Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of maps
- Preface
- Chronology 1987–91
- Abbreviations
- PART 1 STRATEGY AND POLICY
- PART 2 NEW MAJOR PEACE OPERATIONS
- 3 An international obligation
- 4 Establishing the force
- 5 Success in Namibia
- 6 Shadows from a distant war
- 7 A mission of presence
- 8 The genesis of humanitarian demining
- 9 Balancing the risks
- PART 3 THE FIRST GULF WAR
- Conclusion
- Appendix A Australian participation in multinational peacekeeping operations, 1947–2007
- Appendix B Key United Nations Security Council resolutions and statements
- Appendix C Investigations into chemical warfare in the Iran–Iraq War, 1984–87 by Daniel Flitton
- Appendix D Gulf War syndrome by Rosalind Hearder
- Appendix E Major office bearers, 1987–96
- Bibliography
- Index
9 - Balancing the risks
Mine-clearers in Pakistan and Afghanistan: 1991–93
from PART 2 - NEW MAJOR PEACE OPERATIONS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of maps
- Preface
- Chronology 1987–91
- Abbreviations
- PART 1 STRATEGY AND POLICY
- PART 2 NEW MAJOR PEACE OPERATIONS
- 3 An international obligation
- 4 Establishing the force
- 5 Success in Namibia
- 6 Shadows from a distant war
- 7 A mission of presence
- 8 The genesis of humanitarian demining
- 9 Balancing the risks
- PART 3 THE FIRST GULF WAR
- Conclusion
- Appendix A Australian participation in multinational peacekeeping operations, 1947–2007
- Appendix B Key United Nations Security Council resolutions and statements
- Appendix C Investigations into chemical warfare in the Iran–Iraq War, 1984–87 by Daniel Flitton
- Appendix D Gulf War syndrome by Rosalind Hearder
- Appendix E Major office bearers, 1987–96
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
On a freezing winter's afternoon in January 1992 Captain Mark Willetts flew into Kabul to take up the position of UN mine clearance liaison officer. A friend of a friend had arranged for him to live with another UN employee. But when he arrived at the house, he found it surrounded by a two-metre fence with an equally high locked gate. In falling snow he climbed over, but no one was home. He was already wearing warm clothes, but he opened his bivvy bag and pulled out the quilted US Air Force high-altitude clothing that he had purchased in the Peshawar bazaar and donned it over his other clothes. Then he climbed into his sleeping bag, before trying to get into his bivvy bag. None of this was sufficient to keep out the piercing cold as he huddled on the veranda. After midnight the UN employee returned, having forgotten that Willetts was due that night. In any case, there was no heating in the house and he barely slept for the next three nights. Eventually he found another house.
It was a memorable beginning to Willetts' work in Kabul and yet another aspect of the Australian deminers' operations in Afghanistan between mid-1991 and the end of 1993. The deployment of a liaison officer to Kabul was a major step in the development of the Mine Clearance Program, for the plan was eventually to set up the headquarters in Kabul and to establish training courses in Afghanistan rather than in Pakistan.
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- Australia and the New World OrderFrom Peacekeeping to Peace Enforcement: 1988–1991, pp. 238 - 266Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011