Armed Forces Participating in Crisis Management Operations


Criminal jurisdiction and crisis management operations international organisations until 1989 (non-UN)

Operation

Jurisdiction of sending state

Remarks

Arab League

• Kuwait (1961)

• Jordan (1970)

• Lebanon (1976)

Exclusivea

Unknown

Unknown


Unknown whether SOFA was concluded

No SOFA concludedb

Organization of American States, OAS

• Observers (various)

• Dominican Rep. (1965)

Unknown

Unknown

Unknown whether SOFA was concluded

Unknown whether SOFA was concluded

Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States, OECS

• Grenada (1983)

Unknown

Unknown whether SOFA was concluded

Organisation of African Unity, OAU

• Chad (1979–1982)

Exclusivec








































Criminal jurisdiction and crisis management operations coalitions of states until 1989

Multinational Force and Observers, MFO

Egypt (1981–…)

Exclusived


Multinational Force, MNF

Lebanon (1982–1984)

Status cf. diplomatic relations treatye

Inter-African Force, IAF

Zaïre (1978–1979)

Unknown

Unknown whether SOFA was concluded

Commonwealth Monitoring Force, CMF

Rhodesia/Zimbabwe (1979–1980)

Unknown

Unknown whether SOFA was concluded

Indian Peacekeeping Force, IPKF

Sri Lanka (1987–1990)

Maledives (1988)

Unknown

Unknown

Unknown whether SOFA was concluded

Unknown whether SOFA was concluded


aParagraph 11 Exchange of Letters between His Highness the Prince of the State of Kuwait and the Secretary General of the League of Arab States; Kuwait, 12 August 1961 (UN Doc S/5007, 30 November 1961)

bSchmalenbach 2004, p. 518

cParagraph 5(9) Agreement between the Transitional National Union Government of the Republic of Chad and the Organization of African Unity (OAU) regarding the status of a PanAfrican peacekeeping force in Chad; Nairobi, 28 November 1981 (in Mays 2003, Annex)

dParagraph 11(a) Appendix to Annex, of the Protocol relating to the establishment and maintenance of a Multinational Force and Observers (with annex); Washington, 3 Augustus 1981 (Vol. 1335 UNTS 1983, No. 22403)

e Exchange of notes constituting an agreement on United States participation in a multinational force in Beirut; Beirut, 18 and 20 August 1982 (Vol. 1751 UNTS 1993, No. 30567) and para viii, Exchange of notes constituting an agreement on United States participation in a Multinational Force in Beirut; Beirut, 25 September 1982 (Vol. 1777 UNTS 1994, No. 31022). Agreements concluded by France and Italy have not been published in the UNTS



For example, the status of members of the Multinational Force and Observers (MFO) in Egypt was set out in the Appendix to the MFOProtocol.51 Section 11 states that members of the MFO are subject to the exclusive criminal jurisdiction of the respective sending States. Section 11(d) of the Appendix allows participating States to make supplementary arrangements with the host State on the status of MFO members. Several States used the option to conclude agreements with Israel on military personnel on leave on its territory.52 In these agreements sending States have waived their right to exercise criminal jurisdiction, as accorded by the MFOProtocol, in the case of certain weapons and drugs-related crimes.53

The changing international political relations in the post Cold War era initially gave new élan to crisis management operations. The Russian Federation made less frequent use of its power of veto in the Security Council, which subsequently could operate more effectively and in general States were more inclined to contribute troops to these operations. After 1989, both the number of UN operations and the role of (sub) regional organisations,54 military alliances and coalitions of States increased.

Table 4.2 shows to what extent sending States could exercise criminal jurisdiction over their forces participating in various crisis management operations led by international organisations (excluding UN, NATO and EU) since the end of the Cold War. Although a great number of the SOFAs have been not published, it can be derived from other agreements that sending States in general had exclusive criminal jurisdiction over their armed forces.


Table 4.2
Criminal jurisdiction and crisis management operations international organisations (excl. UN, NATO and EU); post 1989

















































Commonwealth of Independent States, CIS

• Moldova (1992–…)

• S-Ossetia (1992–2008)

• Abkhazia (1993–2008)

• Tajikistan (1993–2000)

Status cfm. UN treaty; expert on missiona

Idem

Idem

Idem





Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe, OSCE

• Various missions

• Uganda (1993)

• Burundi (1994–1996)

Unknown

Unknown

Unknown

Unpublished MOUs

Unknown whether SOFA was concluded

Unknown whether SOFA was concluded

African Union, AU

• Burundi (2003–2004)

• Sudan (2004–2007)

• Somalia (2007–…)

• Comoros (2006)

• Comoros (2007–2008)

Unknown

Exclusiveb

Exclusivec

Unknown

Unknown

Unknown whether SOFA was concluded



Contents of SOFA are unknown contents of

SOFA is unknown

Economic Community of West African States, ECOWAS

• Liberia (1990–1999)

• Sierra Leone (1997–1999)

• Guinea-Bissau (1998–1999)

• Ivory Coast (2002–2004)

• Liberia (2003)

Unknownd

Unknown

Exclusivee

Unknown

Unknown

Contents of SOFA are unknown

Unknown whether SOFA was concluded


Unknown whether SOFA was concluded

Unknown whether SOFA was concluded

Central African Economic and Monetary Community, CAEMC

• CAR (2002–2008)

Exclusivef


Economic Community of Central African States, ECCAS

• CAR (2008–…)

Unknowng

Contents of SOFA are unknown

Southern African Development Community, SADC

• Congo (1998)

• Lesotho (1998–1999)h

Unknown

Unknown

Unknown whether SOFA was concluded

Contents of SOFA is unknown


aParagraph 39 Statute on Collective Peacekeeping Forces in the Commonwealth of Independent States; Moskow, 19 January 1996 (UN Doc A/51/62; S/1996/74)

bParagraph 62(b) Status of mission agreement on the establishment and management of the ceasefire commission in the Darfur area of Sudan; Khartoum, 4 June 2004 (www.​issafrica.​org/​AF/​profiles/​sudan/​darfur/​soma.​pdf. Accessed November 2014)

cArticle XII (55)(b) Status of Mission Agreement (SOMA) between the Transitional Federal Government of the Somali Republic and the African Union on the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM); Addis Ababa, 6 March 2007 (storage.​globalcitizen.​net/​data/​topic/​knowledge/​uploads/​2010050510342929​0.​pdf. Accessed November 2014)

dAllegedly, 8 years after the start of the mission a secret SOFA was concluded; Schmalenbach 2004, p. 521

eArticle VII (24) Agreement defining the operations, composition and status of ECOMOG on the territory of the Republic of GuineaBissau; Bissau, 22 March 1999 (UN Doc S/1999/445 (1999) 20 April 1999)

fMultinational Force Central African Republic (FOMUC); Article 11 Protocole Relatif au mandat et au statut de la force multinationale de la CEMAC en République Centrafricaine; 3 June 2003 (www.​juriafrica.​com. Accessed November 2014)

gIn 2008 ECCAS took over command of the operation in CAR from CAEMC, called Mission for the Consolidation of Peace (MICOPAX)

hOperation Boleas

The following sections will address the well-documented practice of NATO and the EU, which play an increasingly important role in the crisis management operations.



4.4.2 NATO


Similar to the UN, NATO does not possess its own armed forces, so operations under NATO command are conducted by forces provided by NATO Member States. In the early 1990s the organisation made its first steps in the field of crisis management conducting naval and air operations in and around the Balkans.55 In 1995, after parties to the conflict in the former Yugoslavia had signed the Peace Agreement of Dayton,56 NATO answered to the UN Security Council’s call to establish a multinational military Implementation Force (IFOR).57 Later, NATO extended its activities in the Balkans to, inter alia, Kosovo and Macedonia. Afterwards, the organisation led various operations outside European territory, such as the ISAF operation in Afghanistan, Operation Unified Protector in Libya and a number of naval operations,58 as well as giving support to the African Union (AU) and its operations.

For NATO the status of the participating forces has always been a focal point, exclusive jurisdiction of the sending States over their forces being paramount (see Table 4.3). For instance, the SOFA annexed to the Peace Agreement of Dayton determines59:


Table 4.3
Criminal jurisdiction and crisis management operations NATO; post 1989
















Operation

Jurisdiction sending State

Remarks

• IFOR/SFOR (1994–2004)

• Kosovo (1999–…)

• Albania (1999–2010)

• Macedonia (2001–2003)

• Afghanistan (2003–…)

Exclusivea

Exclusiveb

Exclusivec

Unknown

Exclusived




Classified; not published



aArticle 7 Agreement between the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) concerning the status of NATO and its personnel; Article 7 Agreement between the Republic of Croatia and the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) concerning the status of NATO and its personnel en Article 10 Agreement between the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) concerning transit arrangements for peace plan operations; Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, 21 November 1995 and Paris 14 December; Appendix B to Annex 1-A to the Dayton Peace Agreement (www.​ohr.​int/​dpa/​. Accessed November 2014)

bSection 2(2.4) Regulation No. 2000/47 on the status, privileges and immunities of KFOR and UNMIK and their personnel in Kosovo; 18 August 2000

c Agreement between the government of the Republic of Albania and NATO concerning the status of NATO and its personnel present on the territory of the Republic of Albania; Brussels, 24 June 1999 (NAVO Document SG(99)1003, 25 June 1999)

dSection 1(3) Annex A, Military Technical Agreement between the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and the Interim Administration of Afghanistan; 4 January 2002


NATO military personnel under all circumstances and at all times shall be subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of their respective national elements in respect of any criminal or disciplinary offenses which may be committed by them…60

Similar provisions formulated somewhat differently were also used in other SOFAs.61 Several agreements are classified and have, therefore, not been published.

Decades of NATO practice show that host States never exercised criminal jurisdiction over the foreign forces. Unlike the UN and the EU (see below), NATO has not adopted a model SOFA that could clarify the organisation’s position on this point. As far as can be established, NATO has not concluded any mission-specific SOFA for its naval operations or for its assistance to the AU.

NATO member States participating in an operation are not party to the mission-specific SOFAs signed by NATO’s Secretary-General. Pursuant to Article 36 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, consent of third States for whom rights arise out of treaty provisions, are to be presumed as long as the contrary is not indicated.62 Unlike UN practice, NATO member States do not conclude agreements on their contribution of forces to a NATO mission, in which they accept the SOFA provisions. However, the applicability of the SOFAs can be deduced from the decision-making procedure of NATO (see also Sect. 9.​4.​2), which is based on consensus. This means that the decision of the North Atlantic Council approving the final text of a SOFA implies acceptance by its members. It can also be argued that the sending State’s transfer of command over its military units to a NATO commander (see Sect. 11.​3) results in the sending State’s implicit acceptance of the provisions made by NATO.


4.4.3 EU


In 1992, with the signing of the EU Treaty, the Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP) of the EU was established.63 In 1999, the European Council meeting in Cologne defined the European (since the Treaty of Lisbon 64 formulated as Common) Security and Defence Policy as part of the CFSP.65 This meant that the EU could deploy armed forces to execute the so-called Petersberg tasks: humanitarian and rescue tasks, peacekeeping tasks and tasks of combat forces in crisis management operations.66

The implementation of the Lisbon Treaty has led to reformulating the tasks as missions “…for peace-keeping, conflict prevention and strengthening international security …” (Article 42(1), EU Treaty). The Lisbon Treaty provides the EU with the possibility to entrust execution of tasks to a group of Member States (Article 42(5) EU Treaty).

Since 31 March 2003 the EU has undertaken crisis management operations,67 for which member States and third countries provide armed forces. On 2 December 2004, after the successful execution of several smaller missions,68 the EU took over from SFOR in Bosnia-Herzegovina, from then on called EUFOR Althea/BiH. Later, the EU also mounted operations in Africa.69 On 31 December 2008 the EU launched Operation Atalanta, its first naval mission, to protect the vessels of the World Food Programme and to combat piracy off the coast of Somalia.

The EU has almost always concluded SOFAs with the host States, the first of which with Macedonia.70 Article 6 of the SOFA read:

EUF personnel shall be granted treatment, including immunities and privileges, equivalent to that of diplomatic agents granted under the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic relations dated 18 April 1961.

On the basis of this provision military personnel enjoyed full criminal immunity. Third States participating in the mission concluded agreements with the EU on the participation of their forces,71 in which applicability of the SOFA to the participating forces was confirmed.72

Subsequent SOFAs show that absolute criminal immunity of the sending States’ forces was paramount to the EU, although no longer was referred to the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic relations. Article 6 of the SOFA concluded with Gabon, where EU forces were based to support EUFOR in de Democratic Republic of the Congo, read73:

EUFOR-personnel shall enjoy immunity from the criminal jurisdiction of the Host State under all circumstances.

Furthermore, besides immunity of their forces, the SOFA allowed sending States to exercise criminal jurisdiction in the host State (Article 8):

The competent authorities of a Sending State shall have the right to exercise on the territory of the Host State all the criminal jurisdiction and disciplinary powers conferred on them by the law of the Sending State with regard to all EUFOR personnel subject to the relevant law of the Sending State.

Such provisions were also included in later EU agreements,74 for instance, concerning the EU Naval Force Somalia and the operation in Chad75 and the Central African Republic (CAR) (see Table 4.4).76 Today, the provisions mentioned above are part of the Model Agreement on the status of the European Unionled forces (the Model EUSOFA).77 These provisions are more specific about criminal immunity than the provisions included in the SOFAs adopted by the UN and NATO. However, they have similar consequences for the exercise of criminal jurisdiction over the participating forces.


Table 4.4
Criminal jurisdiction and crisis management operations EU; post 1989


















Operation

Jurisdiction sending State

Remarks

• Macedonia (2003)

• Congo DRC (2003 en 2006)

• Bosnia (2004–…)

• Chad (2008–2009)

• CAR (2008–2009)

Status cfm. Diplomatic Relations Treatya


Exclusiveb

Exclusivec

Exclusived

No SOFA concluded





aArticle 6(1) Agreement between the European Union and the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia on the status of the European Unionled Forces (EUF) in the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia; Skopje, 21 March 2003 (OJ 2003, L 82/46)

bParagraph 12 UN Doc S/RES/1575 (2004), 22 November 2004 in which the UN Security Council stated that SOFAs to the Dayton Peace Agreement are applicable to NATO and EU forces

cArticle 6(3) Agreement between the European Union and the Republic of Chad on the status of the European Unionled forces in the Republic of Chad; N’Djaména, 6 March 2008 (OJ 2008, L 83/40)

dArticle 6(3) Agreement between the European Union and the Central African Republic on the status of the European Unionled forces in the Central African Republic; Bangui, 16 April 2008 (OJ 2008, L 136/46)

The applicability of the SOFAs to the armed forces of participating States is undisputed. On the basis of Article 216(2) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, all agreements concluded by the Union are binding for the institutions of the Union and the Member States.78 With other participating States the EU concludes Participation Agreements. These agreements include a provision declaring the SOFAs EU is a party to as applicable to the participating non-member States.79 Furthermore, the Participation Agreements explicitly state that third States can participate in the EU-led forces.


4.4.4 Coalitions of States


After the Cold War the number of operations led by international organisations increased, as did the number of coalition operations. The operations in East Timor are an example of the latter. In August 1999, after the population of this region had voted by referendum in favour of independence from Indonesia, serious disturbances occured. The deployment of multinational forces authorised by the UN had to restore peace and security and to facilitate humanitarian assistance operations.80 Australia led the International Force in East Timor (INTERFET). On 24 September 1999, through an exchange of notes, it concluded an agreement with Indonesia on the status of the INTERFET-forces.81 The treaty is classified and for that reason unpublished. Apparently, the sending States retained full criminal jurisdiction over their forces.82

On 28 February 2000 the United Nations Transitional Administration in East Timor (UNTAET) succeeded INTERFET. Until the independence of East Timor (Timor Leste) on 20 May 2002 UNTAET administered the territory. In 2006 the security situation worsened and subsequently the government of Timor Leste requested international assistance to restore peace and security. In June 2006, in response to the request, Australia and New Zealand sent the International Stabilization Force (ISF).83 The status of the forces was regulated in two SOFAs concluded by East Timor with Australia and New Zealand, respectively.84 They included a provision stating that the personnel would be granted the status:

…equivalent to that accorded administrative and technical staff of the Contributing Governments under the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations of April 18, 1961.

This reference to the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations is exceptional in the area of crisis management operations. In general the SOFAs concluded for other coalition operations show that, as far as the information is available, also in the context of coalition operations, the forces are subject to the exclusive criminal jurisdiction of the sending States (see Table 4.5).


Table 4.5
Criminal jurisdiction and crisis management operations coalitions of States; post 1989









































































































Operation

Jurisdiction sending State

Remarks

United Task Force, UNITAF

Somalia (1992–1993)


No SOFA concluded

Operatie Turquoise

Rwanda (1994)

Unknown

Unknown whether SOFA was concluded

Multinational Force, MNF

Haiti (1994–1995)

Exclusivea


South Pacific Peacekeeping Force, SPPKF

Papua New Guinea (1994)

Exclusiveb

Military Observer Mission Ecuador-Peru, MOPEP

Ecuador/Peru (1995–1999)

Unknown

Unknown whether SOFA was concluded

Multinational Protection Force, MPF

Albania(1997)

Exclusivec
 

Inter-African Mission to Monito the Bangui Agreements, AMIB

CAR (1997–1998)

Status cfm. Diplomatic Relations Treatyd

Truce Monitoring Group for Bouganville, TMG

Papua New Guinea (1997–1998)

Exclusivee


International Force in East Timor, INTERFET

East-Timor (1999–2000)

Full immunity

Classified; precise contents SOFA unknown

International Peace Monitoring Team, IPMT

Solomon Islands (2000–2002)

Full immunity

(except when the sending States expressly consent otherwise”)f

International Security Force, ISAF

Afghanistan (2001–2003)

Exclusiveg
 

Opérátion Licorne

Ivory Coast (2002–…)

Functionalh immunity

Also: immunity on base

Regional Assistance Mission to Salomon Islands, RAMSI

Solomon Islands (2003–…)

Functionali immunity

however, host State cannot exercise jurisdiction when sending State exercises that right j

Multinational Force Iraq, MNF-I

Iraq (2003–2009)

Exclusivek


Multinational Interim Force, MIF

Haiti (2004)

Unknown

Unknown whether SOFA was concluded

International Stabilization Force, ISF

Timor Leste (2006–…)

Status cfm. Diplomatic Relations Treatyl


aParagraph 43(b) Agreement between the governments participating in the multinational force (“MNF”) authorized persuant to Security Council Resolution 940 and the Republic of Haiti on the status of MNF in Haiti

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