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Soldiers and Civil Power

Supporting or Substituting Civil Authorities in Modern Peace Operations

Thijs Brocades Zaalberg

9789053567920
528 pages
Amsterdam University Press
Overview
Peace operations became the core focus of many Western armed forces after the Cold War. The wish amongst political and military leaders during the 1990s to hold on to the classical identity of the armed forces as an instrument of force made them pursue a strict separation between military operations and the civilian aspects of peacekeeping, such as policing, administrative functions, and political and societal reconstruction.

In his book Soldiers and Civil Power, Thijs Brocades Zaalberg argues that this policy failed to match up to reality. Supporting civil authorities, and at times even substituting them (de facto military governance), became the key to reaching any level of success in Cambodia, Somalia, Bosnia and Kosovo. As a result of the false segregation between the civilian and the military domain, this was accomplished mostly by improvisation and creativity of commanders who probed for the limiting boundaries of their original mandate by reaching ever further into the civilian sphere.
Author Bio
Thijs Brocades Zaalberg recieved his PhD in history from the University of Amsterdam and currently works as an analyst at the Clingendael Centre for Strategic Studies (CCSS) in The Hague. The Clingendael Centre for Strategic Studies (CCSS) is a joint venture of the Netherlands Institute of International Relations Clingendael and the Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research TNO.