Congo 
Pacification Commission to halt hostilities, create administrative 
authority, and restore law and order in Ituri area.

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peace: Strengthen local 
police capacity; Measures of progress: Results needed for sustainable 
peace: * Complete national assessment of police capabilities and needs; 
* Provide limited police training and material support to Kisangani 
training program.

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peace: Foster political 
reconciliation; Measures of progress: Results needed for sustainable 
peace: * All major parties participate in U.N.-sponsored Inter-
Congolese dialogue; * All parties agree on power-sharing plan; * 
Support the Ituri pacification commission[A].

Objective: Results needed for sustainable peaceDevelop institutions 
that ensure rule of law and participatory governance: Assist in 
creation of unified national security forces; Measures of progress: 
Results needed for sustainable peaceDevelop institutions that ensure 
rule of law and participatory governance: * Establish high command of 
unified national armed forces; * Form initial unified police unit in 
one city or area.

Results needed for sustainable peace: Develop institutions that ensure 
rule of law and participatory governance; Objective: Assist in creation 
of unified national government; Measures of progress: * Transitional 
constitution approved by parties; * Transitional government formed by 
parties; * Election plans for a democratic government finalized; * 
Peacekeeping operation coordinates activities of U.N. system and other 
actors in supporting the transitional government and rule of law.

Results needed for sustainable peace: Create conditions for economic 
recovery and social reform; Objective: Support reopening of major 
riverways for free movement of goods and people; Measures of progress: 
* Obtain agreements among parties to conflict permitting commercial and 
other traffic along the Congo River from Kinshasa to Kisangani.

Source: GAO analysis of United Nations documents and official 
interviews.

[A] The commission, which includes the United Nations and all parties 
to the conflict in the Congo's northeastern Ituri region, was created 
to develop and implement new structures to restore law and order and 
effective administration in this region along the Ugandan border.

[End of table]

[End of section]

Appendix III: Crises and International Response in Sierra Leone, East 
Timor, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo:

Sierra Leone:

From 1991 through 2000, Sierra Leone experienced a devastating series 
of armed conflicts between the government and rebel groups, brought on 
by decades of poor governance, economic mismanagement, and corruption. 
The conflict was exacerbated by external support for the rebels, 
primarily from Liberia. The international community attempted 
unsuccessfully to restore peace for nearly a decade. In 1999, the 
government and primary rebel groups signed a peace agreement, and the 
United Nations deployed a peacekeeping operation to support efforts to 
create a sustainable peace. In 2000, international efforts to restore 
the peace intensified after rebels took about 500 peacekeepers hostage. 
The United Kingdom intervened and ultimately deployed about 5,500 
troops to protect and evacuate U.K. and other nationals and to support 
the government and international peacekeepers. The United Nations 
strengthened its mandate and by 2001 had nearly tripled the size of its 
military force to 17,500 troops. After the rebel leader was captured in 
May 2000, the hostages were released or rescued, and the rebel groups 
were largely disarmed and demobilized. In May 2002, the former rebels 
participated in national elections conducted with U.N. support and 
characterized by observers as free and fair. The U.N. peacekeeping 
force currently assists the government of Sierra Leone in its efforts 
to maintain security and restore law and order throughout the country.

Sierra Leone, a small West African country with an estimated population 
in 2001 of approximately 6 million was founded as a refuge for freed 
slaves by the United Kingdom in the late 1800s. It has been an 
independent country since 1961 (see fig. 7). Although endowed with 
substantial mineral resources, most notably diamonds mined in the 
eastern portion of the country, over 80 percent of Sierra Leone's 
prewar population lived in poverty.

Figure 7: Map of Sierra Leone:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

The conflict in Sierra Leone began in 1991 with a relatively small-
scale revolt against the government by a group known as the 
Revolutionary United Front (RUF). With the help of Liberian faction 
leader (and later president) Charles Taylor, the rebels gained control 
of Sierra Leone's diamond mining areas, enabling them to sustain 
prolonged and destructive struggle against relatively weak and divided 
government opposition. Independent militias and elements of the armed 
forces fought each other, the RUF, and West African forces deployed as 
peacekeepers in a series of conflicts. By the late 1990s, damage and 
disruption from the ongoing conflict had reduced Sierra Leone to the 
extent that the United Nations' global Human Development Index ranked 
it last place in the world. Much of the nation's infrastructure was 
destroyed, and about half of the population was displaced from their 
homes. Approximately 500,000 people fled the country, including an 
estimated 80 percent of Sierra Leone's professionals.

Throughout the 1990s, the United Nations and other elements of the 
international community made a number of unsuccessful attempts to end 
the conflict in Sierra Leone. The Economic Community of West African 
States,[Footnote 17] with the support of the United Nations and the 
Organization of African Unity, attempted to achieve settlements through 
negotiated agreements, sponsorship of democratic elections, and 
military intervention. These attempts failed because of weaknesses in 
Sierra Leone's civilian and military institutions, continuing rebel 
resistance, limitations of the international military forces operating 
in the country, and competing international commitments to the region. 
The government was overthrown by a military coup in 1992. The military 
relinquished power to a new president and parliament elected in 
February 1996, but the RUF did not participate in the elections and did 
not recognize the results. In November 1996, the United Nations helped 
negotiate a peace agreement (known as the Abidjan Accord) between the 
government and the RUF. This agreement was derailed when the government 
was overthrown in 1997 by another military coup, and the army and the 
RUF formed a ruling junta. The government was restored in 1998 after 
West African forces drove the junta from power. In January 1999, an 
unsuccessful attempt to overthrow the government by the RUF resulted in 
massive loss of life and destruction in Freetown and the surrounding 
area.

In July 1999, the parties to the conflict signed a peace agreement 
(known as the Lomé Agreement because it was signed in Lomé, Togo) 
negotiated with the assistance of the United Nations. Under the 
agreement, the RUF agreed to maintain a cease-fire, transform itself 
into a political party, and join a government of national unity. In 
return, the agreement granted pardon and amnesty to all combatants, 
including those from the RUF, for actions before the agreement was 
signed. In October 1999, the Security Council established the United 
Nations Mission in Sierra Leone to, among other things, assist in the 
implementation of the Lomé Agreement, assist in the disarmament 
demobilization and reintegration of former combatants, and monitor the 
cease-fire. The council's resolution authorized the deployment of up to 
6,000 military peacekeepers. Despite having signed the Lomé Agreement, 
RUF forces attacked population centers and engaged in a series of armed 
confrontations with African peacekeeping forces and, subsequently, with 
U.N. troops. In May 2000, the RUF took about 500 U.N. peacekeepers 
hostage. U.N. and other assessments concluded that insufficient 
military strength and other shortcomings contributed to the 
peacekeeping force's inability to deter and repel RUF attacks and 
stabilize the country.[Footnote 18]

The hostage-taking and other incidents prompted a significant change in 
the United Nations' and the international community's approach to the 
crisis in Sierra Leone. The international community applied greater 
military and diplomatic pressure, which succeeded in overcoming RUF 
resistance and restoring the peace. Beginning in May 2000, the United 
Kingdom deployed troops to protect and evacuate U.K. and other 
nationals and secure the area around Freetown and the airport. This 
deployment boosted confidence in the government and allowed the United 
Nations to redeploy peacekeepers to other areas. At the same time, the 
United Nations began increasing the strength of its peacekeeping force 
in a series of steps from 6,000 to 17,500 troops. The Security Council 
augmented the mission's mandate to clarify its right to self-defense 
and tasked it to help extend government authority throughout the 
country, including areas controlled by the RUF and other armed groups. 
In addition, Guinean armed forces defeated RUF incursions into that 
country, and the United Nations imposed sanctions on Liberia to reduce 
that country's support for the RUF. The arrest and imprisonment of RUF 
leader Foday Sankoh in mid-2000 enhanced RUF cooperation.

The United Nations reported that, through May 2002, the U.N. 
peacekeeping operation supported the extension of government authority 
throughout the country, the disarmament and reintegration of ex-
combatants, and the conduct of free and fair national elections. 
According to U.N. reports, by December 2001, U.N. troops had been 
deployed to all districts of Sierra Leone, and, by June 2002, 
government administrators and police had also been deployed to all 
districts with the support of the U.N. forces, the U.N. Development 
Program, and international groups. In January 2002, the Government of 
Sierra Leone, the RUF, and the United Nations declared the disarmament 
process complete. Having disarmed, the RUF participated as a political 
party in national presidential and parliamentary elections in May 2002. 
The U.N. operation played an important role in supporting these 
elections, which international and local observers characterized as 
free, transparent, and generally free of violence.

In the spring and summer of 2002, having achieved these basic 
milestones, U.N. officials began to develop plans to gradually reduce 
the size of the mission. In accordance with Security Council guidance, 
U.N. officials identified and articulated strategic goals for key areas 
where progress would affect the security threat facing Sierra Leone and 
its ability to maintain security and stability without substantial 
assistance from U.N. peacekeepers.[Footnote 19]

East Timor:

A former Portuguese colony, East Timor experienced years of 
intermittent conflict following its 1975 occupation by Indonesia. Low-
level international efforts to resolve this conflict were unsuccessful 
until 1998, when Indonesian-Portuguese negotiations finally produced 
agreement on a referendum to decide the territory's political future. 
The ensuing vote for independence in August 1999 provoked a violent 
response from militias favoring integration with Indonesia. The 
international community intervened to end the fighting and established 
a U.N. transitional administration in 2000 to run the country and 
oversee international assistance efforts until a new national authority 
was elected and independence declared in May 2002. A U.N. peacekeeping 
operation remains in East Timor in support of the government and 
ongoing international efforts to create sustainable peace in the new 
country.

East Timor is a small country with a population ranging between 800,000 
and about 1 million occupying the eastern portion of the island of 
Timor (see fig. 8). First colonized by Portugal in the 1500s, Timor was 
divided between the Netherlands and Portugal in 1859. While the Dutch 
side became part of Indonesia after World War II, East Timor remained 
under Portuguese rule. In 1975, Portugal finally withdrew and East 
Timor declared independence. However, armed conflict among domestic 
factions provided Indonesia with a pretext for occupation. For the 
ensuing quarter century, Indonesia conducted an unsuccessful campaign 
to incorporate East Timor, with intermittent warfare claiming 100,000 
to 250,000 lives. By 1999, years of violence and disruption had reduced 
East Timor to last place among Asian countries on the United Nations' 
Human Development Index.

Figure 8: Map of East Timor:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Although the United Nations refused to recognize Indonesia's annexation 
and called for self-determination for East Timor, these calls did not 
achieve results until the government of Indonesia changed hands in 1998 
and the new administration decided to enter U.N.-mediated discussions 
with Portugal about the territory's political future.

In 1999, these talks resulted in agreement to hold a popular vote on 
whether East Timor would accept or reject a proposal to remain 
affiliated with Indonesia as an autonomous entity. To ensure a free and 
fair referendum, the Security Council created a small observer mission, 
the U.N. Mission in East Timor, to monitor campaigning and voting and 
to oversee the result of the vote. However, Indonesia retained 
responsibility for maintaining peace and security. On August 30, 1999, 
the population voted overwhelmingly against the proposal, voting in 
effect for U.N. administration and eventual transition to full 
independence. In response, militias favoring integration with Indonesia 
went on a rampage with the support of elements of the Indonesian 
security forces, killing hundreds of people, displacing 500,000 more--
many of whom fled or were forcibly removed to West Timor--and 
destroying much of the country's already damaged infrastructure and 
housing. Those leaving included most of the country's professional 
class, who were predominantly Indonesian in origin.

Despite diplomatic pressure from the Secretary General and others, 
Indonesian authorities did little to end the violence; Indonesian 
security forces in fact provided considerable support to pro-union 
militias. In 1999, the Secretary General noted that the potential for 
post-vote discord was widely acknowledged and Indonesian authorities 
had not done an effective job of quelling prereferendum violence. The 
U.N. mission then in the country, however, had not been provided with 
the means for taking effective action to restore stability.

In the aftermath of the violence, the United Nations authorized a 
series of interventions in East Timor that were intended to end the 
violence, create a national government, and consolidate a stable 
environment that would permit devolution of all responsibilities to the 
new national government and withdrawal of U.N. forces. In September 
1999, the Security Council authorized an Australian-led international 
force of approximately 8,000 military personnel to intervene in East 
Timor, end the violence, and facilitate humanitarian operations. With 
Indonesian consent, this force quickly entered East Timor and restored 
order. About 500,000 East Timorese were displaced from their homes. 
About half of the displaced went to West Timor, in some cases forced to 
go by fleeing pro-Indonesia militiamen. The following month, the 
council authorized creation of the U.N. Transitional Administration in 
East Timor that would assume responsibility for maintaining security 
from the Australian-led force, administer an interim government, and 
work to develop East Timor's capacity for self-government. In the 
ensuing months, the mission oversaw development of a national 
consultative council, began training a police force, assisted with the 
return of most of the refugees, helped other international 
organizations create the conditions for economic development, and 
patrolled the boundary with Indonesia. Between August 2001 and April 
2002, the people of East Timor elected a constituent assembly, adopted 
a constitution, and elected a president.

On May 20, 2002, East Timor became an independent country, and the U.N. 
transitional administration turned over responsibility for governance 
to Timorese authorities. Recognizing this change in circumstances, the 
Security Council created a U.N. Mission in Support of East Timor to 
pursue a mandate that supports the new government as it works to 
establish stability and security in the country. The mission has 
developed implementation plans for its activities, identified security 
and governance "milestones" to be achieved, and developed a proposed 
timetable for reducing its presence in East Timor over a 2-year period, 
with the final withdrawal of the peacekeepers to be completed by mid-
2004.

Democratic Republic of the Congo:

Since suffering foreign invasion and overthrow of the government in 
1996-97 and again in 1998-99, the Democratic Republic of the Congo 
(DRC) has been divided by conflict among shifting alliances of foreign 
and domestic armed groups, including troops from seven other countries 
sent to support or oppose the government. International initiatives 
aimed at restoring peace, including a U.N. peacekeeping operation, have 
made some progress since 1999, but violence continues to occur. The 
Security Council established a peacekeeping operation, the U.N. 
Organization Mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo, in support of 
a 1999 peace agreement signed in Lusaka, Zambia. The parties to the 
agreement largely failed to meet their commitments until late 2002, 
making it difficult for the U.N. mission to plan a comprehensive 
approach to restoring stability. Foreign troops were withdrawn by May 
2003, and the Congolese factions formed a transitional government in 
June 2003. In July 2003, the council expanded the peacekeeping 
operation's mandate to assist the new government's efforts to provide 
security and rule of law. In addition, the council authorized a 
substantial increase in the size of the peacekeeping force.

The DRC occupies the core of central Africa. Approximately equivalent 
in size to the United States east of the Mississippi River, the country 
shares borders with nine other nations and has a population of about 55 
million. The country is rich in natural resources, with substantial 
deposits of gold, diamonds, coltan, and other minerals; ample timber; 
and enormous potential for hydroelectric power generation.[Footnote 20] 
A colony of Belgium until 1960, the new country dissolved into a 
multisided war shortly after declaring independence. The government of 
dictator Mobutu Sese Seko, in power from 1965 to 1997, eventually 
restored order but failed to channel the country's considerable wealth 
into economic and social development. Corrupt government officials 
became wealthy while the population remained poor, politically 
disenfranchised, and willing to support opposition groups and coup 
attempts. The economy suffered a near-total collapse during the early 
1990s. By 1997, the central government could do little to resist rebels 
and outside forces.

The political and economic tensions in the DRC were exacerbated by the 
1994 conflict and associated genocide in neighboring Rwanda. More than 
1 million ethnic Hutus fleeing Tutsi reprisals inside Rwanda became 
refugees in eastern DRC. Ethnic tension and fighting involving 
Congolese Tutsis, the army, and exiled Rwandan Hutu militias ensued, 
leading eventually to a 1997 uprising by domestic rebel groups that 
succeeded in deposing Mobutu with support from Rwanda, Uganda, and 
Angola. The successor government under rebel leader Laurent Kabila was 
challenged in 1998 by a new coalition of internal rebels and Rwandan 
and Ugandan troops. With support from Angola, Zimbabwe, Namibia, Sudan, 
and Chad, the Kabila government pushed its challengers back to eastern 
DRC before losing the initiative. Rwandan and Ugandan troops and their 
respective rebel client groups remained in control of large portions of 
the country (see fig. 9). According to International Rescue Committee 
estimates, the continuing conflict has cost more than 3 million lives 
since 1998.

Figure 9: Location of Countries Aligned with and against the Kabila 
Government in 1998, and the Location of Major Antigovernment Groups and 
Natural Resources in the Democratic Republic of the Congo as of 2003:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

In July 1999, the main parties to the DRC conflict agreed to honor a 
cease-fire and begin a national dialogue to lead to the creation of a 
transitional government and national elections. The Security Council 
authorized a U.N. peacekeeping operation to support the cessation of 
hostilities, oversee the withdrawal of foreign forces, and encourage 
talks sponsored by the United Nations and the African Union to create a 
new national government that included the current government and 
foreign-supported rebel groups in eastern DRC. The peacekeeping 
operation would then support the new government's efforts to restore 
peace, including a timetable calling for agreement on the formation of 
a unified transitional government within 3 months, withdrawal of all 
foreign forces within 6 months, and reestablishment of state 
administration throughout the DRC within 9 months, that is, by April 
2000.

The parties were slow to meet their commitments and were unable to 
implement a comprehensive plan to restore peace. The formation of a 
national government was also substantially delayed. The parties 
committed numerous violations of the cease-fire, and it was not until 
December 2002 that the Kinshasa government and major rebel groups from 
eastern Congo[Footnote 21] signed a power-sharing agreement that would 
permit the creation of the transitional government. Foreign troops have 
been slow to withdraw in part because they want to retain control of 
mineral resources.[Footnote 22] Rwanda withdrew its troops in late 
2002, while Uganda removed the last of its units in May 2003. As of 
August 2003, fighting has continued among rebel militias seeking to 
control Ituri and other northeastern regions. In Ituri, local, ethnic 
militias began fighting after foreign troops vacated the area.

Since 1999, the Security Council has gradually increased the strength 
and mandate of the U.N. peacekeeping operation that supported the peace 
process. In 2001, the council authorized the mission to train police 
for the eastern rebel-occupied city of Kisangani and help reopen the 
Congo River to commercial traffic. In 2002, it inaugurated a program to 
disarm and repatriate ethnic Hutu militiamen and their families from 
the DRC to Rwanda. The council approved a number of increases in the 
size of the peacekeeping force, raising its authorized strength from 90 
military liaisons in August 1999 to 8,700 troops by December 2002. The 
actual forces provided by member states to the operation have been 
significantly below the ceiling because the country's unstable 
political environment, great size, and poor transportation network make 
it costly to deploy troops. Consequently, the number of U.N. troops 
actually deployed to the DRC totaled about 6,200 soldiers and 76 police 
as of June 2003. In May 2003, the council also authorized the 
deployment of a separate French-led force of about 1,500 international 
troops to the Ituri region to end fighting and restore order in the 
city of Bunia.

The Congolese parties to the peace agreement formed the National Unity 
and Transition government in June 2003. On July 28, 2003, the Security 
Council expanded the peacekeeping operation's mandate to assist the 
government in developing a more comprehensive approach to restoring 
stability, including efforts to support security sector reform, 
elections, and the establishment of the rule of law, in coordination 
with other international actors. The council also authorized the 
mission to use force to stabilize Ituri and other northeastern regions 
and expanded its force level to 10,800 troops. The U.N. operation will 
also assume control over international forces in the Ituri region in 
September 2003. The new resolution extended the mission for 1 year but 
did not set a date for elections. However, the Secretary General 
suggested in May 2003 that the holding of free and fair national 
elections might serve as an appropriate time to end the current 
peacekeeping operation.

[End of section]

Appendix IV: Comments from the U.N. Department of Peacekeeping 
Operations:

United Nations:

Nations Unies:

HEADQUARTERS - SIEGE	NEW YORK, NY 10017 TEL.: 1 (212) 963.1234 - 
FAX: 1 (212) 963.4879:

REFERENCE:

11 September 2003:

Dear Mr. Christoff,

On behalf of Mr. Gudhenno, I would like to thank you for the 
opportunity to review and comment on your report entitled "UN 
Peacekeeping: Transition Strategies for Post-Conflict Countries Lack 
Result-Oriented Measures of Performance".

In general, the report identifies a number of the key issues that must 
be confronted by peacekeeping operations. While it recognizes certain 
constraints in developing realistic measures of performance, we would 
welcome further recognition of the efforts that have been made by the 
Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO) to enhance the results-
oriented performance measures of its operations.

The Under-Secretary-General has given priority attention to improving 
the development of mission implementation plans and mission budgets, 
and improving their alignment in order for both to serve as strategic 
planning and management tools. DPKO and the Department of Management 
have also made significant efforts to strengthen the results based 
budgeting (RBB) process, including improvements to the development of 
measurable indicators of achievement. This has been accomplished 
through extensive planning discussions between DPKO Headquarters and 
field operations (both substantive and support elements), the provision 
of integrated strategic planning guidance from Headquarters for the 
development of mission budget proposals, and strong coordination 
between Headquarters and field operations during the budget preparation 
process for 2004-2005. All budgets for peacekeeping operations are now 
being prepared in the RBB format. We would be glad to share examples of 
those new frameworks, should that be helpful. I should add that the 
lessons learned and best practices from the planning and budget 
preparation processes will be captured and reflected in the activities 
for the 2005-2006 budget cycle.

On a related issue, reference to budgetary allocations in the report 
would benefit from a comparative perspective. For example, while the 
report states that "The cost and resources needed for peacekeeping 
operations are high", it should be noted that the cost of $6 billion 
cited for peacekeeping in East Timor, Sierra Leone and the DRC is for a 
five-year period.

You rightly point out that much of field reporting is largely 
"narrative" in nature; however, the kind of numerical performance 
measures you propose in your report, are in fact routinely included, 
such as the handover process, training statistics, demarcation of the 
border and return of refugees in the case of East 
Timor. This information is subsequently incorporated in regular 
reports, including those to the UN legislative bodies and the Council.

Although the attempt to identify trends and apply comparative analysis 
can be very useful, it should be noted that peacekeeping mandates (and 
political situations) vary, as do the strategies applied to implement 
them. It would 
therefore be more appropriate to analyse each mission separately, based 
on the merits of its mandate and progress in mandate implementation. 
For example, a comparison cannot be made between the security tasks and 
functions in East Timor, where the mission has had an executive 
mandate, with the establishment of security in the DRC, which is not 
MONUC's responsibility.

With regard to specific references on the DRC, the draft report 
contains some factual inaccuracies, such as "In the Democratic Republic 
of the Congo, the UN peacekeeping operation been limited to supporting 
the intermittent peace negotiations between the warring parties...", 
which does not reflect MONUC's mandate. The progress achieved in the 
DRC in the last year and a half has also not been reflected. The 
withdrawal of foreign troops, signing of peace agreements, progress in 
DDRRR, installation of transitional government, and restoration of 
basic communications between different parts of the country are all 
achievements in which MONUC and the United Nations have played a 
significant role.

Concerning references to East Timor, you might wish to note that, on 20 
May 2002, the name of the country changed to Timor-Leste.

I hope that you will find our comments useful. Should you have any 
questions, please feel free to contact me.

Yours sincerely,

Donna-Marie Chiurazzi-Maxfield 
Special Assistant Under-Secretary-General:

Department of Peacekeeping Operations:

[End of section]

Appendix V: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments:

GAO Contacts:

Tetsuo Miyabara, (202) 512-8974 B. Patrick Hickey, (202) 512-3163:

Staff Acknowledgments:

In addition to those named above, Ann Baker, Lynn Cothern, Martin De 
Alteriis, Michael McAtee, and Claire van der Lee made major 
contributions to this report.


FOOTNOTES

[1] For example, see U.S. General Accounting Office, Cambodia: 
Governance Reform Progressing, but Key Efforts Are Lagging, GAO-02-569 
(Washington, D.C.: June 13, 2001); and Bosnia: Crime and Corruption 
Threaten Successful Implementation of Dayton Peace Agreement, GAO/
T-NSIAD-00-219 (Washington, D.C.: July 19, 2000).

[2] East Timor officially became the Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste 
upon attaining independence in May 2002.

[3] We define results-oriented or outcome measures as the results of 
programs and activities compared with their intended purpose. See U.S. 
General Accounting Office, Managing for Results: EPA Faces Challenges 
in Developing Results-Oriented Performance Goals and Measures, GAO/
RCED-00-77 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 28, 2000), and Performance 
Measurement and Evaluation: Definitions and Relationships, GAO/
GGD-98-26 (Washington, D.C.: April 1998).

[4] The 15-member Security Council authorizes the deployment of a 
peacekeeping operation and determines its mandate. Such decisions 
require at least nine votes in favor and are subject to a veto by the 
negative vote of any of the council's 5 permanent members--China, 
France, the Russian Federation, the United Kingdom, and the United 
States. The U.N. Secretary General makes recommendations on how the 
operation is to be launched and carried out and reports on its 
progress. The U.N. Department of Peacekeeping Operations is responsible 
for providing political and executive direction to operations in the 
field.

[5] See Len Hawley, Generic Political-Military Plan for a Multilateral 
Complex Contingency Operation (Washington, D.C.: July 18, 2002).

[6] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Issues in Implementing 
International Peace Operations, GAO-02-707R (Washington, D.C.: May 24, 
2002). 

[7] Several U.S. government studies support this approach. For example, 
see DFI International, Effective Transitions from Peace Operations to 
Sustainable Peace (Washington, D.C.: September 1997). Moreover, the 
Special Coordinator of the Stability Pact for Southeastern Europe noted 
that the pact, a multinational effort to implement a comprehensive, 
long-term regional conflict prevention strategy, was also based on this 
approach.

[8] The Report of the Panel on United Nations Peace Operations, 
commonly referred to as the "Brahimi Report," made recommendations to 
the Secretary General in November 2000 to improve the strategic 
direction, planning, organization, and conduct of peace operations. 

[9] The July 1999 Lomé Peace Agreement between the parties stipulated 
that the primary rebel group would maintain a cease-fire, disarm and 
demobilize, transform itself into a political party, and participate in 
a government of national unity.

[10] Another key task is to complete the reintegration of about 57,000 
ex-combatants into society by the end of 2003.

[11] The court's draft budget for the fiscal year beginning in July 
2003 was approximately $35.3 million.

[12] The Security Council has addressed calls for initiating 
peacekeeping operations in Afghanistan, Cote d'Ivoire, Liberia, Iraq, 
and other locations in the past 2 years. 

[13] The boundary between East and West Timor is known as the Tactical 
Coordination Line, pending the outcome of negotiations between East 
Timor and Indonesia in establishing an international border.

[14] Under the agreement governing the referendum (formally termed a 
"popular consultation"), the people of East Timor could choose to 
accept or reject autonomy. However, a vote to reject autonomy, coupled 
with the Indonesian President's promise to seek to have Indonesia's 
Supreme People's Consultative Assembly reverse the territory's 
annexation in the event of such an outcome, was essentially a vote for 
independence. The agreement stipulated that, if the people of East 
Timor rejected autonomy, the United Nations would administer East Timor 
until it assumed full independence.

[15] Experiences in the Balkans further demonstrate that transitions 
take longer than expected. In 1995, U.S. and international leaders 
stated that the NATO-led peacekeeping forces in Bosnia and Herzegovina 
would require a 1-year deployment and then withdraw. As of June 2003, 
13,000 international peacekeeping troops remain in the country with 
some remaining for the foreseeable future.

[16] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Agencies Annual Performance 
Plans Under the Results Act: An Assessment Guide to Facilitate 
Congressional Decisionmaking, GAO/GGD/AIMD-10.1.18 (Washington, D.C.: 
February 1998); Managing for Results: Agencies' Annual Performance 
Plans Can Help Address Strategic Planning Challenges, GAO/GGD-98-44 
(Washington, D.C.: Jan. 30, 1998); and The Government Performance and 
Results Act: 1997 Governmentwide Implementation Will Be Uneven, GAO/
GGD-97-109 (Washington, D.C.: June 2, 1997).

[17] The member states of the Economic Community of West African States 
are Benin, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Cote d'Ivoire, The Gambia, Ghana, 
Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, 
Senegal, Sierra Leone, and Togo.

[18] These shortcomings included a serious lack of cohesion within the 
mission; confusion about the mandate and rules of engagement; and 
problems in command and control, leadership, planning, information 
sharing, and logistics.

[19] U.N. Security Council Resolutions 1436 and 1470, adopted in 
September 2002 and March 2003 respectively, instructed U.N. officials 
to base plans for withdrawing the operation on an evaluation of the 
security situation in Sierra Leone and the capacity of the country's 
security sector to take responsibility for internal and external 
security.

[20] Coltan, or colombite-tantalite, is a metallic ore used in laptop 
computers and other common electronic devices. 

[21] The two major rebel groups participating in peace-building efforts 
are the Rwandan-supported Congolese Rally for Democracy and the 
Ugandan-supported Movement for the Liberation of the Congo. Splinters 
of these two groups and other rebel groups have also been involved in 
the fighting and in recent negotiations to form a transitional 
government.

[22] A U.N. panel concluded in late 2002 that the conflict in the DRC 
had evolved into a dispute about control over minerals. The panel 
observed that disintegration of civil authority in the DRC, combined 
with incursion by foreign armies, had fostered the formation of 
criminal networks linked to the armed forces of Rwanda, Uganda, and 
Zimbabwe and to the DRC government. These networks realized large 
profits from trade in the country's natural resources and had built up 
a "self-financing war economy" that is likely to remain a challenge to 
establishing an effective national government.

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