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Past
Events
Asia Pacific Peace
Operations Capacity Building
Past
Event links
- Civil
Military Cooperation in Peace Operations Seminar
14-18 April 2003, Tokyo, Japan
-
Mission
Command & Control South East Asia Single Issue Seminar
9-13 December 2002 Bangkok, Thailand
-
Peace
Operations Special Issues & lessons Learned Seminar
11-17 September 2002 Ko' Olina Resort , Hawaii
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All
Asia Seminar 2002
19-23 August 2002, Pattaya, Thailand
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Northeast
Asia Peace Operations Seminar Game
17-21 June 2002, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
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Southeast
Asia Peace Operations Seminar Game
8-12 April 2002 Jakarta, Indonesia
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South
Asia Peace Operations Seminar Game
25 February - 1 March 2002 Kathmandu, Nepal
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South
Asia Peacekeeping Operations Command Post Exercise (PKO
CPX)
June 2001 Honolulu, Hawaii, USA
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South
Asia Peace Keeping Operations Gaming Seminar (AAR)
23-28 September 2000 Dhaka, Bangladesh
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South
East Asia Peace Operations Seminar (AAR)
10-14 July 2000 Bangkok, Thailand
Past
Event After Action Reports
Program Summary
2000 - 2003
Description
The goal of this program is to promote multinational engagement
throughout countries in the Asia Pacific Region by facilitating
a multinational dialogue on the nature of peace operations
and by building peace operations capacities, primarily through
information exchange and engagement activities.
Partners and Roles
-
Center of Excellence in Disaster Management and Humanitarian
Assistance (COE): Serves as the program administrator, program
and content developer and supplier of subject matter experts,
expert briefers and program documentation.
-
United States Pacific Command (USPACOM): Co-sponsors events
through the Asia Pacific Regional Initiative (APRI) and
supplies U.S. military representation.
-
Host nations: Collaborate in the design process, offer a
secure and positive setting for the event and provide administrative
support.
-
The United Nations Department of Peacekeeping Operations
(UNDPKO): Furnishes a modality for activities, facilitates
impartial forum for open dialogue and contributes expertise.
Cooperative Engagement
Cooperation among organizations managing complimentary programs
within the Asia-Pacific region promotes a unity of effort,
improves efficiency, and reduces duplication of effort. Organizations
with which COE cooperates on issues related to peace support
missions and security issues include the Multinational Planning
Augmentation Team, the Center for Civil-Military Relations,
the Association of International Peacekeeping Training Centers,
the Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, the Asia Pacific
Area Network and the UN Training and Evaluation Service (TES
is the training arm of UNDPKO). In addition, the International
Committee of the Red Cross and the United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees participate regularly.
Milestones
Several recent events affect the content and dialogue of the
program:
-
Publication and broad dissemination of the Brahimi Report.
-
Establishment of national peacekeeping training centers,
institutes or peacekeeping offices in Australia, Bangladesh,
India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mongolia, Nepal, Thailand, and
Korea.
-
Participation by several Asian nations in the Enhanced International
Peacekeeping Capabilities (EIPC) program.
-
Shifting of the paradigm and themes of several major bi-lateral
and multinational exercises, including Cobra Gold, SAGIP,
Yama Sakura, Balikatan, and Tempest Express to include peace
enforcement activities
-
Execution of the United Nations Transitional Authority for
East Timor (UNTAET) Mission and the Interim Administration
Mission in East Timor (UNMISET).
Events to Date
Over the course of these events, the content moved from a
focus on broad issue discussions at the leadership level to
operational-level games guided by scenarios.
-
Asia Pacific Regional Senior Leadership Seminar - (85) Philippines,
May 00
-
South East Asia Peace Operations Symposium - (70) Thailand,
July 00
-
South Asia Peace Keeping Gaming Seminar - (44) Bangladesh,
September 00
-
Asia Pacific Peacekeeping Seminar Game - (68) Malaysia,
April 01
-
South Asia Peace Operations Peacekeeping Seminar Game -
(50) Nepal, February 02
-
South East Asia Peace Keeping Gaming Seminar - (75) Indonesia,
April 02
-
North East Asia Peace Operations Peacekeeping Seminar Game
- (45) Mongolia, June 02
-
Standard Generic Training Modules Seminar - (54) Thailand,
August 02 *
-
Peace Operations Special Issues and Lessons Learned Seminar
- (59) Hawaii, September 02 **
-
Mission Command and Control South East Asia Single Issue
Seminar - (42) Thailand, December 02
-
Civil-Military Cooperation in Peace Operations Seminar -
(42) Japan, April 03

* Executed by UNDPKO TES and co-funded by COE/USPACOM.
**This 'capstone' seminar represents two events within the
APRI accounting structure.
Results
35 countries participated in one or more events. Countries
were invited to send three representatives, and recommended
to send one each from the military, civil police and civilian
(humanitarian or government) to mimic the broad categories
of personnel represented in peace support missions. Host Countries
were permitted additional representation.
Countries
and number of events participated in are:
11
Events: Malaysia, Thailand
10 Events: Mongolia, Philippines, Sri Lanka, United States
9 Events: Australia, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Nepal
8 Events: India, Japan, Tonga
7 Events: Fiji, Korea
6 Events: Mauritius, Madagascar, Papua New Guinea, Singapore
5 Events: China, New Zealand, Pakistan, Russia
4 Events: Maldives, Canada, United Kingdom, Vanuatu, Vietnam
1 Event: France, Germany, Jordan, Samoa, Sweden, Turkey
Observations
-
Most countries that have institutionalized their focus
on peacekeeping (see Milestones #2 above) have attended
a proportionately higher number of events. Their attendance
coincides with increasing levels of interest to prepare
their personnel, particularly their military personnel,
to support peacekeeping missions.
-
After the first four events, participants identified as
a high priority the need for more training. During this
period, several countries moved further along in their
level of commitment to build capacity for participating
in peace operations by instituting peacekeeping training
centers, taking advantage of centers of their neighbors,
and so on. This activity has been encouraged by successful
participation in UNTAET and UNMISET, and with the release
and dissemination of the Brahimi Report and related documents.
-
To further their influence, nations have elected to assist
in the development of training modules for use by troop
contributing nations with the administrative assistance
of UNDPKO TES.
-
Sub-regional cooperation (South Pacific Island nations,
Southeast Asia, etc.) may be an efficient and effective
approach.
Recommendations
-
Increase the proportion of participants from government
agencies, non-governmental response organizations and civilian
police;
-
Support efforts to develop exportable, integrated training
packages;
-
Support political and diplomatic approaches and initiatives
to "close the loop" between policy, strategic, operational
and tactical levels;
-
Introduce more sophisticated methods of interaction and
ways of capturing information and knowledge through applied
learning technologies;
-
Integrate lessons learned from past peace operations and
make them accessible through the world wide web or other
means;
-
Address ways to support capacity-building efforts initiated
from within countries in the region.
Resources
After Action Reports may be viewed at the Center of Excellence
website (http://coe-dmha.org)
or APAN (http://www.apan-info.net).
Articles on events in the program series can be found in The
Liaison (http://coe-dmha.org/liaison.htm)
and the Asia Pacific Defense Forum (http://www.pacom.mil/forum/forum.htm)
Information on contributions to UN missions and national peacekeeping
training efforts may be found at the UNDPKO and UNDPKO/TES
website (http://www.un.org/Depts/dpko/dpko/home.shtml
, http://www.un.org/Depts/dpko/training/)
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