Somalia and the Future of Humanitarian Intervention
Author(s)
Clark, Walter; Herbst, Jeffrey
Abstract
The intervention in Somalia was not an abject failure; an estimated 100,000 lives were saved. But its mismanagement should be an object lesson for peacekeepers in Bosnia and on other such missions. No large intervention, military or humanitarian, can remain neutral or assuredly brief in a strife-torn failed state. Nation-building, the rebuilding of a state’s basic civil institutions, is required in fashioning a self-sustaining body politic out of anarchy. In the future, the United States, the United Nations, and other interveners should be able to declare a state “bankrupt” and go in to restore civic order and foster reconciliation.