Quality. Independence. Impact.

Home | Contact Us | Media Resources

Friday November 21, 2008

Welcome   |   Register   |   Log in

Past Event

A Discussion with James Dobbins

Europe’s Role in Nation-Building

Europe, Development, Developing Countries, United Nations


Event Summary

Despite ample experience over the past decade, Western nations are still learning difficult lessons when it comes to attempts at nation-building and are still developing the skills needed to address this dauntingly complex task. On July 8, the Center on the United States and Europe (CUSE) at Brookings hosted James Dobbins, one of the foremost practitioners in the field, for a discussion of a new RAND Corporation study, Europe’s Role in Nation Building: From the Balkans to the Congo (RAND, 2008).

Event Information

When

Tuesday, July 08, 2008
3:00 PM to 4:30 PM

Where

Falk Auditorium
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Map

Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

E-mail: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

In his new book, Dobbins and his team investigate Europe’s use of armed force as part of broader nation building efforts and examine its success at transforming societies as they move from conflict to peace and stability. Dobbins’ book builds on other RAND studies on nation building and evaluates Europe’s performance, comparing it to the records of the United States and the United Nations in other past nation building operations. The book concludes with policy recommendations that address the pitfalls and lessons learned from past operations.

James Dobbins is director of the International Security and Defense Policy Center at RAND, a post he assumed after a career as a U.S. diplomat. Ambassador Dobbins held senior White House positions under four presidents, serving most recently as the Bush administration’s Special Envoy for Afghanistan. CUSE Director and Brookings Senior Fellow Daniel Benjamin provided introductory remarks and moderated the discussion. After the program, Ambassador Dobbins took audience questions.
 

Transcript

JAMES DOBBINS: What do we mean by nation building? This is a term that's entered American parlance, the Europeans tend to call it state building, the U.N. calls it peace building, the current administration calls it stabilization and reconstruction. What we mean by the term is the use of armed force in the aftermath of a conflict to forestall a return to hostilities and promote a transition to democracy. So all of the cases that we look at have a military component. That doesn't mean we're saying you always have to have a military component, we're simply saying those are the only cases we studied. That's the universe that these studies are designed to address. Not all military interventions are nation building interventions, but since 1989 if you look at the military interventions that have taken place, nearly all of them fit this paradigm. Whatever the reason that led to the intervention in the first place, they all end up fitting this paradigm which is very much a post-Cold War phenomenon.

There has been a major growth in these kinds of missions since 1989. For instance, during the Cold War the United States intervened in a new country on an average of something like once every 10 years where you had Granada, Panama, Lebanon, the Dominican Republic. In the Clinton Administration, that went from once every 10 years to once every 2 years, so you had Somalia, Haiti, Bosnia, and Kosovo, in just a little more than 8 years. The current President Bush came into office saying he wasn't going to do this anymore, and he invaded three new countries in his first 3 years in office. He went into Afghanistan, Iraq, and we went back into Haiti in 2004. The point here is that there's been an acceleration in these kinds of missions.

This is also evident in the U.N.'s record which has accelerated even more quickly. During the Cold War the U.N. mounted a new peacekeeping operation an average of once every 4 years. Since 1989 it mounts a new operation on the average of once every 6 months. These operations are cumulative. In the 1990s they were lasting 6 to 8 years, more recently they're lasting 8 to 10 years. So if you're doing one every 2 years like the United States, pretty soon you're doing four or five at once as the U.S. was in 2004 when it had troops in Bosnia, Kosovo, Haiti, Afghanistan, and Iraq. If you're the U.N. and you're mounting one every 6 months, pretty soon you're up to about 20 which is where the U.N. is at the moment.

This phenomenon was largely a domain for the U.N. on the one hand or U.S.-led coalitions including NATO on the other. But more recently a third alternative if you will has emerged which is European-led efforts including European Union-led efforts. It's still a rather tentative phenomenon, but it's one that we're studying and so that's what this study is designed to look at.

Participants

Introduction and Moderator

Daniel Benjamin

Director, Center on the United States and Europe

Panelist

Ambassador James Dobbins

Director, International Security and Defense Policy Center, Rand Corporation


My Portfolio

My New Content

View suggested content based on items you have saved to your Portfolio.
Log in or register now