A Speech Regarding The Veterans Of War...
The great experiment you are honouring here today has been
shaped by many people. I recall in particular its original
architects, Ralph Bunche, Dag Hammarskjöld and Lester
Pearson, all three of them Nobel Laureates. Their remarkable
work has been built upon by their successors who set up and
directed further peacekeeping operations. You are also honouring
the soldiers of peace, some half a million young men and women
from fifty-eight countries. Seven hundred and thirty-three
“Blue Helmets” have given their lives in the service
of peace. One of them, Lieutenant Colonel William Higgins,
is still in the hands of his kidnappers. I take this opportunity
to appeal once again for his immediate release.1 We cannot
forget these brave soldiers. Nor can we forget the civilians
of the United Nations Secretariat, and especially the Field
Operations Service, who have supported their military colleagues
with dedication and courage in fifteen peacekeeping operations
all over the world. The technique which has come to be called
peacekeeping uses soldiers as the servants of peace rather
than as the instruments of war. It introduces to the military
sphere the principle of nonviolence. It provides an honourable
alternative to conflict and a means of reducing strife and
tension, so that a solution can be sought through negotiation.
Never before in history have military forces been employed
internationally not to wage war, not to establish domination
and not to serve the interests of any power or group of powers,
but rather to prevent conflict between peoples. We are now
at a time of extraordinary hope and promise for the United
Nations, after a long period when the spectre, and too often
the grim reality of war have darkened our planet, there is
a new mood of understanding and common sense, a new determination
to move away from international conflict and devote ourselves
instead to the immense task of building a better world. Recently,
we have seen several conflicts give way to negotiation and
conciliation. These developments have not been fortuitous.
They are the result of diplomatic activity by the United Nations
sustained over the years and intensified recently. Indeed,
the prospects of realising the vision expressed in the Charter
of the United Nations seem better today than at any time since
the organisation was founded. In the past forty years we have
experienced perhaps the most revolutionary period in all of
human history. The instruments of war have been developed
to the point where war itself has become a futile anachronism,
an anachronism so expensive and terrifying that even the richest
and most powerful countries can no longer afford to contemplate
it. We have redrawn the political map of the world so that
for the first time in history the international community
is not dominated by competing empires, but consists of more
than 160 independent sovereign states. Thus collective responsibility
for peace can be evolved in a truly representative international
system. At the same time, the technological revolution of
the past forty years, which has radically changed the way
people live, work and communicate, presents enormous opportunities
as well as grave risks. We must now reflect upon these changes
and start to assimilate them. With a better international
climate, it now seems possible to further develop modes and
techniques to control conflict and settle disputes. We can,
and must, achieve what we have dreamed of for so long, that
is to make the rule of law standard rather than the exception
in world affairs. Our technological capacity and the undoubted
basic fact of interdependence, make this even more urgent.
With a reliable system of collective responsibility we can
face the vast economic and social challenges of our time and
alleviate the massive poverty and suffering which are a disgrace
to the human condition. Without it, we run the risk of a steady
deterioration of the conditions of life on this planet. In
our striving for a world at peace with itself, and governed
by the rule of law, I believe that peacekeeping operations
play a vital and significant role. In some ways they are analogous
to the role of the civil police in the development of peaceful,
law-abiding nation states. The technique of peacekeeping,
which has already proved itself in fifteen operations all
over the world, can help us to cross the line from a world
of international conflict and violence to a world in which
respect for international law and authority overcomes belligerence
and ensures justice. Peacekeeping operations symbolise the
world community’s will to peace and represent the impartial,
practical expression of that will. The award of the Nobel
Peace Prize to these operations illuminates the hope and strengthens
the promise of this extraordinary concept.
Acceptance by Javier Pérez de Cuéllar, on the
occasion of the award of the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo, December
10, 1988