I think actually that's only part of the solution. There's also a need to work within the UN, to work in New York, to press DPKO and press the leadership of the mission to do a better job than it's done so far on staying engaged on the political issues. Just to repeat the point, we're not going to get to a solution.
The UN--no, it's not only the UN; it's the UN together with the AU; they have done a lousy job on reviving the peace process. They need to be pushed there. With the North-South Peace Agreement there are specific crisis areas--I mentioned one, Abyei--all along the north-south corridor. Those are the flashpoints. The UN has to be pushed to redeploy its troops from areas that are less volatile to those that are most volatile. That's what makes the most sense.
DPKO is unwilling to do it because it means revisiting MOUs with troop-contributing countries and rejigging the mandate. They're stuck in bureaucratic ways, but they need pushing from international member states and partners.
In Darfur, certainly support with equipment and support with personnel is necessary. But I think, just again, that the missing plank in the solution is really on the political side and there's not much attention, not much focus or outrage, going on about the fact that the political process is stalled and there's really no work going on in the short term to revive it.