Children as "weapon systems": a general dedicates his life to ending the use of child soldiers worldwide.
Knight, W. Andy
The Global Quest to They Fight Like Soldiers, They Die Like
Children: Eradicate the Use of Child Soldiers
Romeo Dallaire, with Jessica Dee Humphreys
Random House
307 pages, hardcover
ISBN 9780307355775
April 2011
Imagine. You are a soldier, trained to kill the enemy. On the
battlefield, just as you are about to shoot an enemy combatant, you
suddenly see in your gun sights that the soldier is a mere child
"in the tattered remnants of a military uniform with dozens more
children behind." What would you do?
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This is the ethical dilemma that Romeo Dallaire asks his readers to
ponder in his latest book, They Fight Like Soldiers, They Die Like
Children: The Global Quest to Eradicate the Use of Child Soldiers. The
retired lieutenant-general and Canadian senator, now a celebrated icon
in Canada and around the world for his attempt to protect innocent
people from genocidal slaughter in Rwanda, had to wrestle with this very
same moral dilemma when he headed the United Nations peacekeeping
mission (UNAMIR) in that country in 1994. In the first few pages of this
book, Dallaire asks the following heart-wrenching questions: "Do
you treat this person aiming his weapon at you as a soldier or a
child?" And, "Is a child still a child when pressing the
barrel of a gun to your chest?"
Reading Dallaire's new book leaves one with the stark
realization that the former general has still not recovered fully from
his terrible experience in Rwanda, an experience vividly recorded in his
award-winning book, Shake Hands with the Devil: The Failure of Humanity
in Rwanda. In that earlier publication, Dallaire was compelling,
riveting and dramatic in his account of the horrific and atrocious
events of the Rwandan genocide that left 800,000 people dead over the
course of 100 days. The story of the general's frustrated efforts
to intervene and protect the vulnerable Tutsi population was turned into
a successful docudrama in 2007. We are given a taste of the impact that
the failed UNAMIR mission had on Dallaire when he writes the following
in his new book: "the smells, the sights, the terrible sounds of
the dying in Rwanda have been damped down in my psyche to a dull roar
through constant therapy and an unrelenting regimen of medication."
In They Fight Like Soldiers, They Die Like Children, it is almost
as if Dallaire is still engaged in the self-flagellation of his
immediate post-Rwanda experience. But this time, the reader will find
that Dallaire has resolved to devote the rest of his life to ending a
scourge he witnessed first hand in Rwanda but that is present in many
parts of the developing world. This is not a book about Rwanda per se;
it is about child soldiers, of whom there are approximately 250,000 in
the world, some as young as seven. The book consists of an introduction
and ten chapters, with a foreword written by Ishmael Beah--a former
child soldier and author of A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier.
In the introduction, Dallaire recounts the international
community's attempts to protect children living in war-torn
countries: the 1989 Convention on the Rights of the Child; Graqa
Machel's pivotal report, "Impact of Armed Conflict on
Children," which was presented to the UN General Assembly in 1996;
the appointment of Olara Otunnu (although Dallaire does not mention him
by name) as the UN secretary-general's first Special Representative
for Children and Armed Conflict; and the adoption of the Optional
Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child.
What Dallaire shows in this introduction is that much has been done
over the past 22 years to bring attention to the problem of child
recruitment into armed forces and irregular groups. He also suggests
that there is an emerging norm at the international level aimed at
protecting such children, which he compares to the actions undertaken by
Lloyd Axworthy and a group of non-governmental organizations to ban
landmines through the Ottawa Process. We are told by Dallaire that it
was Axworthy, then foreign minister of Canada, who convened a conference
in Winnipeg in 2000 to draw attention to the plight of children affected
by war. It was apparently at that conference that Dallaire first
declared his intention to make the ban on the use of child soldiers his
lifelong goal. As he puts it, his mission from then on was "to stop
extremist adults from turning children into killing machines."
The rest of the book is devoted to making the case for bringing an
end to this scourge. But the author does so in a way that strikes me as
odd and ineffective. He mingles nonfiction chapters with three fictional
chapters in the book--a technique that does little to make his case. The
three fictional chapters involve the abduction of a child, the
indoctrination of that child as a child soldier and the moment when that
child and a UN peacekeeper come face to face in battle. According to
Dallaire, the rationale for employing this literary technique was to
connect the experiences of child soldiers to "the child that
survives within ourselves." Most readers will find those three
fictional chapters to be totally unnecessary. Indeed, they may be viewed
as more of an obstacle than as an instrument for facilitating a deeper
understanding of the nature of the child soldier problem and the extent
to which the recruitment of children as soldiers can be seen as an
international crime.
Chapter One, titled "Warrior Boy," provides us with some
insight into Romeo Dallaire's childhood, a seemingly good one,
especially when his father--a rather stern military man--was not around.
The young Dallaire spent much time at his parents' countryside
cabin, swimming in the lake, building fortresses in sandpits, pretending
to be fighting great battles and "daydream[ing] in the
stillness." By the age of 18, after attending many cadet camps, he
was ready to enter a career in the Canadian military. His five years
attending the College militaire royal de Saint-Jean and then the Royal
Military College in Kingston, Ontario, did not, however, adequately
prepare Dallaire to deal with "an enemy who wore the trappings of
childhood so familiar" to him, "but was so different from the
soldier" he had become.
It is in Chapter Two, titled "Little Soldiers, Little
Killers," that Dallaire paints a picture of his first confrontation
with child soldiers "as young as fourteen." This occurred
during the Rwandan civil conflict. As he puts it, "I saw them,
heard them, faced them down, and eventually confronted them in the midst
of a carnage that swallowed their youth and my professional warrior
ethic." The general was confronted with "little soldiers with
big guns" who often wore "ill-fitting uniforms." In his
direct confrontations with these children, Dallaire found it difficult
to reconcile the image of "their youth and potential" with
"the hatred, the guile, the blatant evil in the eyes of these
teenagers: boys, and yes, even girls."
The use of child soldiers has been the norm for thousands of years
all over the world.
After two fictional chapters inspired by Antoine de
Saint-Exupery's classic work, The Little Prince, Dallaire returns
to non-fiction. In "How a Child Soldier Is Made," he provides
a sweeping description of the push-pull factors that result in children
being used by such notorious groups as the Lord's Resistance Army
in Northern Uganda, the Interahamwe in Rwanda and the Revolutionary
United Front in Sierra Leone. Push factors habitually include abuse in
the home, extreme poverty, shame, even boredom. Pull or
"positive" factors include gaining respect and power,
protection, revenge, freedom and excitement.
Although Dallaire does not analyze in a critical way the above
reasons why children are drawn into armed conflict, he is firm in his
conviction that the political and military leaders who use children in
this way are "criminals who must be held responsible and
accountable for their abuse of children and their violation of
international law." In his quest to end the impunity, Romeo
Dallaire wants to, in his words, "eradicate the use of child
soldiers." But his language is strange, to say the least. He refers
to these children, not as victims of conflict but rather as a
"complete end-to-end weapon system in the inventory of war
machines." Put another way, these children are "the ultimate
cheap, expendable, yet sophisticated human weapon" or "tools
used by adults to wage war." In other passages of the book,
Dallaire labels these young soldiers as "drug-induced
'brain-dead' child fanatics." It is this collage
description of child soldiers that makes me feel uncomfortable.
Yes, it is true that an unlimited supply of child soldiers,
combined with a proliferation of small arms and light weapons, has
turned many countries in the developing world into exceedingly dangerous
places. Children in war-torn areas such as Colombia, Cote d'Ivoire,
the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Somalia,
Sri Lanka, Sudan and Uganda--both boys and girls--are easy to recruit
and cheap to sustain. In some cases, they have no real sense of fear
when drawn into battle and therefore make excellent combatants. Large
numbers of these children are manipulated through drugs and can be
easily indoctrinated to commit some of the most egregious crimes during
wars. Many are certainly used as expendable objects in war zones: as
mine sweepers, as bait for ambushes and as cannon fodder. Girls are an
even greater asset than boys to armed groups and rebel forces because
they can do almost anything the boys can do and yet be security guards,
cooks, babysitters for the younger children, sex slaves and bush wives.
But Dallaire's labelling of child soldiers as a "weapon
system" is troubling. The author's basic thesis is this:
"If it is possible to use a child as a weapon system, it should be
possible to decommission or neutralize that weapon system: to eradicate
the use of child soldiers." He holds out faith in the International
Criminal Court and special courts such as the one in Sierra Leone as
deterrent mechanisms that might help to reduce the recruitment of
children in militias and irregular armies. In his seventh chapter,
"How to Unmake a Child Soldier," he makes it pretty clear that
he considers proactive eradication the best way to go. He details a
process being used by the UN, the European Union and some governments to
repair the damage after the fact. It is known as the disarmament,
demobilization and reintegration (DDR) process. In Dallaire's
opinion this process is fraught with difficulties. He comes to the
conclusion that a much better way to address the problem of child
soldiers is to "stop the recruitment and use of children within
belligerent forces before it happens [rather] than to deal with the
complexities" of the DDR process.
There are some problems with Dallaire's approach to addressing
the problem of child soldiers. For one, the author's militaristic
description of these children as weapon systems has the effect of
dehumanizing these victims of wretched and exploitative adults. It is
not that Dallaire himself lacks empathy. But his military mindset seems
to override his genuine desire to bring an end to the recruitment of
children as soldiers. These children are not pieces of military
hardware. They are living, breathing human beings who are deprived of
their innocence, are subject to invisible wounds of war such as shame,
guilt, stigmatization, isolation and loss. They are individuals who,
like the author himself, have experienced major psychosocial trauma and
stress as a result of their experiences in the throes of civil conflicts
and the frightening uncertainty of the bush. Dallaire's language of
decommissioning these so-called weapon systems diverts our attention
away from the real problem--i.e., how can we stop unscrupulous adults
from taking advantage of the innocence of youth, and how can we create
the conditions that would make child recruitment into armed conflict a
thing of the past?
Another problem is that the portrait Dallaire paints of children as
combatants squaring off against seasoned, well-trained adult soldiers
contributes to the sensationalist image of predatory child killers who
present an ethical challenge to normally highly moral military units who
uphold just war principles. The reality, however, is much different. In
most of the civil conflicts in which children are soldiers, these
children are confronted by individuals who are not bound by any laws of
war, convention, treaty or protocol. For example, adult Sinhalese
security forces in Sri Lanka were known to have tortured, raped and
executed very young Tamils who were recruited into the Tamil Tigers as
children during the now-ended civil war. Also, Dallaire's
psychological portrayal of child soldiers as emotionally crippled,
pathological and drug-induced is really a caricature that, in essence,
overlooks the highly functional and even resilient character of many of
these youth.
Beyond these deep ethical and psychological concerns, Dallaire also
makes the unfounded claim that today's child soldiers do not
"fit any description of what civilizations over the millennia have
called a child." However, over the centuries the definition of a
child has evolved. "Childhood" is a culturally constructed
notion that varies across societies and across time. The fact is that
the use of child soldiers has been the norm for thousands of years all
over the world. Even advanced nations like the United States and the
United Kingdom have used children in armed forces. The Spartans of
ancient Greece had a militaristic society in which boys as young as
seven years old were taken from their parents and brought up in military
barracks. In early human history, small children were generally used as
spies and scouts. In the 1300s, the Ottoman Turks would kidnap Christian
boys and brainwash them into becoming loyal followers of the Sultan.
Many of these boys went on to become well-trained military elites, known
as the Janissaries. Dallaire seems unaware of these instances.
But there is one thing that is abundantly clear when reading this
book: this former soldier is sincere in his commitment to end the
practice of the utilization of children as instruments of war, not only
in civil conflicts but also in places like Brazil where young children
are pulled into gang wars and drug running. This is why he devotes the
last part of his book to disarming, demobilizing and reintegrating child
soldiers (the DDR process) and to finding ways of deterring adults,
military and militia leaders from continuing the practice of recruiting
children for armed conflict. Even though Dallaire has evidently shifted
from his role as a military man to that of an advocate, he brings to his
advocacy the baggage of a military mindset, a military strategist, a
general, a soldier. This explains the militaristic labels he uses to
describe young children who, simply by the accident of birth, happen to
be drawn into conflicts in their villages, their towns, their cities,
their countries.
Want to share your thoughts?
We welcome letters, which we reserve the right to publish after
editing for length, clarity and accuracy.
W. Andy Knight is chair of the Department of Political Science at
the University of Alberta and director of the Children Affected by War
project funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of
Canada.
Related Letters and Responses
I produced this book to engage the understanding, empathy and
action of the Western Peers of Child Soldiers around the globe. The
governments, academics and nongovernmental organizations of the world
have failed to adequately protect the children in conflict areas from
being ruthlessly recruited as child soldiers; I am confident that by
engaging our youth we can make great strides toward the eradication of
the use of child soldiers worldwide.
I wish to take this opportunity to address Dr. Knight's review
so as to clarify my viewpoints. I also want to express that I welcome
the opportunity to engage academics, as the entire premise for my work
on the Child Soldiers Initiative ...