Lewis MacKenzie (born April 30, 1940, Truro, N.S., Can.) is a Canadian military officer who commanded the United Nations Peacekeeping Forces in the Bosnian capital of Sarajevo during the disintegration of Yugoslavia in the 1990s.
MacKenzie, the son of a career army officer, majored in philosophy at St. Francis Xavier University in Antigonish, N.S. His devotion to the military started at age 12, when he joined the Royal Canadian Air Cadets. MacKenzie attended the Canadian Army Command and Staff College (1970), the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Defense College in Rome (1977), and the United States Army War College (1983), where he studied political science.
During his 33-year career in the Canadian army, MacKenzie served with NATO forces in West Germany and with UN peacekeeping forces in the Gaza Strip, Cyprus, Vietnam, Egypt, Central America, and former Yugoslavia. In Central America he was commander of the United Nations Observer Mission (1990–91). Between peacekeeping missions MacKenzie served as an instructor at the Canadian Forces Command and Staff College (1979–82), and he was in charge of army training at St. Hubert, Que. (1983–85). As commander of the Canadian Forces Base in Gagetown, N.B. (1988–90), he was responsible for the training of officers at the Combat Training Centre. In 1985 he was appointed director of Combat-Related Employment for Women, and in 1991 he was appointed deputy commander of the Canadian Army’s Land Forces Central Area.
MacKenzie was named chief of staff of the United Nations peacekeeping force in former Yugoslavia in February 1992. Although the purpose of the mission was to ensure a cease-fire in newly independent Croatia, the UN headquarters were located in the Bosnian capital, Sarajevo. Soon after the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina was created, MacKenzie found himself in the midst of warring ethnic factions. In May 1992 he created Sector Sarajevo and with his UN force set about opening the Sarajevo airport for the delivery of humanitarian aid. MacKenzie became an international celebrity by using the only weapon at his disposal, the media, to try to help restore peace.
After his return from the Balkans in October 1992, MacKenzie was appointed commander of the army in Ontario. However, the conflict in former Yugoslavia followed him back to Canada. He was verbally attacked by members of the Croatian community in Canada and by factions in Bosnia. Although he tried to defend himself, as a member of the Canadian armed forces he was precluded from commenting on government policy. After criticizing the United Nations’ inability to command, control, and support its peacekeeping forces, MacKenzie retired from the military in March 1993. That year he published an account of his career, Peacekeeper: The Road to Sarajevo, in which he recounted his harrowing experiences. In 1993 the Conference of Defence Associations Institute presented MacKenzie with its Vimy Award, and in 2006 he was awarded the Order of Canada.