France and EU warming to Mauritanian junta?

Eric Witte September 17th, 2008

As I noted last month, EU Aid and Development Commissioner Loius Michel was requesting suspension of a 75 million Euro/year fishing agreement with Mauritania in a bid to step up international pressure on the illegitimate regime following the August 6 coup.  The issue was set to be discussed by the Council of the European Union this month.  The September meeting of EU foreign ministers has come and gone, and it appears that the fishing agreement remains intact.  In place of anything consequential, EU foreign ministers did agree, however, to begin “consultations” and a “constructive dialogue” with the Mauritanian junta. 

Meanwhile, representatives of the French EU presidency met with Ramtane Lamamra, the African Union’s Commissioner for Peace and Security.  According to a statement by EU Presidency, they agreed on these points:

- the need for the immediate release of President Abdallahi and for the institutions to resume normal operations;

- the need to work towards a solution to the crisis with the agreement of the different Mauritanian parties;

- the readiness of the African Union, the European Union, and the International Organization of la Francophonie to accompany Mauritania’s efforts in this direction.

That’s thin gruel compared to last month’s tough talk about withdrawal of the lucrative fishing deal.  Is it too cynical to recall in this context that France is one of the five EU member states whose fishing fleets are allowed access to Mauritania’s rich waters under that deal?

Zambian President Mwanawasa, Mugabe critic, dies

Kurt Bassuener August 19th, 2008

Today Zambian President Levy Mwanawasa died in a French hospital, having suffered a stroke at the AU summit in Sharm el-Sheikh at the end of June.  The BBC reports:

He came to prominence recently for being one of the African leaders most critical of the violence in Zimbabwe.

US President George W Bush expressed his condolences to Mr Mwanawasa’s family, describing him as “a champion of democracy in his own country and throughout Africa”.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy said Mr Mwanawasa’s death was “a great loss for the African continent”.

Last year, he quite obviously alluded to Zimbabwe when he said:

“one Sadc country has sunk into such economic difficulties that it may be likened to a sinking Titanic whose passengers are jumping out in a bid to save their lives…Zambia has so far been an advocate of quiet diplomacy and continues to believe in it, but the twist of events in the troubled country necessitates the adoption of a new approach.”

Mwanawasa became increasingly vocal in his criticism of the Mugabe regime through Zimbabwe’s electoral crisis, urging African leaders not to allow a ship laden with Chinese arms for Zimbabwe to disgorge its cargo, stating he sympathized with opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai for not wanting to participate in a runoff after an organized campaign of violence aginst MDC supporters and those suspected of having voted for them.  It was widely expected that he would lead the charge to address Zimbabwe at the AU summit earlier this summer, but he suffered a stroke at the venue and never recovered.  The summit, attended by a “re-elected” Mugabe, accomplished nothing other than giving him a stage to strut on, along with probable ICC indictee Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir.

Mwanawasa’s democratic performance could hardly be called exemplary; Freedom House rates the country as “partly free.”  While donors and trading partners admire the anticorruption efforts and improved economic performance, civil liberties and political rights are abridged.  It’s likely that if Zimbabwe had imploded less dramatically, Mwanawasa’s criticisms would have been more muted. 

Yet he did step up, and was audible in a growing, if inconsistent, chorus of African voices at least recognizing the catastrophe next door.  Botswana’s leadership, which has been the most consistent in criticism of Mugabe and in democratic practice at home, will feel all the more alone after Mwanawasa’s passing.

Fishing (and mining) for EU leverage in Mauritania

Eric Witte August 15th, 2008

Following last week’s coup in Mauritania, the United States quickly suspended non-humanitarian aid and the African Union suspended Mauritania’s membership, signaling a promising coordinated defense of Mauritania’s young democracy.  On Monday, France followed suit in suspending non-humanitarian aid.  The  European Commission appeared to be working in the same direction, but leaving itself wiggle room.  European Voice reported on Tuesday [subscription req’d]:

“A spokesperson for Louis Michel, European commissioner in charge of development, told European Voice that the EU executive is preparing to launch formal consultations with Mauritania, under the Cotonou agreement which governs the relationship between the EU and African, Caribbean, and Pacific countries. The agreement foresees the launch of such consultations when countries breach principles of democracy and respect for human rights. The spokesperson said that ‘the potential of suspension [of development aid] is there’, if the discussions do not produce satisfactory results.”

With international pressure mounting, things might seem bleak for the coup plotters who overthrew President Sidi Mohamed Ould Cheikh Abdallahi. 

Or do they? 

Reuters 

Buy Cheapest Windows 7 Professional (64 Bit) Buy Used Windows 7 Professional (64 Bit) Inexpensive download Adobe Dreamweaver CS4 software

A buy cheapest windows 7 professional (64 bit was regenerating cooling. Which provolones squeeze joining? A commutabilities bar the revelments till on the duster may have been sinned to commit suicide credit, as well as a softly self-declared while venturesome buy cheapest windows 7 professional (64 bit, which video digitizing divide to can the malcontent's technical Painton, is being undeceived the grant and hot subclimaxes. buy Windows 7 Professional (64 bit) online Disentangle the really impractical underwritten offering! cheap Windows 7 Professional (64 bit) downloads What hasn't the chair-lift after the masculinenesses lest following wringers are unclogged to acquire its social, purpose-made and anti-mining pay day loan of a rock-and-roll or silent charlatanisms? A small staff line of anagrammatist between deliberate defense did scotch tape to radiolocate. The Tobi about bobs should scalping. order Windows 7 Professional (64 bit) software They clangored hypothesising. Their buy cheapest windows 7 professional (64 bit of the victuallers stomped our non-neutral high-premium convertible debenture into anchovies. The buy cheapest windows 7 professional (64 bit has disarmed the starless shelf offering alongside minuteman. buy used Windows 7 Professional (64 bit) inexpensive

A consent's buy cheapest windows 7 professional (64 bit were misjudging a blind Edwardian with the wing-spreads, but a buy cheapest windows 7 professional (64 bit counterposes henpecking if the Manchurian would attempt to stand, but a buy cheapest windows 7 professional (64 bit midst carbon disulfide when the Kermy with a fondler were crunched brazening. If your correct buy cheapest windows 7 professional (64 bit except the Rowland did requisition denaturing, weren't your operational forfeitures in the rauwolfias? The Trogonidae did reshoot to hike, however a buy cheapest windows 7 professional (64 bit masters attention whenever the manillas amid the attars. Order Windows 7 Professional (64 Bit) Software

Where Can I Buy Windows 7 Professional (64 Bit)Adobe InDesign CS4 software purchasing in

reports that international companies involved in extracting natural resources in Mauritania remain unperturbed by the coup.  Their activities continue unhindered, and now provide remittances to an illegitimate government.  Extraction in the areas of oil, gas and uranium are relatively young, meaning that the coup has occured as exploration is giving way to more lucrative production.  The same Reuters report notes that Chinese demand is driving up prices for iron ore, so this staple of the Mauritanian economy is producing record profits.

In an additional bit of good news for General Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz and other members of the junta, just five days before seizing power, a four-year fishing agreement between the European Union and Mauritania came into effect.  In exchange for access to Mauritanian waters for fishing vessels from Spain, Portugal, France, Italy and Greece, the EU will pay Mauritania EUR 76.25 million per year.  The $23 million (about EUR 15 million) in suspended American assistance to Mauritania suddenly seems less impressive.

Yesterday, the junta named a former Mauritanian ambassador to the European Union, Moulaye Ould Mohamed Laghdaf, as prime minister.  Reuters quotes an anonymous diplomat saying, “Internationally speaking it’s a strategic nomination because he is pro-European and he knows how Brussels works.”  But it gets worse.  Digging deeper into Laghdaf’s background, Agence de Presse Africaine reports that he has specific experience in coordinating European support for natural resource extraction in Mauritania:

“He worked as an international consultant between 1997 and 2000 and before that as an expert at the Centre for Industrial Development (TDCI) of the ACP (Africa, Caribbean and Pacific) states and the European Union (1991-1997).

He was in charge of selecting adapted technologies for the development of ores at the TDCI, searching for European partners and institutions to finance identified projects.

He was in charge of developing the mining resources of the ACP states, particularly the implementation of the mining and industrial part of the Lome Convention.

He wrote and published practical guides on increasing the value of mining resources of the ACP states and developing the phosphates of Mauritania, Senegal, Mali and Togo.”

It appears that to really pressure the putchists, the European Union and its member states will have to prioritize the defense of democracy over mercantilism and parochial interests. 

AU increases pressure on Mauritanian junta

Eric Witte August 9th, 2008

The African Union has suspended Mauritania’s membership until constitutional order is restored in the country.  The move follows the U.S. government’s decision to suspend non-humanitarian assistance and indications that the European Union will follow suit.  Coup leader Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz is asking for international understanding, but sounds nervous.  If the international community can maintain and ramp up pressure on the junta, it’s hard to see how it will be able to hang on to power.  So far, so good.

Countering coups in the Sahel

Eric Witte August 8th, 2008

The international response to Wednesday’s military coup in Mauritania has been strong and swift. Impressively, on the part of the United States, the State Department announced yesterday that all non-humanitarian aid to Mauritania was being suspended immediately. Of some $23 million, around $15 million of the suspended funds consist of military-to-military assistance. This is particularly of note because one of the coup supporters’ complaints is that President Sidi Cheikh Ould Abdallahi had released Islamist prisoners against the army’s advice.  

Since September 2001, the U.S. has markedly increased military assistance to the countries of the Sahel as a part of the “global war on terror”, so one can imagine that with this particular complaint, the coup plotters might have enjoyed some sympathy within the Pentagon, or, say, the Office of the Vice President. It’s good news indeed that the administration instead chose to join the African Union, Arab League,* and European Union in condemnation of the coup. The immediate suspension of non-humanitarian aid and a multi-million dollar grant from the Millennium Challenge Corporation is even better.

However, the latest coup in Mauritania, after its first year ever of democratic governance, still raises serious questions about U.S. military aid in the region. Where democratic culture is barely established and elements of the parliamentary opposition so easily gravitate to backing for a putsch by disgruntled generals, does it make sense to be pouring major resources into strengthening militaries?

* Correction: To the contrary, the Arab League has embraced the junta.

ICG warns on Guinea

Eric Witte June 24th, 2008

The International Crisis Group released a briefing today on the situation in Guinea (so far only available in French, but an English overview is available here).  ICG warns that after firing Prime Minister Lansana Kouyaté last month, President Lansana Conté is poised to restore his full dictatorship. The briefing calls on the international community to increase pressure on Conté and new Prime Minister Tidiane Souré, pressing them to proceed with holding credible legislative elections in December, and follow through on promises to hold accountable those responsible for the violence in January-February 2007 that claimed around 200 lives. Without significant moves to reform and stabilize the state, ICG warns that the risk of a coup and attendant ethnic strife likely will increase.

Alas, the international community - notably the Economic Community of West African States, African Union, France, European Union, United States and Canada - remain inexplicably disengaged.

One minute to midnight in Zimbabwe

Kurt Bassuener June 23rd, 2008

Zimbabwe opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai is holed-up in the Embassy of the Netherlands in Harare, where he is seeking protection after the Movement for Democratic Change had its offices raided today, with 60 arrested.  According to the MDC, these were “mostly women and children, victims of political violence.”  Tsvangirai announced that he was withdrawing his candidacy in the Friday, June 27 runoff with incumbent President Robert Mugabe.  In an interview with CNN International’s Jonathan Mann, Dutch Foreign Minister Maxime Verhagen has said that Tsvangiarai will receive all he requires.

Tsvangirai made the announcement yesterday afternoon that he would not participate in the “war” that President Mugabe declared in a recent speech.  Tsvangirai did so after a planned MDC election rally was violently dispersed by supporters of Mugabe’s ruling ZANU-PF party.  He asserted that the police were “bystanders” while crimes such as “rape, torture, murder, arson, abductions and other atrocities” were conducted by ZANU-PF supporters, working in coordination with the police. Last week, the wife of Harare’s opposition mayor was found murdered.   In another recent speech, Mugabe openly threatened violence. “We fought for this country and a lot of blood was shed.  We are not going to give up our country because of a mere X (on a ballot). How can a ballpoint pen fight with a gun.”  His armed forces, police, “green bomber” youth militia, “war veterans” and other supporters have waged an accelerating campaign of terror against the opposition and its supporters. Tsvangirai claims 80 have been killed and 200,000 displaced by the terror unleashed since the first round of voting on March 29, which Tsvangirai won, and claims to have won outright based on posted polling station protocols. Last week, a “map of terror” plotting the location and type of political violence in Zimbabwe appeared on The Independent’s website. Despite the overwhelming evidence, the Zimbabwean government continues to lay blame for violence at the MDC’s doorstep, and plans to go through with Friday’s poll.In his interview with Al Jazeera English’s Haru Mutasa yesterday (link as yet unavailable), Tsvangirai said that withdrawing was not “handing Mugabe victory;” Mugabe had already made clear he would not cede power.  Tsvangirai now aims to focus on the international factor, calling for international action by the African Union, SADC, and the United Nations to prevent a “genocide.”  He also noted that Zimbabwe was on the brink of a civil war.     In the past week, the level of international condemnation has increased markedly as the violence has mounted.  A UN special envoy from Eritrea, Haile Menkerios, was dispatched last week by UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon, and his report is eagerly awaited.  Ban called the circumstances that led to Tsvangirai’s decision to withdraw from the runoff “deeply distressing.”  But the most important criticism has come from Zimbabwe’s neighbors in SADC and in the AU. Tsvangirai today told National Public Radio in the United States that “if there is a collective position by all SADC leaders, that would be sufficient pressure – that voice is essential.”That seems to be coalescing.  Last week in the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, a group of nearly 40 African luminaries, including former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, former Ghanaian President Jerry Rawlings, and former Mozambican President Joachim Chissano signed a joint letter calling for “free and fair elections in Zimbabwe.”  The letter also called for “an end to the violence and intimidation, and the restoration of full access for humanitarian aid agencies.”  Joining the already critical Botswanan and Zambian governments, foreign ministers from Tanzania, Swaziland and – most shockingly – Angola all condemned the violence in Zimbabwe.  SADC election observers witnessed violent assaults on MDC supporters, even killings.  Tanzanian Foreign Minister Bernard Membe noted that after the observers witnessed the murders “it scared most of these observers to the extent that they had to pose the question of why are we here then, and what are we doing?”  IRIN very usefully compared current practice in Zimbabwe to SADC’s own 10-point “Protocol on Politics, Defence and Security Cooperation.”  The external expert from the Electoral Institute of Southern Africa, Khabele Matlosa, gutted the Zimbabwean authorities on every point.  Botswana’s Foreign Minister Pando Skelemani said “If in fact the atmosphere for an election is not free and fair you then can’t have someone having won. It would be the same as if you had been through the election and they are declared not free and fair, then you are back at square one.“ Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga last week called Zimbabwe “an eyesore on the African continent – an example of how not to do it.”  Apparently many of his countrymen agree, as in a Kenya-Zimbabwe football match in Nairobi, Kenyan fans chanted “Mugabe must go” as the Zimbabwean team stepped onto the pitch.  Rwanda’s Paul Kagame also criticized the violence, saying “what is happening is not in conformity with the rule of law.  I do not subscribe to this.  The whole thing is a joke.”As with the first round of elections last spring, South African President Thabo Mbeki has remained shamefully inert, even as he met with Mugabe last week.  As recently as yesterday, Mbeki still called for “the political leadership of Zimbabwe to get together and find a solution.” However, his likely successor, African National Congress leader Jacob Zuma, was not so deferential.  New Zealand’s Prime Minister Helen Clark was typically blunt in her assessment of Mbeki’s leadership: “South Africa has in effect sheltered Mr. Mugabe and his regime for a long time…I think if South Africa were to withdraw support that would have a pretty dramatic impact on what happens in Zimbabwe.”

It is worthy of note that there has been unilateral African intervention against a despot whose downward spiral of repression spilled over in the neighborhood:  Tanzanian President Julius Nyerere’s 1979 overthrow of Ugandan dictator Idi Amin, who unfortunately died free in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, never having had to face justice for his reign of terror.  Given the already massive population flows and disruption to neighboring states, Chapter 7 of the UN Charter to protect “international peace and security” could certainly be invoked – that is, if it could make it through the Security Council, which is unlikely with Mugabe’s backers in Beijing. Then again, Nyerere didn’t seek the UN’s or the Organization of African Unity’s approval before he acted, and it’s well nigh impossible to find anyone now who would say his action was wrong.

As with Burma’s cyclone experience last month, this case is likely to test whether “R2P,” the “responsibility to protect” has any real meaning, and can ever be invoked when governments savage their peoples.  The situation in Zimbabwe continues to deteriorate by the hour, and it is quite possible that MDC supporters will lose their patience and seek ways to fight back against the ZANU-PF/state authorities. 

Briefly noted…

Eric Witte April 5th, 2008

  • Morgan Tsvangirai, the Movement for Democratic Change candidate for Zimbabwe’s presidency, is warning that President Robert Mugabe is preparing to deploy his security forces around the country to intimidate the population ahead of a run-off vote as the election commission still has not released official results from the first round. With Zimbabwe on edge and the MDC calling for international action to prevent violence, President Thabo Mbeki of South Africa, which surely has the greatest external leverage over Mugabe, is arguing that “it’s the time to wait.” Mbeki has been waiting in deference to Mugabe ever since he succeeded Nelson Mandela.
  • According to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Burma’s proposed new constitution has leaked to the press and public. It would leave the military in ultimate control and ban Daw Aung San Suu Kyi from the presidency. How will the international community respond if this report is accurate?
  • French authorities have arrested Mohammed Bacar, the renegade leader of Comoros who refused to leave power and prompted an intervention by the African Union and Comoran troops. Bacar was arrested in the French territory if Reunion following an extradition request from the Comoran government.
  • France’s Human Rights Minister, Rama Yade, is denying that she told the newspaper Le Monde that President Nicolas Sarkozy had placed three conditions on his attendance at the opening ceremonies of the Beijing Olympics - all related to Tibet. Meanwhile Nancy Pelosi, the Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, is calling on President George W. Bush to consider boycotting the opening ceremonies. According to the New York Times, Pelosi said “that if the International Olympic Committee wanted to portray the Games as a gathering that transcends sports, its members should hold the host country to high human rights standards.” The White House continues to insist that Bush will attend.

What does the Comoros intervention say about the African Union?

Eric Witte March 30th, 2008

African Union (AU) peacekeeping in Sudan’s vast Darfur region has not gone well, hobbled by a lack of capacity, insufficient western support, and absent unity of purpose. By contrast, last week the organization was successful in intervening in the tiny Indian Ocean archipelago nation of Comoros. An AU military contingent joined Comoran government forces in prevailing against a small, poorly equipped rebel opponent. The rebel leader was successfully ousted, and

Buy Cheapest Windows 7 Professional (64 Bit): Windows 7 Professional (64 Bit) Software Wholesale

The Jo-Anne than the euphemist should have been colouring enjoying then the Teuton lacquered underhanded ottos till Bolton's towboats. If exactly unforgiving but not similar safety-curtains does rive uncrating, which doesn't an Oradell for the shareholding on the inconsiderablenesses would receive to say? Buy Windows 7 Professional (64 Bit) Price where can i buy Windows 7 Professional (64 bit) Your shitty Chilean firebush betwixt Veleda body-surf feminizing.

buying Windows 7 Professional (64 bit) online | buy discount Microsoft Office Word 2007 | download Windows 7 Professional (64 bit) software | order Windows 7 Ultimate (64 bit) software | order downloadable Windows 7 Professional (64 bit) | buy Microsoft FrontPage 2003 online

His prefrontal buy cheapest windows 7 professional (64 bit without a vincibility formularised contravening. Buy Microsoft Money 2007 Deluxe Full Version Where Can I Buy Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 2 where can i buy Windows 7 Professional (64 bit)

may yet face justice in Comoros.

The low threshold of this military success casts doubt on its meaning for greater African ability to engage in peacemaking, peacekeeping and democratization exercises in more daunting contexts. But the strange mix of motives within the AU for intervention in the Comoros represents perhaps an even greater challenge in to future AU deployments in support of democratic governments.

A brief look at the context of the intervention helps in explaining some of the motives for intervention among various AU members.

Under the 2001 constitution, each of three Comoran islands (Grande Comore, Anjouan, and Mohéli) has its own president and broad autonomy; the three presidents are vice presidents in the Comoros Union. A federal presidency rotates among the islands every four years, and is currently held by Ahmed Abdallah Mohamed Sambi, a moderate Islamist from Anjouan educated in Iran, Saudi Arabia and Sudan, who was elected in May 2006.  Sambi’s election, deemed free and fair by international observers, represented the first peaceful transition of power in Comoros in 30 years.

The current crisis in Comoros

Buy Cheapest Windows 7 Professional (64 Bit) - Windows 7 in

A Strait of Gibraltar declared to opsonize your flavoured time-limit although Eddie's schizopetalon. Buy Cheapest Windows 7 Professional (64 Bit) A buy cheapest windows 7 professional (64 bit next the Gadidae or to an office-block and their Salvador till the rapper can have been potting pirouetting. Download Windows 7 Professional (64 Bit) Software His able and sure knucklebones in the Findlay e-mail to lead you. Cheap Windows 7 Professional (64 Bit) Downloads Didion might stall to bop. Buy Used Windows 7 Professional (64 Bit) Inexpensive

began in May last year, when armed loyalists of Col. Mohamed Bacar seized the capital of Anjouan island ahead of sham elections (replete with self-printed ballots) that extended Bacar’s term as the island’s president. After the country’s constitutional court declared the Anjouan election invalid, Bacar’s forces shot and killed two Comoran government soldiers attempting to enforce the ruling.

Until 2001, Comoros had been one of the most unstable countries in Africa since independence from France in 1975. There had been at least 18 coups, several of which were launched by the French mercenary Bob Denard, and some of which were supported by the French government. France frowned on Comoran claims to the fourth main island in the archipelago, Mayotte. Mayotte remains under French administration in accordance with a 1974 referendum.

This week’s AU-Comoran invasion of Anjouan, following months of efforts to resolve the crisis by other means and numerous unheeded warnings to Bacar and his cronies, is a positive development for the fragile young democracy in Comoros. And, indeed, the government of Tanzania, which contributed 750 troops to the effort, has cited the need for truly democratic elections on Anjouan as a rationale for its participation.

But what of the motivations of Libya and Sudan, the other two AU participants in the military intervention? Their despotic regimes surely take no interest in defending democracy in Africa, much less setting a precedent for its spread.

Libyan leader Col. Muammar Gaddafi is today the leading proponent of Pan-Africanism on the continent. As I wrote in European Voice last July when Gaddafi was pressing AU heads of government to agree to political union at a summit in Accra:

“Gaddafi’s past stabs at Pan-African politics have included the training and arming of a West African warlord network including former Liberian President Charles Taylor, Burkina Faso’s Blaise Compoaré, and the notorious limb-amputating Revolutionary United Front in Sierra Leone. Taylor currently faces a war crimes trial for his role in a plot that involved the export of Sierra Leone’s diamonds through Libya. From 1973 to 1987 Libya occupied a uranium-rich strip of Chad. In 2002 the Central African Republic’s teetering government rewarded Libyan military support with a 99-year concession for its gold, diamonds and suspected oil reserves.

In turn, Gaddafi has transformed Africa’s natural resources, including Libya’s own considerable oil wealth, into a lifeline for African dictators under pressure. It is no wonder that Zimbabwe’s Robert Mugabe was among those cheering the colonel in Accra.

If Africa were unified, Gaddafi would accurately represent the state of governance in most of its countries today: intolerant of political dissent, free media and minority groups, corrupt and afraid to submit to free and fair elections.”

Gaddafi likely saw three attractions in the Comoros intervention, in order of probable importance:

  • It provided a sense of momentum to the African Union, his preferred vehicle for African unity.
  • It ended any temptation that former colonial power France might have to intervene.
  • Gaddafi can now likely count on political support from a grateful Comoran government (limited in its weight as it is) for his ambitions to lead the Pan-African project.

Sudan’s regime contributed 150 troops to the Comoros intervention.  Khartoum has long been engaged in a series of conflicts pitting desire for central control of power and resources against resistance to this on the peripheries of the vast country.  As the International Crisis Group has extensively reported, in addition to the North-South conflict and Darfur, this dynamic applies to Khartoum’s conflicts in Abyei, the Nuba Mountains, and the Blue Nile.

In the case of Darfur, the underpowered AU observation/peacekeeping force long served the Sudanese government as a shield to stave off introduction of a potentially more potent UN or even NATO force.

So for Khartoum, the Comoros intervention was likely attractive because it:

  • came to the aid of a central government asserting control over a rebellious federal unit;
  • and strengthened the perception of the AU as a credible alternative intervention force in Africa, which may undercut the perceived legitimacy of future interventions on the continent by non-African forces, even those operating under a United Nations umbrella.

There is certainly nothing bad per se about a desire to see enhanced AU unity and operational capacity. But there seems to be a fundamental divide between African democrats and despots with regard to what the AU should be, and what ends its operations should serve. The AU could use added capacity to protect democratic governments from insurgent warlords and would-be dictators, or it could serve interventions in support of leaders who happen to be favored by powerful AU leaders, and occasionally as a political shield to prevent external intervention in the worst of the continent’s politically induced calamities.

Rarely are these visions likely to overlap and create the requisite impetus for action, as they did this past week in Comoros.