Long road to an African rapid reaction force
HIGHLIGHTS
* New rapid reaction mechanism (ACIRC) gains traction
* Nigeria cool on ACIRC
* Recent interventions in DRC spark debate
* Some African military interventions too partisan
JOHANNESBURG, 22 February 2014 (IRIN) - The African Union (AU) is rethinking
on how it can most effectively deploy military forces to tackle the
continent’s crises.
The African Capacity for Immediate Response to Crises (ACIRC) was
<
http://www.irinnews.org/report/95426/security-a-quick-reaction-force-moulde
d-by-africa-s-circumstances> first floated in the AU in 2013 as a stop-gap
measure to counter the continued delays of an African Standby Force (ASF),
which includes a quick reaction force, the Rapid Deployment Capability
(RDC).
The recent spike in African conflicts, with former colonial powers stepping
in to try preventing crimes from escalating into mass atrocities, has given
the ACIRC concept renewed impetus.
In 2013 the AU’s
<
http://www.issafrica.org/uploads/Annual_Review_PSC_2013-2014.pdf> Peace and
Security Council convened “its greatest number of meetings… since it became
operational in 2004”, but other than African armies participating in support
of other military actors it had no capacity to respond to rapidly evolving
conflicts and humanitarian crises.
“The French, in a period of less than one year, came to the ‘rescue’ of two
countries [Mali and Central African Republic (CAR)] in need of military
support [and] showed the failure of African countries to respond decisively
and be in charge of the process,” said Solomon Dersso, a senior researcher
in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, for the <
http://www.issafrica.org> Institute for
Security Studies (ISS), a think-tank based in Pretoria, South Africa.
“AU member states failed to muster the required responses, and whatever
responses they marshalled in the end were too late, too little,” he told
IRIN.
African states bailed out by former colonial powers are a “humiliation” for
the AU, analysts say, and make a mockery of “African solutions for African
problems”. The continental body’s January 2014 summit in Addis Ababa was
called the Year of Agriculture and Food Security, but security concerns
dominated the agenda.
One of the summit’s
<
http://agenda2063.au.int/en/news/22nd-ordinary-session-african-union-assemb
ly-concludes-summary-key-decisions> key decisions was the establishment of
“a panel of independent experts to assess the status of the
operationalization of the African Standby Force and its RDC, as well as the
development of proposals for the operationalization of ACIRC.”
A “comprehensive report” on the progress of the ASF and the ACIRC is due in
June/July 2014.
Nigerian cold feet
ASF was expected to be operational in 2008, but the latest deadline is 2015.
It is expected to have 25,000 troops drawn from Africa’s five regional
economic blocs, as well as thousands of personnel in non-military support
roles, such as policing and humanitarian affairs. However, while ASF enjoys
consensus among AU members, the proposed ACIRC is creating fault lines among
its 54 member states.
South Africa and Algeria are the ACIRC’s most powerful proponents, and are
joined by Angola, Chad, Liberia, Niger, Senegal, Sudan, Tanzania and Uganda.
But Nigeria - emerging as Africa’s largest economy - has cooled towards the
ACIRC.
Dersso said Nigeria’s absence as an “active supporter of ACIRC” was a “major
gap… with all its experience in undertaking and leading operations [in the
<
http://www.irinnews.org/report/96436/analysis-towards-intervention-in-mali>
Economic Community of West African States] for a long time, and as one of
the power houses of Africa”.
Johan Potgieter, a senior ISS conflict researcher, told IRIN he favoured
Nigeria’s decision to distance itself from the ACIRC. “We [Africa] are too
quick to reinvent the wheel. Let us rather develop the [ASF] concept to its
logical conclusion before we start with a new concept. The development of
the ASF… [has come] a long way, and many arguments for and against the
current concept were exhaustively examined. Let us finish the job first,
before we start a new one.”
The DRC intervention experience
The ACIRC concept, tabled by South Africa at the AU, strongly resembles the
<
http://www.irinnews.org/report/98514/north-kivu-braces-for-potential-un-arm
ed-group-clashes> Force Intervention Brigade (FIB), deployed in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) to “neutralize” armed groups as part
of a UN mandate to restore stability in the country’s resource-rich east.
South Africa contributed its best troops and an array of military hardware,
including its Rooivalk attack helicopter, state of the art communications
and aerial surveillance, and operated in concert with Malawian and Tanzanian
troops.
Unlike the RDC of the ASF, the ACIRC has no scope for civilian roles in its
force design, such as forensic detectives and child experts, which “are
critical when there is evidence of genocide or gross violations of human
rights,” Potgieter said.
Although analysts viewed the FIB as a prototype for the ACIRC, operations
against the M23 were conducted in an area with an established peacekeeping
force infrastructure, including vital civilian components. The role of any
African quick reaction force is to rapidly deploy and provide a 90-day
window for the arrival of forces under the banner of the UN. The FIB
deployment in the DRC was a reversal of this scenario.
ACIRC is seen as a resource with highly trained specialist units of 1,500
troops drawn from a pool of 5,000 soldiers, requiring airborne troops and
air-delivered logistics to fulfil its mandate.
The African Standby Force’s false dawns have seen frustration and cynicism
creep in, but Lesley Anne Warner, Africa analyst at the US-based
<
https://www.cna.org/centers/strategic-studies> CNA Center for Strategic
Studies, told IRIN that “the slow rate of progress towards… [setting] up the
ASF… [shows] the true complexity of establishing such a force.”
Even with an operational ASF, recent conflicts have illustrated that
military preparedness is not the only drag factor “when there has been a
demand signal for intervention”, she said.
Deploying FIB to the DRC took months. The protocols and considerations of AU
states “negotiating amongst themselves to determine which member states are
capable and unbiased enough to be troop contributors, what the scope of the
mandate should be, and whether the AU and UN will approve it, and which
member states or international donors can pay for the intervention force. In
some cases, like in Mali, such deliberations take so long that they are
overtaken by events on the ground that necessitate Western intervention,”
Warner said.
Analysts have argued that even with a fully operational ASF at hand,
multiple threats might overwhelm its capacity to intervene, despite the
narrative of the African Renaissance and impressive economic growth. “Ten
countries in Africa will continue to remain fragile in the mid-21st
century,” Jakkie Cilliers and Timothy Disk forecast in
<
http://www.issafrica.org/publications/papers/prospects-for-africas-26-fragi
le-countries> Prospects for Africa’s 26 Fragile Countries, an African
Futures Paper.
“There are concerns that the establishment of ACIRC may compete with and
divert attention away from the ASF,” Dersso noted. “This is a bit of an
exaggerated or misplaced concern. Currently, African countries deploy troops
in various situations - the recent, most related experience is the
intervention brigade in DRC - and to the extent that such deployments do not
undermine or compete with ASF, the same logic seems to apply here as well.”
In the absence of an ASF and fast reaction units, the troop contributions of
African countries to peacekeeping and peace enforcement duties have
escalated in recent years.
Steady increase in African peacekeepers
“In the last decade, 10 AU and Regional Missions were deployed. During this
period we saw a steady increase in contributing to UN peacekeeping, from
about 10,000 in 2003 to 35,000 in 2013. This implies that more than 75,000
African peacekeepers participated in UN and African peace operations during
2013. The… planned ASF of about 25,000 troops… has therefore already been
achieved,” Annette Leijenaar, head of the conflict and peacebuilding
divisions at ISS, and Helmoed Heitman, an independent military analyst, said
in a January 2014 policy brief:
<
http://www.issafrica.org/iss-today/africa-can-solve-its-own-problems-with-p
roper-planning-and-full-implementation-of-the-african-standby-force> Africa
can solve its own problems with proper planning and full implementation of
the African Standby Force.
However, with greater coordination and cooperation by AU states, “Africa
might not need to rely on US and European [militaries] for the airlifting of
troops, since the aircraft in African air forces are already capable of
transporting everything but heavy vehicles,” the authors point out.
But regional powers need to “pull their weight… Some argue that South Africa
is doing far less than it should, given the strength of its economy. Angola
does very little in terms of peacekeeping - except for a small deployment to
<
http://www.irinnews.org/report/95340/analysis-latest-coup-another-setback-f
or-guinea-bissau> Guinea-Bissau, despite a large army and reasonable airlift
capacity - and Egypt, with its enormous transport fleet, could offer to
airlift troops to conflict zones,” the policy brief said.
The injudicious use of military force, and the inherent dangers of
“meddling” and “bilateral military” interventions in the absence of
intervention forces - and wise counsel - can provoke more, rather than less
conflict.
Africa analyst Warner said “bilateral” interventions were not necessarily
“negative”, as long as “the intervening force is perceived by both parties
to conflict as a neutral stakeholder rather than… partisan.”
“The problem has been when countries like South Africa, Chad, and Uganda
have intervened in CAR and South Sudan in a definitively partisan role.
What’s worse is that, unlike South Africa and Uganda, Chad is supposed to be
acting on behalf of MISCA [International Support Mission to CAR], which has
AU and UN mandates. However, no member of the international community
appears willing to take on allegations of Chadian support for former Seleka
fighters,” Warner said.
South Africa’s flawed military intervention in CAR
South Africa’s disastrous deployment to the CAR at the request of former
president François Bozizé, resulting in the deaths of 14 South African
soldiers by Seleka militias - the country’s highest number of military
deaths in a
<
http://www.irinnews.org/report/99683/long-road-to-an-african-rapid-reaction
-force> single
http://cdncache1-a.akamaihd.net/items/it/img/arrow-10x10.png
episode since the end of apartheid in 1994 - angered both Seleka and
regional powers, but the catalyst for CAR’s descent into humanitarian
catastrophe was the regionalization of peace and security.
According to a 2013-2014
<
http://www.issafrica.org/uploads/Annual_Review_PSC_2013-2014.pdf> ISS
review of the African Union Peace and Security Council (PSC), “the Economic
Community of Central African States countries” defied the AU by “for
example, refus[ing] to comply with the decisions of the PSC to isolate the
Seleka leaders”.
“We saw the case of regional countries exceeding their limits and
interfering with [the] internal politics of failing… countries [or those] in
conflict. In CAR, we saw the countries of the region playing kingmaker on a
scale and form unprecedented in recent history,” Dersso said.
Leijenaar and Heitman said in their policy brief: “For the ASF to succeed,
it is also crucial that internal differences and lack of coordination within
the AU be addressed. The debate around regional brigades came to the fore
with the overthrow of former president François Bozizé in the CAR… when
regional forces simply stood aside.”
Criticism of Uganda
Ugandan parliamentary approval to deploy its defence forces to protect its
nationals and assets in Juba, the capital of South Sudan, and elsewhere in
the country, ended with the Uganda People’s Defence Force (UPDF) supporting
President Salva Kiir against Vice President Riek Machar’s forces.
“The manner in which Uganda is securing its interests compromises concurrent
efforts on the part of the Intergovernmental Authority on Development
(IGAD), of which Uganda is a member, to mediate the crisis,” Warner said in
a January
<
http://africanarguments.org/2014/01/31/museveni-plays-peacemaker-by-day-and
-combatant-by-night-in-south-sudan-by-lesley-anne-warner> 2014 briefing:
Museveni [Uganda’s president] plays peacemaker by day and combatant by night
in South Sudan.
“UPDF operations should have occurred under the auspices of IGAD and, with
an AU or UN mandate, restricted to protecting civilians and strategic
installations once its mission surpassed the evacuation of Ugandan
nationals. Instead, Uganda’s current roles as both combatant and peace
<
http://www.irinnews.org/report/99683/long-road-to-an-african-rapid-reaction
-force> broker
http://cdncache1-a.akamaihd.net/items/it/img/arrow-10x10.png
runs the risk of damaging what is supposed to be a legitimate and
non-partisan IGAD mediation process.”
“The issue of [a] regional dimension of conflicts would surely affect
decision-making processes and the politics of the deployment of ACIRC, if…
[it] eventually comes into existence,” Dersso said.
“Depending on how ACIRC is organized, and its deployment is determined,
there is a possibility that ACIRC may address aspects of the negative
involvement of neighbouring countries.”
go/he/cb
Received on Sat Feb 22 2014 - 18:25:51 EST