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entitled 'Peacekeeping: Cost Comparison of Actual UN and Hypothetical 
U.S. Operations in Haiti' which was released on February 21, 2006. 

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Report to the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, Committee 
on International Relations, House of Representatives: 

February 2006: 

Peacekeeping: 

Cost Comparison of Actual UN and Hypothetical U.S. Operations in Haiti: 

GAO-06-331: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-06-331, a report to the Subcommittee on Oversight and 
Investigations, Committee on International Relations, House of 
Representatives: 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The UN employs about 85,000 military and civilian personnel in 
peacekeeping operations in 16 countries. The United States has provided 
about $1 billion annually to support UN peacekeeping operations. In 
addition, the United States has led and participated in many such 
operations. UN reports and congressional hearings have raised concerns 
about accountability for UN peacekeeping operations and the need for 
reforms. 

We were asked to provide information relating to the cost and relative 
strengths of UN and U.S. peacekeeping. In particular, we have (1) 
compared the cost of the ongoing UN Stabilization Mission in Haiti with 
the cost that the United States would have incurred had an operation 
been deemed in the U.S. national interest and undertaken without UN 
involvement; (2) analyzed factors that could materially affect the 
estimated costs of a U.S. operation; and (3) identified the strengths 
of the United States and the UN for leading the operation.
We developed our cost estimate of a U.S.-led operation using cost 
models from the Departments of Defense and State. The estimate is based 
on various military assumptions, such as the use of primarily active 
duty troops. It includes only those costs directly attributable to the 
operation that would not otherwise be incurred. 

What GAO Found: 

We estimate that it would cost the United States about twice as much as 
the United Nations (UN) to conduct a peacekeeping operation similar to 
the current UN Stabilization Mission in Haiti (designated “MINUSTAH”). 
The UN budgeted $428 million for the first 14 months of this mission. A 
U.S. operation in Haiti of the same size and duration would cost an 
estimated $876 million, far exceeding the U.S. contribution for 
MINUSTAH of $116 million. Virtually all of the cost difference is 
attributable to (1) civilian police, (2) military pay and support, and 
(3) facilities, and reflects high U.S. standards for police training, 
troop welfare, and security. 

Comparison of Cost Estimate for a U.S. Operation and UN MINUSTAH 
Budget: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

Various military and nonmilitary factors can substantially affect the 
estimated costs of a U.S. operation. We analyzed three military 
factors: the mix of reserve and active duty troops, the rate of 
deployment, and the operational tempo. Deploying all reserve troops 
would increase the cost estimate by $477 million, since it would 
require paying more reservists a full salary. Deploying troops at a 
faster rate than the UN—within the first 60 days instead of 180—would 
cost an additional $60 million. Conducting the operation at a higher 
tempo—with more intensive use of vehicles and equipment—would increase 
estimated costs by $23 million. In addition to military considerations, 
including nation-building and development assistance activities in the 
scope of the operation would increase the cost significantly. Official 
donors, including the United States, distributed $382 million for these 
activities during the first year of MINUSTAH. 

Cost is not the sole factor in determining whether the United States or 
the UN should lead an operation, and each offers strengths for this 
responsibility. U.S.-led operations in Haiti between 1994 and 2004 
benefited from a vast military infrastructure, which provided strong 
communications, command and control, readiness to deploy, tactical 
intelligence, and public information. The UN’s strengths include 
multinational participation, extensive peacekeeping experience, and an 
existing structure for coordinating nation-building activities. Complex 
political considerations are likely to influence decisions about the 
role of the United States and the UN in peacekeeping. 

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-06-331. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact Joseph A. Christoff at 
(202) 512-8979 or christoffj@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

Estimated Cost of a Hypothetical U.S. Operation Is Twice as High as 
Ongoing UN Mission: 

Alternative Scenarios with Differing Assumptions Could Generate Higher 
Cost Estimates: 

U.S. and UN Peacekeeping Forces in Haiti Each Have Key Strengths: 

Conclusions: 

Agency Comments: 

Appendixes: 

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: 

Appendix II: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Comparison of UN and U.S. Costs for a Peacekeeping Operation 
in Haiti (dollars in millions): 

Table 2: Additional MINUSTAH-Related Funding Disbursed by Donor, July 
2004 to March 2005 (dollars in millions): 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Comparison of UN Budget for MINUSTAH and Cost Estimate for a 
U.S. Operation: 

Figure 2: Impact of Three Cost Factors on Base Estimate for 
Hypothetical U.S. Operation: 

Figure 3: U.S. Marines Arrive in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Via C-17 
Military Transport in March, 2004: 

Figure 4: MINUSTAH Peacekeepers from Jordan Prepare to Patrol The Slum 
of Cite Soleil in Haiti, July 2005: 

Abbreviations: 

DOD: Department of Defense: 

DPKO: United Nations Department of Peacekeeping Operations: 

MINUSTAH: United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti: 

UN: United Nations: 

COST: Contingency Operations Support Tool: 

Letter February 21, 2006: 

The Honorable Dana Rohrabacher: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable William D. Delahunt: 
Ranking Minority Member: 
Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations: 
Committee on International Relations: 
House of Representatives: 

As of November 2005, the United Nations (UN) maintained about 70,000 
peacekeeping troops and about 15,000 related international civil 
servants in 16 countries, including Haiti, Lebanon, Georgia, Cyprus, 
Sudan, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Currently, the United 
States provides about $1 billion annually to support UN peacekeeping 
missions. In addition to these financial contributions, the United 
States has led and participated in a variety of peacekeeping 
operations, most recently in Somalia, Haiti, Bosnia, and Kosovo. UN 
reports and congressional hearings have raised concerns about 
accountability for UN peacekeeping operations and the need for 
management reforms. 

To advance UN reform efforts and determine the value of peacekeeping 
operations to the United States, you asked us to provide information 
relating to the cost and relative strengths of UN and U.S. 
peacekeeping. In particular, we have (1) compared the cost of a 
specific UN mission with the cost that the United States would have 
incurred had an operation been deemed in the U.S. national interest and 
undertaken without UN involvement; (2) analyzed factors that could 
affect the estimated costs of a U.S. operation; and (3) identified 
strengths of U.S. and UN peacekeeping forces in leading the operation. 
We selected the UN Stabilization Mission in Haiti (officially 
designated "MINUSTAH") as a case study for comparison. This mission 
provides a strong basis for estimating costs and assessing UN and U.S. 
strengths because it is located in a country in which both the U.S. and 
UN have a history of military intervention. However, given the 
operational, structural, and doctrinal differences between the U.S. and 
UN military and civilian infrastructures, it is uncertain whether the 
United States would implement a peacekeeping operation in Haiti in the 
same way as the UN, as we have generally assumed for the purposes of 
this report. Moreover, because the results of our review are based on a 
single case study, they cannot be generalized to all U.S. and UN 
peacekeeping operations. Nonetheless, we believe this case study 
provides some useful insights into cost and effectiveness-related 
issues for other peacekeeping missions. 

We analyzed detailed cost and operational data from the UN relating to 
MINUSTAH for the first 14 months of this mission. Using these data, we 
developed a comparable scenario for a U.S. operation, which officials 
from the Joint Chiefs of Staff validated as reasonable; this scenario 
assumes deployment of the same number of military, civilian, and police 
personnel and aircraft in Haiti over the same period. We derived a cost 
estimate for the military portion of this scenario using the Department 
of Defense's (DOD) Contingency Operation Support Tool, the official DOD 
cost estimation mechanism for all contingency military operations. For 
the civilian portions, we based cost estimates primarily on historical 
data and formulas from the Department of State. We determined that data 
we collected for this report are sufficiently reliable for the purpose 
of estimating U.S. peacekeeping costs and comparing them with UN budget 
figures. We conducted our work from June to February 2006 in accordance 
with generally accepted government auditing standards. See appendix I 
for a detailed description of our scope and methodology. 

Results in Brief: 

We estimate that it would cost the United States about twice as much as 
the United Nations to conduct a peacekeeping operation similar to 
MINUSTAH. According to UN records, the UN budgeted $428 million for the 
first 14 months of MINUSTAH, for which the United States is responsible 
for 27.1 percent, or $116 million.[Footnote 1] A similar U.S. operation 
would cost an estimated $876 million. Virtually the entire cost 
difference can be attributed to three major elements: civilian police, 
military pay and support, and facilities, as shown in figure 1. First, 
the estimated cost of deploying U.S. civilian police officers is $217 
million, compared to $25 million budgeted by the UN for foreign police 
officers. Unlike the U.S. cost estimate, the UN budget does not include 
police salaries and compensation, as they are funded voluntarily by 
police-contributing nations.[Footnote 2] Compensation rates for U.S. 
police officers reflect a high standard of skills and experience. 
Second, we estimate that military pay and support would cost $260 
million, compared to $131 million in the UN budget, reflecting high 
salary and equipment standards for U.S. soldiers and a higher level of 
support in health, nutrition, and morale. Third, facilities-related 
costs would total about $208 million, compared to $100 million in the 
UN budget. Under MINUSTAH, mission facilities are donated by the 
Government of Haiti, while the U.S. estimate reflects the cost of 
posting U.S. civilian personnel in a secure embassy compound. 

Figure 1: Comparison of UN Budget for MINUSTAH and Cost Estimate for a 
U.S. Operation: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

Various military and nonmilitary factors can affect the estimated costs 
of a U.S. peacekeeping operation in Haiti. We analyzed the influence of 
three military factors on the cost estimate: the mix of reserve and 
active duty troops, the rate of troop deployment, and the operational 
tempo. First, deploying reserve soldiers instead of primarily active 
duty military personnel[Footnote 3] could increase the operation's 
costs by as much as $477 million. Regular pay for active duty soldiers 
is not included in the cost estimate, since DOD would incur this cost 
regardless of where these soldiers were deployed. However, DOD pays 
reservists a full salary and provides other benefits only when they are 
called into active duty. Second, deploying troops at a faster rate than 
the UN--within the first 60 days of the operation instead of 180--would 
raise estimated U.S. costs by about $60 million. Third, conducting the 
operation at a higher operational tempo, which entails heavier use of 
vehicles and equipment, would increase maintenance and support costs by 
$23 million. Most nonmilitary costs for nation building and development 
assistance are not included in the UN and U.S. estimates, and including 
them would increase both estimates substantially. International 
bilateral and multilateral donors contributed at least $382 million for 
such activities during the first year of MINUSTAH, of which the United 
States directly funded more than a quarter. We did not include these 
costs in our estimate because the United States would rely on the 
international community to help achieve such goals in any case. 

Cost is not the sole factor in determining whether the United States or 
the UN should lead a peacekeeping operation, and, in Haiti, each offers 
strengths suited to this responsibility. The United States' strengths 
include strong communications, command, and control, which were proven 
militarily effective in past Haiti peacekeeping operations. The U.S. 
military infrastructure also afforded U.S.-led operations in Haiti 
three elements found by UN studies to be critical for effective 
peacekeeping but largely absent in MINUSTAH: rapid deployment capacity, 
tactical intelligence, and a public information strategy. For example, 
rapid troop deployment to Haiti in 1994 enabled a U.S.-led force to 
achieve its primary military objectives within 76 days. The UN's 
strengths are rooted in the multinational character of its operation as 
well as its extensive experience with peacekeeping and related nation 
building. The UN has developed a structure for coordinating the 
activities of international organizations and has access to experienced 
and skilled international civil servants, including personnel with 
diverse language capabilities. The relative strengths of UN and U.S. 
peacekeeping forces may differ in other conflict zones. Furthermore, 
complex political considerations, including the interests of the United 
States and other UN member countries, are likely to influence decisions 
about the role of the United States and the UN in any peacekeeping 
operation. 

Background: 

Both the UN and United States have a long history of peace support 
operations upon which to base cost estimates. The UN has carried out 60 
peacekeeping missions worldwide since 1948. For each mission, the UN 
Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO) prepares a budget, which 
is reviewed in detail at high levels of UN management and is ultimately 
approved by the General Assembly. The UN assesses each member for its 
allocated portion of this amount based on the country's per capita 
gross national income and its membership status on the Security 
Council. The United States currently pays about 27 percent of the total 
for each mission, and in fiscal year 2005 directly contributed about 
$1.3 billion in support of UN peacekeeping operations overall. The 
United States has also led and participated in a variety of 
peacekeeping operations since World War II, most recently in Somalia, 
Haiti, Bosnia, and Kosovo. U.S. military operations are funded largely 
by DOD appropriations, and, under DOD regulations, the budgets are 
based primarily on cost estimates generated with the department's 
Contingency Operations Support Tool.[Footnote 4] This computer model 
uses financial formulas that draw upon a database of historical costs 
from past military operations and other regularly updated cost 
information. In addition, the State Department has extensive experience 
posting foreign service officers in conflict areas and funding U.S. 
police officers to support UN peacekeeping missions, for which it 
maintains cost estimation formulas and historical cost databases. 

The UN Security Council has authorized five peacekeeping missions in 
Haiti since 1993, of which the United States has led two between 1994 
and 2004. The primary task of the ongoing MINUSTAH operation is to 
provide a secure and stable environment through its military and police 
presence and operational support to the Haitian National Police. 
MINUSTAH assists the transitional government in police reform and 
institutional strengthening; disarmament, demobilization and 
reintegration; elections monitoring; and promotion and protection of 
human rights and the political process. The initial authorized force 
strength was 6,700 troops, 1,622 civilian police officers, and 1,697 
civilian administrators and staff. Although initially authorized for 6 
months, the UN Security Council has renewed the mission's authorization 
and funding through June 2006. 

Criticism and controversy, including allegations of sexual misconduct 
of peacekeepers, have brought calls for reform of UN peacekeeping 
operations within the UN and from U.S. observers. In 2000, the UN 
Secretary General convened a high-level panel to review UN peace and 
security, which recommended a variety of reforms.[Footnote 5] The 2005 
bipartisan Task Force on the United Nations highlighted the need for 
more rapid deployment and more clearly defined mandates.[Footnote 6] 
Proposed legislation, the Henry J. Hyde United Nations Reform Act of 
2005,[Footnote 7] calls for more oversight and investigation over UN 
operations and mandates that the UN adopt and enforce a code of conduct 
for all peacekeeping personnel. 

Estimated Cost of a Hypothetical U.S. Operation Is Twice as High as 
Ongoing UN Mission: 

We estimate that it would cost the United States twice as much as the 
UN to conduct an operation similar to MINUSTAH. The higher U.S. cost of 
civilian police, military pay and support, and facilities account for 
virtually the entire difference between our estimate and the MINUSTAH 
budget, and reflects the additional cost of ensuring high U.S. 
standards for training, troop welfare, and personnel security. 

From May 1, 2004, to June 30, 2005--the first 14 months of MINUSTAH-- 
the UN budgeted mission costs totaled $428 million. This budget assumed 
a phased deployment of 6,700 military personnel, 750 personnel in 
formed police units, 872 civilian police officers, and 1,184 civilian 
administrators and staff. It included the cost of personnel, 
operational support, equipment, facilities, and transportation. 
[Footnote 8] Using the same basic parameters of troop and staff 
deployment in Haiti for 14 months, we estimated that the United States 
would likely budget about $876 million, nearly twice the UN estimate, 
for a comparable U.S. peacekeeping operation. (This cost estimate is 
based on a variety of assumptions, described in detail in app. I.) The 
United States was financially responsible for $116 million of the 
budgeted cost of MINUSTAH, based on the U.S. assessed contribution of 
27.1 percent of the DPKO regular budget. Hence, we estimate that 
conducting a U.S. operation similar to MINUSTAH would cost the United 
States about 7.5 times as much as its official contribution to the UN 
for that mission ($876 million versus $116 million).[Footnote 9] 

Major disparities in the cost for civilian police, military pay and 
support, and facilities account for virtually all of the difference 
between the UN budget and our cost estimate. Our estimate reflects the 
additional expense of paying salaries for personnel that would 
otherwise be donated by other countries as well as the cost of ensuring 
U.S. standards for police training, the equipment and welfare of 
military personnel, and the security of staff posted overseas. (See 
table 1 for a detailed comparison of the UN budget and our estimate by 
major cost category.) 

Table 1: Comparison of UN and U.S. Costs for a Peacekeeping Operation 
in Haiti (dollars in millions): 

Major cost categories: Transportation; 
Budgeted UN cost: $94; 
Estimated U.S. cost: $100; 
Difference between UN budget and U.S. estimate: -$6. 

Major cost categories: Facilities and related costs; 
Budgeted UN cost: $100; 
Estimated U.S. cost: $208; 
Difference between UN budget and U.S. estimate: -$108. 

Major cost categories: Medical/health costs; 
Budgeted UN cost: $5; 
Estimated U.S. cost: $22; 
Difference between UN budget and U.S. estimate: -$17. 

Major cost categories: Military personnel pay and support; 
Budgeted UN cost: $131; 
Estimated U.S. cost: $260; 
Difference between UN budget and U.S. estimate: -$129. 

Major cost categories: Civilian personnel (non-police); 
Budgeted UN cost: $63; 
Estimated U.S. cost: $46; 
Difference between UN budget and U.S. estimate: $17. 

Major cost categories: Civilian police; 
Budgeted UN cost: $25; 
Estimated U.S. cost: $217; 
Difference between UN budget and U.S. estimate: -$192. 

Major cost categories: Miscellaneous; 
Budgeted UN cost: $10; 
Estimated U.S. cost: $23; 
Difference between UN budget and U.S. estimate: -$13. 

Major cost categories: Total cost; 
Budgeted UN cost: $428; 
Estimated U.S. cost: $876; 
Difference between UN budget and U.S. estimate: -$448. 

Source: GAO analysis of DOD and State Department cost data. 

[End of table] 

Civilian police. The UN budgeted $25 million to deploy 872 civilian 
officers for MINUSTAH, while we estimate that it would cost the United 
States $217 million to deploy the same number of U.S. officers. The UN 
does not reimburse countries contributing police for the officers' 
salaries and only pays for living expenses, clothing allowance, and 
death and disability compensation.[Footnote 10] U.S. costs, however, 
include salaries, special pay, benefits, equipment, and special 
training. Furthermore, U.S. officers deployed in Haiti under MINUSTAH 
are required to meet standards for training, experience, and skills 
significantly beyond those applied by the UN. For instance, U.S. 
officers deployed to Haiti must be proficient in French or Haitian 
Creole and have a minimum of 8 years' work experience with five years 
in a position of sworn civilian law enforcement. Candidates must pass 
several tests that measure physical capabilities and weapons 
proficiency. UN-sponsored officers deployed to Haiti are required by 
the UN to demonstrate only the ability to operate a firearm and drive a 
vehicle; the ability to communicate in French is preferred but not 
required. 

Military pay and support. The UN budgeted $131 million for pay and 
support of military troops, while we estimate it would cost the United 
States $260 million for the same number of soldiers. The UN costs are 
based primarily on a per-soldier payment to contributing nations of up 
to $1,400 monthly for basic pay and allowances, clothing, gear, 
equipment, and ammunition. U.S. costs include pay and allowances for 
reservists and active duty personnel as well as clothing, arms, 
protective gear, and rations. The higher U.S. costs help ensure a basic 
standard of living for U.S. soldiers and their families and relatively 
high standards of welfare in the field in terms of equipment, 
nutrition, health, and morale. For example, estimated costs for food 
and water for U.S. military personnel total $85 million, compared to 
$20 million in the UN budget. Medical support for the military and 
civilian personnel on a U.S. operation would cost an estimated $22 
million, over four times the UN budgeted cost of $5 million. According 
to officials of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, UN multinational forces in 
Haiti prior to MINUSTAH had difficulty providing adequate troop support 
and relied on accompanying U.S. forces for supplementary rations and 
health care. A Rand Corporation study of the multinational force 
cooperation in Haiti in 1994 indicates that the U.S. forces provided UN 
forces with intelligence and training, as well as logistical and 
communications support, including housing, food, transportation, and 
vehicle maintenance.[Footnote 11] 

Facilities. The UN budgeted $100 million for facilities-related costs, 
while we estimate that the cost to the United States would be $208 
million. The UN budget includes acquisition and construction of troop 
and civilian housing and other facility-related equipment and supplies. 
While MINUSTAH staff offices are donated by the Government of Haiti, 
U.S. facilities must meet State Department security standards, which 
include posting civilian staff within secure U.S. embassy or consulate 
compounds. In addition to administrative and security expenses, U.S. 
government agencies with staff in these compounds would be required to 
contribute a total of about $12 million to the State Department's 
Capital Security Cost-Sharing Program, which funds the construction of 
secure embassies worldwide.[Footnote 12] 

Estimated costs in other categories are likely to be similar for the UN 
and the United States. For example, we estimate that the transport of 
U.S. troops, civilian personnel, and equipment would cost about $100 
million; the UN budgeted $94 million for these costs. 

Alternative Scenarios with Differing Assumptions Could Generate Higher 
Cost Estimates: 

Various military and nonmilitary factors can influence the composition 
of a peacekeeping operation and thus impact the estimated cost. We 
identified three different military scenarios that could substantially 
affect the estimated costs of a U.S. peacekeeping operation. Greater 
concentration of reserve troops could almost double the military costs, 
while a quicker deployment of forces and higher operational tempo would 
also increase costs. Further, the addition of nation-building and 
development assistance activities to the scope of an operation in Haiti 
would increase the estimated cost substantially. 

Analysis of Alternative Military Assumptions Generated Higher U.S. Cost 
Estimates: 

According to U.S. experts in military operations and cost estimation we 
consulted, various factors could significantly influence the cost 
estimate for a U.S. peacekeeping operation. These factors include the 
number of troops and types of military units deployed, the pace of 
deployment, the intensity or operational tempo, the modes of 
transportation for deployment, and the mix of active duty and reserve 
troops. These factors depend heavily on the needs of the operation and 
demands of other military commitments; decisions about such factors 
involve complex military, political, and financial considerations that 
can change rapidly. 

We analyzed the potential impact of three principal cost factors by 
altering the assumptions of our cost estimate to reflect (1) military 
forces comprised entirely of reserve soldiers, (2) deployment of 
military forces within the first 60 days of the operation rather than 
180 days, and (3) higher operational tempo (more intensive use of 
vehicles and equipment). Figure 2 illustrates how altering the 
assumptions for these factors affects the cost estimate. 

Figure 2: Impact of Three Cost Factors on Base Estimate for 
Hypothetical U.S. Operation: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

Deployment of all-reserve forces. Our base cost estimates assume that 
the military contingent of a U.S. operation would consist primarily of 
active duty forces (85 percent). Officials from the Joint Chiefs of 
Staff confirmed that this is one of a number of possible scenarios, 
depending on the availability of active duty and reserve troops, 
ongoing military commitments, specific operational needs, and other 
factors. A change in this fundamental assumption can have a significant 
impact on the estimated cost of the operation, as pay for troops is one 
of the largest components of the estimate. We altered this assumption 
to reflect an operation comprised entirely of reserve forces, which 
increased the cost estimate by $477 million. This difference has such a 
significant impact because DOD does not include regular pay for active 
duty troops in the cost estimates; the department would incur these 
costs regardless of whether the troops were deployed in Haiti, the 
United States, or elsewhere. In contrast, pay for reserve troops is 
considered a direct cost of the operation since DOD would pay 
reservists full salaries only when activated for the operation. 

More rapid deployment. Although the UN Security Council Resolution 
establishing MINUSTAH calls for an immediate deployment of peacekeeping 
forces, the MINUSTAH budget reflects full military deployment within 
180 days of mission authorization. Thus, similar to the UN budget, our 
base cost estimate assumes a military force strength below authorized 
levels during the first six months of the operation. We altered this 
assumption to reflect full deployment within the first 60 days. We 
estimate that this would increase U.S. costs by about $60 million, 
consisting essentially of military pay and support for additional 
troops deployed during the operation's initial months. 

Higher operational tempo. DOD measures the intensity of a military 
operation, or operational tempo, on a scale from 1 to 3, with normal 
operations being level 1.[Footnote 13] The higher the operational 
tempo, the more heavily the forces use equipment and vehicles and the 
higher the cost for fuel, operations, and maintenance. Military experts 
we consulted at the Institute for Defense Analysis and the Joint Chiefs 
of Staff indicated that a peacekeeping operational tempo would normally 
be considered to be at level 1.5, as reflected in our base cost 
estimate. We altered this assumption to reflect a slightly higher 
operational tempo, level 2, which increased the estimated military 
costs by $23 million due to increased equipment, maintenance, and other 
support costs. 

Including Nation-Building and Development Assistance in the Operation's 
Scope Would Significantly Increase Costs: 

Our estimate does not include costs for complementary nation-building 
and development activities, which would be needed to support the 
economic and political goals of a peacekeeping operation. In 2004, to 
bolster MINUSTAH, official donors agreed with the Government of Haiti 
on an Interim Cooperative Framework, to which they pledged a total of 
$1.3 billion for an array of activities to strengthen political 
governance and promote national dialogue, strengthen economic 
governance and contribute to institutional development, promote 
economic recovery, and improve access to basic services. From July 2004 
to March 2005, bilateral and multilateral donors have spent more than 
$382 million for such activities (see table 2). The United States 
directly funded over 27 percent of this total, or $102 million, through 
its bilateral aid programs in Haiti.[Footnote 14] The United States has 
made additional contributions to this aid effort through its financial 
support of UN agencies and multilateral financial organizations, 
including the World Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank. Table 
2 shows the distribution of funding for these activities by donor and 
type of activity. 

Table 2: Additional MINUSTAH-Related Funding Disbursed by Donor, July 
2004 to March 2005 (dollars in millions): 

Type of assistance: Political governance; 
United States: $6.9; 
Canada: $19.7; 
European Community: $1.3; 
Japan: $0; 
World Bank: $0; 
Inter-American Development Bank: $0; 
UN agencies: $1.3; 
Total: $29.2. 

Type of assistance: Economic governance; 
United States: $7.6; 
Canada: $2.5; 
European Community: $4.3; 
Japan: $0; 
World Bank: $47.8; 
Inter-American Development Bank: $18.6; 
UN agencies: $3.8; 
Total: $84.6. 

Type of assistance: Economic recovery; 
United States: $24.6; 
Canada: $0.8; 
European Community: $10.4; 
Japan: $0.4; 
World Bank: $1.1; 
Inter-American Development Bank: $2.7; 
UN agencies: $1.0; 
Total: $41.0. 

Type of assistance: Access to basic services; 
United States: $66.1; 
Canada: $35.7; 
European Community: $30.8; 
Japan: $5.7; 
World Bank: $1.1; 
Inter-American Development Bank: $4.0; 
UN agencies: $28.5; 
Total: $171.9. 

Type of assistance: Other; 
United States: $0; 
Canada: $14.8; 
European Community: $10.4; 
Japan: $0.4; 
World Bank: $0.5; 
Inter-American Development Bank: $3.6; 
UN agencies: $25.8; 
Total: $55.5. 

Type of assistance: Total; 
United States: $105.2; 
Canada: $73.5; 
European Community: $57.2; 
Japan: $6.5; 
World Bank: $50.5; 
Inter-American Development Bank: $28.9; 
UN agencies: $60.4; 
Total: $382.2. 

Source: UN Development Program. 

Note: UN agencies include the UN Population Fund; the UN Children's 
Fund; the Food and Agriculture Organization; the UN Organization for 
Education, Science and Culture; the World Health Organization/Pan- 
American Health Organization; the UN Development Program; and the World 
Food Program. 

[End of table] 

Our cost estimate assumes that the United States and other donors would 
spend the same amount on these programs and activities regardless of 
whether the United States undertook a peacekeeping operation in Haiti. 
Historically, the United States has depended on other official donors 
and multilateral organizations to participate in reconstruction and 
rebuilding efforts following an armed conflict. 

U.S. and UN Peacekeeping Forces in Haiti Each Have Key Strengths: 

In addition to cost, other factors would be considered when determining 
the most appropriate role of the United States and the UN in conducting 
peacekeeping operations. The United States and the UN each have 
strengths that can affect the achievement of peacekeeping objectives in 
Haiti. Past U.S. operations in Haiti have benefited from a strong 
central communications, command and control structure and a vast 
military infrastructure supporting its operations, particularly in 
terms of troop deployment, military intelligence, and public 
information. Among the strengths of a UN mission are its multinational 
participation, its extensive experience in peace operations, and a 
coordinated network of agencies to assist nation building. 

U.S. Peacekeeping Forces in Haiti Had Elements Found to Be Critical for 
Effective Peacekeeping: 

U.S. peacekeeping operations have benefited from strong communications, 
command and control structures, direct access to well-trained military 
personnel and equipment, and other advantages of a large, well- 
established military infrastructure. U.S.-led peacekeeping efforts in 
Haiti have been widely recognized as operationally effective, having 
achieved their military objectives rapidly and with minimal loss of 
life. As we previously reported, U.S. leadership has enhanced 
operational effectiveness of UN peacekeeping in Haiti.[Footnote 15] In 
the 1995 UN Mission to Haiti, the United States provided leadership to 
multinational forces that ensured adequate troops and resources were 
available to carry out assigned tasks, used its command and control 
structure for the operation, and applied its doctrine for "operations 
other than war" to help guide actions. Officials from the Joint Chiefs 
of Staff with experience with more recent multinational forces in Haiti 
also highlighted rigorous training, a reliable communications 
infrastructure, and a cohesive command structure as key factors that 
made U.S. forces operationally effective there. 

Furthermore, by virtue of the vast U.S. military infrastructure of DOD 
and other U.S. agencies, U.S. peacekeeping forces have many elements 
that UN peacekeeping studies have identified as critical for mission 
effectiveness, particularly in Haiti. In March 2000, the UN high-level 
panel reviewing UN peace and security identified elements critical to 
effective peacekeeping. In May 2005, a UN Security Council evaluation 
of MINUSTAH[Footnote 16] emphasized the particular importance of three 
of these elements for operations in Haiti--rapid troop deployment, 
effective tactical intelligence, and a public information strategy--
noting that MINUSTAH was hindered by weaknesses in these elements. 

Dedicated DOD organizations support U.S. military operations in these 
three elements, and have contributed to military successes in past 
operations in Haiti. Funding for these organizations is not reflected 
in cost estimates in this report because they are part of the 
infrastructure that supports all DOD objectives and operations, and 
costs are not readily attributable to specific contingency operations. 

Rapid deployment. The 2000 UN report on peacekeeping indicated that it 
was important to fully deploy an operation within 30 to 90 days after 
the adoption of a Security Council Resolution establishing the mission. 
According to the report, the first 6 to 12 weeks following a ceasefire 
or peace accord are often the most critical for establishing a stable 
peace and a credible new operation; opportunities lost during that 
period are hard to regain. At DOD, the Deputy Under Secretary of 
Defense for Readiness is responsible for developing and overseeing 
policies and programs, including training, to ensure the readiness of 
U.S. forces for peacetime contingencies, crises, and warfighting. 
Military readiness of both personnel and equipment is a major objective 
throughout DOD. The department spends more than $17 billion annually 
for military schools that offer nearly 30,000 military training courses 
to almost 3 million military personnel and DOD civilians. With 
continued heavy military involvement in operations in Iraq and 
Afghanistan, DOD is also spending billions of dollars sustaining or 
replacing its inventory of key equipment items. The United States has 
historically deployed troops in Haiti relatively rapidly. (Fig. 3 
illustrates deployment of U.S. marines in Haiti.) For example, in 1994 
the United States deployed an operation in Haiti within 60 days of the 
issuance of a UN Security Council Resolution authorizing the 
restoration of Haiti's constitutionally elected leadership to power. 
The 20,000-member force quickly established itself in 500 locations 
throughout Haiti and achieved its primary goals within 76 days. 

Figure 3: U.S. Marines Arrive in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Via C-17 
Military Transport in March, 2004: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

Intelligence apparatus. The 2000 UN report on peacekeeping indicated 
that missions should be afforded the necessary field intelligence and 
other capabilities to mount an effective deterrence against violent 
challengers. For its intelligence needs in an operation in Haiti, DOD 
can draw upon the extensive resources of the U.S. intelligence 
community, consisting of a wide array of agencies, departments, and 
offices throughout the U.S. government. The Defense Intelligence 
Agency, for example, employing over 7,500 military and civilian 
employees worldwide, produces and manages foreign military intelligence 
for warfighters, defense policymakers, and force planners in support of 
U.S. military planning and operations. The Central Intelligence Agency 
and the U.S. Navy, Army, Marine Corps, and Air Force, among other 
organizations, also provide intelligence support to U.S. military 
operations. U.S. forces had these resources at their disposal when they 
led multinational forces in Haiti in 1994-95, successfully disbanding 
the Haitian army and paramilitary groups and confiscating the weapons 
caches held by government opponents within 7 months. 

Public information. The 2000 UN report indicated that an effective 
communications and public information capacity is an operational 
necessity for nearly all UN peacekeeping operations. According to the 
report, "effective communication helps to dispel rumor, to counter 
disinformation, and secure the cooperation of local populations." 
Furthermore, it can provide leverage in dealing with leaders of local 
rival groups and enhance the security of UN personnel. The report 
recommends that such strategies and the personnel to carry them out be 
included in the very first elements deployed to help start up a 
mission. At DOD, the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs 
is responsible for developing programs and plans relating to DOD news 
media relations, public information, internal information, community 
relations, and public affairs in support of DOD objectives and 
operations. DOD developed a public affairs strategy that was a central 
element of the operation it led in Haiti in 2004; it included issuing 
regular press releases and briefing local and international media 
frequently on the progress and developments of the operation. U.S. 
military forces in Haiti were met with relatively little violent 
opposition, resulting in a minimal loss of life, either Haitian or 
American. 

UN Has Multinational Participation, Extensive Experience, and Structure 
for Coordinating Nation Building: 

The UN's strengths in peacekeeping in Haiti are rooted in the 
multinational character of its operation as well as extensive 
experience with peacekeeping and related nation building. The UN's 
experience has enabled it to develop a structure for coordinating 
international organizations involved in nation building and give it 
access to a pool of experienced and skilled international civil 
servants, including personnel with diverse language capabilities. 

Multinational participation. The multinational cooperation on UN 
peacekeeping missions, such as in MINUSTAH, provides some notable 
advantages. According to a 2005 study sponsored by the Rand 
Corporation, the UN may have the ability to compensate for its 
relatively small military presence with its reputation of international 
legitimacy and local impartiality.[Footnote 17] Furthermore, its 
multinational character likely lends the UN a reputation for 
impartiality that a single nation may not enjoy. The study concluded 
that this has afforded the UN a degree of success with relatively small 
missions that include both security and nation-building components. 
MINUSTAH represents a multinational effort that is not dominated by any 
single country. (Fig. 4 illustrates multinational peacekeeping 
operations under MINUSTAH.) During its first year of operation in 
Haiti, MINUSTAH comprised 7,624 military staff and police personnel 
from 41 countries. Unlike earlier U.S.-led operations, where the U.S. 
troops represented up to 90 percent of military personnel, U.S. 
participation on the ground in MINUSTAH was limited to 29 U.S. military 
and police personnel--less than 1 percent of the total. As officials of 
the Joint Chiefs of Staff pointed out, development of coalition 
partners through multinational operations is important not only for 
strengthening ongoing and future operations in Haiti, but also for 
building strong international capacity for facing future military 
challenges globally. The advantages for the United States include a 
lower overall cost for peacekeeping and reduced exposure of U.S. 
personnel to the inherent dangers of operating in conflict zones. 
However, according to DOD and State Department officials, the 
multinational nature of a military force may also limit its operational 
effectiveness by introducing variations in training among the personnel 
from different nations and difficulties in communications, command, and 
control. 

Figure 4: MINUSTAH Peacekeepers from Jordan Prepare to Patrol The Slum 
of Cite Soleil in Haiti, July 2005: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

Experienced peacekeeping officials. The UN has developed a cadre of 
senior officials that has gained experience with peacekeeping and 
nation-building activities over many missions. While there are 
acknowledged deficiencies in UN peace operations, the UN established a 
best practices unit in DPKO in 1995 to study and adopt lessons learned. 
Senior MINUSTAH officials, including the Chilean UN Special 
Representative and his deputies, the Brazilian Force 
Commander,[Footnote 18] and the Canadian Police Commissioner bring 
experience in peacekeeping and development activities from diverse 
geographic areas, and particularly from other countries in the region. 
The international nature of the UN also provides access to a large pool 
of civil servants and security personnel with native language speaking 
abilities and translation skills. In Haiti, 11 French-speaking 
countries have provided peacekeeping troops and police officers for 
MINUSTAH. 

Structure for coordinating international assistance. The UN has 
fostered a network of agencies and development banks. UN peacekeeping 
missions can draw directly upon this network in coordinating the 
extensive humanitarian and developmental activities that are related to 
operations with expansive, integrated mandates that include nation 
building. In Haiti, MINUSTAH has established a framework for 
coordination integral to the mission's organization. With UN co- 
sponsorship, official donors in this network, including the World Bank 
and the Inter-American Development Bank, have pledged $1.3 billion in 
development assistance. The UN Development Program coordinates the 
efforts of nine agencies in Haiti, which, during the first year of 
MINUSTAH, disbursed $60 million in development assistance. To help 
ensure that these funds are well coordinated and support MINUSTAH's 
objectives, these UN agencies operating in Haiti report directly to a 
senior MINUSTAH official, who also serves as the chief UN Development 
Program representative for Haiti. 

Conclusions: 

While a U.S. peacekeeping operation in Haiti would be more expensive 
than the current UN mission, it would be subject to higher operational 
standards and supported by an extensive military infrastructure. 
Strong, well-trained, and quickly deployed U.S. forces have proven 
militarily effective in short-term operations in Haiti in the past. 
However, involving the international community extensively in 
peacekeeping operations such as MINUSTAH has notable advantages for 
leveraging development funding, experience, and other resources of 
nations and organizations. The situation in other peacekeeping missions 
may differ significantly from the conditions in Haiti, and complex 
domestic and international political considerations may ultimately 
weigh heavily in determining the role of U.S. and UN peacekeepers in 
future operations. Chief among these are the political interests of the 
United States and other UN member states. 

Agency Comments: 

We provided a draft of this report to the Departments of Defense and 
State and the United Nations for their comment. They provided technical 
corrections, which we incorporated into the report as appropriate, but 
they had no further comments. 

We are sending copies of this report to the Secretaries of Defense and 
State and the Secretary-General of the United Nations. We will also 
make copies available to others on request. In addition, it will be 
available at no cost on our Web site at [Hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you have any questions regarding this report, please contact me at 
(202) 512-8979 or [Hyperlink, christoffj@gao.gov]. Contact points for 
our Office of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found 
on the last page of this report. GAO contacts and staff acknowledgments 
are listed in appendix II. 

Signed by: 

Joseph A. Christoff: 
Director, International Affairs and Trade: 

[End of section] 

Appendixes: 

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: 

To compare the cost of a specific United Nations (UN) mission with the 
cost that the United States would have incurred had an operation been 
deemed in the U.S. national interest and undertaken without UN 
involvement, we obtained and analyzed cost data from the UN and the 
U.S. Government. 

* To determine the UN costs for peacekeeping operations, we analyzed 
the 2004-2005 budget and supporting documents for the UN Stabilization 
Mission to Haiti (MINUSTAH). We spoke with officials of the UN 
Department of Peacekeeping Operations and other UN departments, 
offices, and agencies at UN headquarters in New York about the 
assumptions, cost factors and ratios, and cost estimation methods used 
to generate the budget. We used MINUSTAH as our case study because it 
illustrates the various categories of cost for a contemporary mission 
located in a country where the United States has an expressed national 
interest. Additionally, we believe this case provides a strong basis 
for estimating costs, given the long history of U.S. and UN military 
intervention in Haiti. We chose the period May 1, 2004 to June 30, 2005 
for analysis because it reflected the first approved mission budget and 
incorporated the initial start-up costs. According to UN officials, the 
budget provides a reasonable estimate of costs, though actual expenses 
may vary from the budget. We also discussed with UN officials the 
methodology for determining the U.S. assessment for MINUSTAH, which was 
27.1 percent of the mission budget. We did not include peacekeeping 
support costs, which are indirect costs allocated to the mission for 
overhead and administrative expenses incurred outside of Haiti (at UN 
headquarters and the UN Logistics Base in Brindisi, Italy), as the U.S. 
Government does not allocate corresponding overhead and administrative 
costs to individual operations in a comparable way. 

* To estimate the military costs of a unilateral U.S. operation, we 
developed a comparable U.S. operational scenario based on the MINUSTAH 
budget and supporting documents, assuming deployment of the same number 
of military, civilian, and police peacekeeping personnel and aircraft 
in Haiti over a similar time period of time (14 months). To devise the 
military portion of the scenario, we interviewed DOD officials and 
contractor staff involved in developing cost estimates for U.S. 
contingency operations. The Department of Defense (DOD) Office of the 
Comptroller and its contractor, the Institute for Defense Analyses 
(IDA), generated cost estimates for the military components of this 
scenario using the DOD's Contingency Operations Support Tool (COST), 
since DOD financial management regulations designate COST as the 
department's common cost-estimating platform. The cost estimate DOD 
provided included only the incremental costs of the operation--those 
directly attributable to the operation that would not be incurred if 
the operation did not take place. We based the scenario, and hence the 
cost estimate, on the following assumptions, which correspond closely 
with MINUSTAH budget assumptions and actual UN personnel deployments. 

* Military contingents: 6,594 total personnel divided as follows: 

Hospital units: 500 personnel: 

Engineers: 200 personnel: 

Military police: 820 personnel: 

Light infantry: 5,074 personnel less the number of aviation support 
personnel for 8 UH-60 Black Hawk and 10 CH-47 Chinook helicopters. 

* Type of military personnel: 85 percent active duty, 15 percent 
reserve. 

* Theater of operations: Haiti. 

* Operation dates: orders provided April 30, 2004; costs end June 30, 
2005. 

* Deployment schedule: gradual deployment to theater over 180 day 
period; 30-day pre-deployment and deployment phase for active duty 
units and 60 days for reserve units; 6-month rotation period for all 
units; 7-day re-deployment for all units. 

* Operational tempo: level 1.5 for pre-deployment, deployment, and 
sustainment. 

* Construction of troop housing equivalent to semi-rigid soft wall 
dormitory tents. 

* Transportation: departure from Columbus, Georgia, to Port-au-Prince, 
Haiti; personnel deployed and rotated by commercial air; all equipment 
shipped by sea. 

We obtained input on the scenario design from DOD's Joint Chiefs of 
Staff, who validated it as reasonable. However, the military component 
of the scenario and the corresponding cost estimate have some 
limitations. An actual U.S. military plan may differ significantly from 
the UN plan, due to differences between U.S. and UN military 
infrastructures in operations, structure, doctrine, and circumstances 
at the time of the operation. Additionally, we did not include 
reconstitution--the cost of returning equipment to useable standards 
after operation--in our cost estimate, since the UN does not include 
this cost in its peacekeeping mission budgets, and we assumed that 
reconstitution would occur after the initial budget cycle on which our 
comparison is based. Further, some cost factors used in COST, such as 
some pre-deployment costs and transportation for certain supplies and 
mail, are based on various contingency operations, such as Operation 
Iraqi Freedom, and may not be representative of costs in Haiti. 

* To estimate civilian police costs, we obtained and analyzed data from 
the Department of State's Bureau for International Narcotics and Law 
Enforcement Affairs on actual contract costs for providing civilian 
police to support UN missions. As these contracts do not include the 
costs for daily subsistence and transportation, we calculated these 
additional costs based on the U.S. government meals and incidental 
expense rate for Port-au-Prince and published contract airfare 
schedules. We applied the average costs per officer to the total number 
of civilian police officers included in the MINUSTAH budget. Formed 
police units were not calculated in this manner, as we assumed that 
such personnel would be provided in the military portion of the 
operation as military police and are included as such in that estimate. 

* To estimate U.S. civilian personnel costs for the operation, we 
obtained and analyzed data from the Department of State to determine 
the average annual cost of a foreign service officer in Haiti during 
fiscal year 2005, including salary and benefits, office furnishings, 
housing, residential furnishings, post differential, airfare, shipping, 
rest and recuperation, danger pay, cost of living adjustments, 
educational allowance for one child, and miscellaneous expenses. We 
applied this average cost to the number of non- administrative 
international staff included in the MINUSTAH budget. (We subtracted 
several senior executive positions from this number, as the ambassador 
and U.S. Agency for International Development mission director and 
other senior U.S. officials already posted to Haiti would likely serve 
their functions.) To estimate the cost of locally-employed national 
staff, we obtained staffing information for the U.S. embassy in Port-au-
Prince for fiscal years 2004 and 2005 from the Department of State and 
calculated the average annual salary for locally-employed national 
staff in Haiti. We applied this figure to the number of non- 
administrative national staff included in the MINUSTAH budget. We 
calculated benefits for this staff at 27.6 percent of salaries, per 
information on these costs provided by the Department of State. 

* To estimate civilian facilities and administrative costs, we obtained 
and analyzed data provided by the Department of State and the U.S. 
embassy in Port-au-Prince. The department's Capital Security Cost- 
Sharing Program requires agencies posting staff overseas to pay fees 
into a cost-sharing pool that funds construction of secure embassies 
and consulates. We used data on these fees to calculate the total cost- 
sharing fee for the civilian staff in our U.S. operational scenario for 
Haiti. To determine administrative support costs, we obtained and 
analyzed cost data from the Department of State's International 
Cooperative Administrative Support Services program for the Port-au- 
Prince embassy for fiscal year 2004. We calculated the average 
administrative cost per non-administrative foreign service officer and 
applied this amount to the total number of non-administrative civilian 
personnel in the MINUSTAH budget. 

* To estimate the cost of deploying civilian volunteers, we obtained 
and analyzed data from two U.S.-based nongovernmental organizations 
that contract with the U.S. government to provide volunteers for 
development and humanitarian activities overseas. These organizations 
provided the cost estimates for deploying 153 volunteers in Haiti for 
14 months, which corresponds to the parameters of the MINUSTAH budget 
for volunteers. Our cost estimate includes the average of these two 
estimates. 

For all of the cost data used in these estimates, we obtained and 
analyzed supporting information or discussed the data source with the 
corresponding officials and determined that the data were sufficiently 
reliable for the purposes of this report. 

To analyze factors that could substantially affect the estimated costs 
of the U.S. operation, we developed alternative scenarios and cost 
estimates, varying one major assumption for each scenario. We 
identified the assumptions to vary through discussions with DOD and 
Institute for Defense Analysis officials, who identified those factors 
they believed, based on their experience, would have the most influence 
on the cost estimate for the operation's military component. The three 
variations we selected were (1) an all-reserve force, (2) deployment of 
all troops in Haiti within the first 60 days of the operation, and (3) 
an operational tempo of 2. DOD generated alternative cost estimates for 
each scenario, using COST, and we compared these with the base estimate 
to identify and explain the major differences associated with each 
alternative scenario. 

To identify and assess the strengths of the United States and the UN in 
leading peacekeeping operations in Haiti, we obtained and analyzed UN 
reports and evaluations relating to MINUSTAH and information on past 
U.S.-led operations in Haiti. We interviewed officials from DOD, the 
Department of State, and the UN, as well as peacekeeping experts from 
the Stimson Center in Washington, D.C., to discuss their views on 
factors that contribute to successful peacekeeping operations. We also 
reviewed published reports from various organizations relating to the 
effectiveness of UN and U.S. peacekeeping operations. 

We conducted our review from June through February 2006 in accordance 
with generally accepted government auditing standards. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Joseph Christoff, (202) 512-8979: 

Acknowledgments: 

Key contributors to this report include Tetsuo Miyabara (Assistant 
Director), James Michels, Charles Perdue, Kendall Schaefer, Suzanne 
Sapp, Grace Lui, Lynn Cothern, Joseph Carney, and Sharron Candon. 

(320356): 

FOOTNOTES 

[1] This total does not include an allocation for peacekeeping support 
costs--essentially overhead costs incurred outside of Haiti--primarily 
at UN headquarters in New York and the UN Logistics Base in Italy. 

[2] We did not calculate the value of these donations, which are likely 
to vary widely by contributing country. 

[3] Our estimate is based on a force consisting of 85 percent active 
duty and 15 percent reserve troops. 

[4] Department of Defense Financial Management Regulations, 7000.14-R, 
vol. 12, Ch. 23, para. 2304. 

[5] Panel on United Nations Peace Operations, Report of the Panel on 
United Nations Peace Operations (Brahimi Report), a special report 
prepared at the request of the Secretary General of the United Nations. 
August 2000. 

[6] United States Institute of Peace Task Force on the United Nations, 
Report of the Task Force on the United Nations: American Interests and 
UN Reform, a special report prepared at the request of Rep. Frank Wolf, 
U.S. House of Representatives. June, 2005. 

[7] H.R. 2745, 109TH Cong. (2005). 

[8] The UN cost estimate does not include general overhead costs 
incurred to support all peacekeeping missions, such as the cost to run 
DPKO at the UN Headquarters in New York and the UN logistics base in 
Brindisi, Italy. We did not include these costs because we were unable 
to estimate comparable overhead costs for U.S. operations due to major 
differences in budgeting practices between the two organizations. 

[9] This includes only cash contributions to the United Nations for 
MINUSTAH and does not include in-kind contributions, such as pay and 
benefits for U.S. police and military personnel participating in the UN 
mission. Since the United States has provided 25 police officers and 4 
military personnel to MINUSTAH, this additional contribution of pay and 
benefits does not significantly affect the results of our analysis. 

[10] We did not calculate the value of the non-reimbursable salary and 
compensation costs incurred by police contributing nations, as the UN 
does not maintain data on these voluntary contributions. These costs 
are likely to vary widely depending on each nation's economic 
development. For MINUSTAH, 33 nations have provided civilian police 
officers, ranging from developing countries, such as Cameroon and 
Senegal, to more developed countries, such as Canada and France. 

[11] Michele Tazini, et al., The Army and Multinational Force 
Compatibility (Arlington, VA, 2000). 

[12] The Capital Security Cost-Sharing Program was developed to 
accelerate the building of 150 new secure embassies and consulates 
around the world. Each agency's assigned cost is based on its total 
overseas personnel. See Pub. L. No. 108-447, 118 Stat. 2809, 2920, Div. 
B., sec. 629 (2004). 

[13] Operational tempo level 1 is the equivalent to peacetime 
operations, with tank miles and flying hours being those normally 
accrued during peacetime. Level 2 reflects heightened operations short 
of combat, with tank miles and flying hours (and associated total 
operational costs) at twice the rate of level 1. Level 3 reflects high 
intensity combat, with tank miles, flying hours (and associated total 
operational costs) at three times the rate of level 1. 

[14] This does not include U.S. donations for development and 
humanitarian assistance programs not as closely related to MINUSTAH, 
such as $6 million in disaster relief in fiscal year 2004. 

[15] GAO, U.N. Peacekeeping: Issues Related to Effectiveness, Cost, and 
Reform, GAO/T-NSIAD-97-139 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 25, 2001). 

[16] United Nations, Security Council mission. Report of the Security 
Council Mission to Haiti, 13 to 16 April 2005. May 2005. 

[17] James Dobbins, et al. The UN's Role in Nation-Building, From the 
Congo to Iraq (Arlington, VA, 2005). 

[18] The original MINUSTAH Force Commander died on January 7, 2006. The 
Deputy Force Commander assumed command of all force elements. 

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