Anxious France Hesitates Over U.N. Force

By Crispian Balmer
Reuters
Thursday, August 17, 2006; 12:12 PM

PARIS, Aug 17 (Reuters) - France is considering providing only a symbolic force for the United Nations contingent in Lebanon, and not the thousands of troops U.N. officials had expected, Le Monde newspaper said on Thursday.

If true, such a move could seriously delay the U.N. mission, seen as vital to securing peace between Israel and Hizbollah after a month-long war, or even scupper the operation.

U.N. sources in New York said officials were working hard to convince France to anchor the force and U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan was expected to call President Jacques Chirac during the day to discuss the problem.

Le Monde reported that France wanted to send just a dozen officers and around 200 personnel from an engineering division for the beefed-up U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL). Many diplomats had expected France to provide at least 2,000 men.

Chirac's office said the military options "were still under review". The French defence ministry has demanded that UNIFIL be given a clear mandate and wants to see what other countries will take part before committing itself.

The military's reticence follows disastrous peacekeeping operations over the past three decades, with France losing 58 paratroopers in a 1983 bomb attack in Beirut and some 84 soldiers during a mission to Bosnia in the early 1990s.

But news of the French reticence surprised many U.N. officials and several Security Council diplomats commented privately that France had written most of the elements concerning the force in a U.N. resolution adopted last Friday.

"The fact that the French led the negotiations for the resolution shows a complete disconnect between the foreign and defence ministries," one diplomat said.

"We understand their offer will be pretty weak. But it is not a done deal," the diplomat added.

CLARIFICATION

A French diplomatic source in Paris said France had always highlighted the dangers of such a mission and said the conditions for the operation had not yet been clarified.

The source added there was no turnaround in the French position and no misunderstanding with the United Nations.


CONTINUED     1        >

View all comments that have been posted about this article.

© 2006 The Washington Post Company