Long-term engagement: the future of the regional assistance mission to Solomon Islands
This report argues that the Soloman Islands are entering into a high risk period for conflict and an external security guarantee will need to be maintained.
The expected collapse of the logging industry by 2015 will present a set of severe economic challenges and exacerbate existing socioeconomic grievances. The advent of large scale mining will likely spawn local-level resource conflict.
The report argues that the costs of maintaining a small ongoing security presence must be weighed against the potentially much greater cost of having to redeploy a larger contingent if lawlessness returns following a precipitate withdrawal of the RAMSI security guarantee.
An external security guarantee will need to be maintained for at least the next ten to fifteen years. A complete dismantling of RAMSI’s enabling architecture would make it difficult to provide a credible deterrent effect and rapid response capability.
