Brahimi Report and Report of the Panel on United Nations Peacekeeping: Difference between pages
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Wikify-date|August 2006}} |
{{Wikify-date|August 2006}} |
||
The '''Brahimi Report''', named for |
The '''Report of the Panel on United Nations Peacekeeping Operations'''is commonly called the '''Brahimi Report''', named for the chairman of the committee which produced it, [[Lakhdar Brahimi]]. This report addressed many of the dysfunctionalities of the United Nations, and particularly its inability to carry out its mission for lack of a proper global information collection, processing, and analysis capability. In combination with the service of MajGen Patrick Cammaert of the Royal Netherlands Marines, and the publication of the first book on Peacekeeping Intelligence, which was put on display at 1 UN Plaza, the Brahimi Report helped put an end to the era in which the United Nations considered "intelligence" to be a dirty word. Now better understood as "decision support," intelligence is still not present at the United Nations, but efforts are being made to establish information capabilities that can address the ten threats identified by the [[High Level Threat Panel]]. |
||
==External links== |
==External links== |
Revision as of 20:01, 8 November 2006
The Report of the Panel on United Nations Peacekeeping Operationsis commonly called the Brahimi Report, named for the chairman of the committee which produced it, Lakhdar Brahimi. This report addressed many of the dysfunctionalities of the United Nations, and particularly its inability to carry out its mission for lack of a proper global information collection, processing, and analysis capability. In combination with the service of MajGen Patrick Cammaert of the Royal Netherlands Marines, and the publication of the first book on Peacekeeping Intelligence, which was put on display at 1 UN Plaza, the Brahimi Report helped put an end to the era in which the United Nations considered "intelligence" to be a dirty word. Now better understood as "decision support," intelligence is still not present at the United Nations, but efforts are being made to establish information capabilities that can address the ten threats identified by the High Level Threat Panel.