LEADER 09807oam 2200709 a 450 001 9910971523703321 005 20200520144314.0 010 $a9798400607462 010 $a9786610422890 010 $a9781280422898 010 $a1280422890 010 $a9780313012419 010 $a0313012415 024 7 $a10.5040/9798400607462 035 $a(CKB)111087026966174 035 $a(OCoLC)191950853 035 $a(CaPaEBR)ebrary10023304 035 $a(SSID)ssj0000099935 035 $a(PQKBManifestationID)11124697 035 $a(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000099935 035 $a(PQKBWorkID)10014631 035 $a(PQKB)10132114 035 $a(Au-PeEL)EBL3000830 035 $a(CaPaEBR)ebr10023304 035 $a(OCoLC)55504641 035 $a(OCoLC)48053892 035 $a(DLC)BP9798400607462BC 035 $a(MiAaPQ)EBC3000830 035 $a(Perlego)4202583 035 $a(EXLCZ)99111087026966174 100 $a20010925e20022024 uy 0 101 0 $aeng 135 $aurcn||||||||| 181 $ctxt$2rdacontent 182 $cc$2rdamedia 183 $acr$2rdacarrier 200 10$aAfrica's first peacekeeping operation $ethe OAU in Chad, 1981-1982 /$fTerry M. Mays 205 $a1st ed. 210 1$aWestport, Conn. :$cPraeger,$d2002. 210 2$aLondon :$cBloomsbury Publishing,$d2024 215 $a1 online resource (xiv, 192 pages) $cportraits 300 $aBibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph 311 08$a9780275976064 311 08$a0275976068 320 $aIncludes bibliographical references (p. [169]-186) and index. 327 $aCover -- AFRICA'S FIRST PEACEKEEPING OPERATION -- Contents -- Illustrations -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Chapter 1 Peacekeeping as a Foreign Policy Tool -- OVERVIEW -- WHAT IS PEACEKEEPING? -- FACTORS OF SUCCESS -- Consent and Acceptance by the Belligerents -- Neutrality -- Concurrent Peace Negotiations -- Clear Mandate -- OUTLINE OF THE BOOK -- NOTES -- Chapter 2 Background to the Chadian Crisis -- FACTORS BEHIND THE CHADIAN CIVIL WAR -- Factionalism and French Colonialism -- Libya -- INTERNATIONAL REACTION TO THE CHADIAN CIVIL WAR AND LIBYAN INVOLVEMENT IN THE CONFLICT -- Nigeria -- Francophone African States -- France -- United States -- Great Britain -- CHADIAN CIVIL WAR: 1966-1979 -- NOTES -- Chapter 3 The First Peacekeeping Operations in Chad -- THE KANO CONFERENCES AND THE 1979 NIGERIAN UNILATERAL PEACEKEEPING OPERATION -- Kano I (March 11-16, 1979) -- Kano II (April 3-11, 1979) -- LAGOS I (MAY 26-27, 1979) AND THE ORIGINS OF A PAN-AFRICAN PEACEKEEPING FORCE FOR CHAD -- 1979 NIGERIAN UNILATERAL PEACEKEEPING OPERATION: LESSONS LEARNED -- Consent and Acceptance by the Belligerents -- Neutrality -- Peacekeepers -- Chadian Factions -- France -- Francophone States -- Bordering States -- Concurrent Peace Negotiations -- Clear Mandate -- THE OAU AND THE ENDORSEMENT OF THE NIGERIAN-LED PEACE PROCESS -- OAU Defense Commission (April 21-27, 1979) -- OAU Annual Summit (July 17-21, 1979) -- MANDATING THE FIRST OAU PEACEKEEPING FORCE IN CHAD -- Lagos II (August 14-21, 1979) -- OAU Council of Ministers (February 6-15, 1980) and a Special OAU Conference on Peacekeeping (March 24-26, 1980) -- 1980 OAU PEACEKEEPING OPERATION: LESSONS LEARNED (OR RELEARNED) -- Consent and Acceptance of Belligerents -- Neutrality -- Peacekeepers -- Chadian Factions -- France -- Concurrent Peace Negotiations -- Clear Mandate. 327 $aTHE 1980 OAU PEACEKEEPING OPERATION: LOGISTICAL PROBLEMS -- NOTES -- Chapter 4 Planning a New OAU Peacekeeping Operation for Chad -- OAU ECONOMIC SUMMIT (APRIL 28-30 1980): NIGERIA REINTRODUCES THE CONCEPT OF PEACEKEEPING IN CHAD -- THE OAU AND THE ENDORSEMENT OF A SECOND MULTINATIONAL PEACEKEEPING OPERATION IN CHAD -- OAU Council of Ministers (June 23-29, 1980) -- OAU Annual Summit (July 1-4, 1980) -- THE OAU AD HOC COMMITTEE ON CHAD -- First Conference (November 27-28, 1980) -- Second Conference (December 23-24, 1980) -- Third Conference (January 13-14, 1981) -- THE OAU PLANS A NEW MULTINATIONAL PEACEKEEPING OPERATION -- Nigeria-Libya Bilateral Discussion (February 14, 1981) -- OAU Council of Ministers (February 23-March 2, 1981) -- OAU Mini-Summit on Chad (May 21-22, 1981) -- OAU Annual Summit (June 24-28, 1981) -- FRENCH INITIATIVES IN SUPPORT OF OAU PEACEKEEPING -- France-Chad Bilateral Talks (September 16-18, 1981) -- North-South Economic Summit (October 20-22, 1981) -- Franco-African Annual Summit (November 2-4, 1981) -- NOTES -- Chapter 5 The 1981-1982 OAU Peacekeeping Force in Chad: A Political View -- MANDATING AND FIELDING THE OAU PEACEKEEPING OPERATION -- OAU Foreign Minister's Conference (November 13, 1981) and the Paris Accord (November 14, 1981) -- The Arrival of the OAU Peacekeeping Force and OAU Ad Hoc Committee on Chad Conference (November 27-28, 1981) -- MAINTAINING THE OAU PEACEKEEPING OPERATION -- OAU Contingent Providers Meeting (January 6, 1982) -- OAU Ad Hoc Committee on Chad (February 10-11, 1982) -- OAU Council of Ministers (February 21-22, 1982) -- OAU Mini-Summit on Chad (May 21-22, 1982) -- NOTES -- Chapter 6 The 1981-1982 OAU Peacekeeping Force in Chad: Contingents and Political Organization -- SECURING CONTINGENTS -- Algeria -- Benin -- Cameroon -- Congo -- Egypt -- Ethiopia -- Gabon -- Guinea -- Guinea-Bissau. 327 $aIvory Coast -- Kenya -- Libya -- Madagascar -- Mali -- Nigeria -- Senegal -- Sudan -- Togo -- Upper Volta -- Zaire -- Zambia -- POLITICAL ORGANIZATION -- Chad Committee -- OAU Chairman -- OAU Secretary-General -- OAU Special Representative in Chad -- OAU Peacekeeping Operations Committee -- OAU Force Commander -- NOTES -- Chapter 7 The 1981-1982 OAU Peacekeeping Force in Chad: A Military View -- INITIAL DEPLOYMENT -- MILITARY ORGANIZATION -- FUNDING AND LOGISTICAL SUPPORT -- U.S. AID FOR ZAIRE: A CASE STUDY -- REDEPLOYMENT: PHASE 1 -- Zone 1 (Zone A) -- Zone 2 (Zone B) -- Zone 3 (Zone C) -- Zone 4 (Zone D) -- Zone 5 (Zone E) -- Zone 6 -- Zone 7 -- Zone 8 -- SECON IN MONGO: A CASE STUDY -- REDEPLOYMENT: PHASE 2 -- FINAL FAN OFFENSIVE AND WITHDRAWAL OF THE OAU FROM CHAD -- NOTES -- Chapter 8 Summary, Conclusions, and Impact on the Future of African Peacekeeping -- THE 1981-1982 OAU PEACEKEEPING OPERATION AS AN EXTENSION OF STATE FOREIGN POLICY -- Nigeria -- France -- United States -- Great Britain -- THE 1981-1982 OAU PEACEKEEPING OPERATION AND THE FOUR FACTORS OF SUCCESS -- Consent and Acceptance by the Belligerents -- Neutrality -- Peacekeepers -- GUNT and FAN -- Concurrent Peace Negotiations -- Clear Mandate -- IMPACT OF THE 1981-1982 OAU PEACEKEEPING OPERATION ON THE FUTURE OF AFRICAN PEACEKEEPING -- NOTES -- Appendix 1 Chronology (1979-1982) -- Appendix 2 OAU Status of Forces Agreement -- Bibliography -- Index -- About the Author. 330 8 $aIn 1981 the Organization of African Unity (OAU) mandated and fielded the first regional peacekeeping operation since the Arab League's mission in Kuwait 20 years earlier. Battalion-sized contingents from Nigeria, Senegal, and Zaire were joined by smaller observer contingents from other OAU members in an effort to provide a buffer zone between the two main factions in the Chadian civil war. Mays opens his analysis by providing an overview of the concept of peacekeeping. Several definitions are offered to help distinguish between the various types of peace operations. After examining the concept hegemon, he looks at the ways regional and subregional hegemons utilize peacekeeping operations as foreign policy tools as they protect their interests. Mays argues that Nigeria, as a West African hegemon, served as the moving force behind the mandating and fielding of the OAU peacekeeping mission in Chad. Rather than being purely humanitarian in nature, Nigeria's motivation included the removal of French and later Libyan soldiers from a weak state on its border. However, Nigeria could not perform the task alone. France and the United States were instrumental as well in the mandating and fielding process. French and American interests stemmed from concern over Libyan motives in Chad. Nigeria kept the effort to mandate the peacekeeping operation alive for two years; France proved to be the stimulus behind persuading the Chadian government to accept the deployment of OAU peacekeepers and prompting the Senegalese to contribute a battalion to the mission; the United States contributed by keeping France and Nigeria focused on a peacekeeping solution and helping persuade Zaire to join the mission. Mays offers the first comprehensive examination of the OAU peacekeeping mission and reviews the political and military organization of the force as well as its deployment, redeployment plans, logistics, and operations between the Chadian factions. Utilizing an extensive collection of resources, including interviews with participants, diplomats, and government documents, he provdies a detailed examination of every meeting/conference between 1979 and 1981 that discussed a peacekeeping option for Chad. Factors of success in traditional peacekeeping operations are applied to the OAU mission, and he concludes by reviewing the impact of the 1981-1982 OAU operation on current African peacekeeping trends. An invaluable analysis for scholars, students, and other researchers involved with peacekeeping, international relations, and African studies. 606 $aPeacekeeping forces, African$zChad 606 $aPeacekeeping forces$zChad 615 0$aPeacekeeping forces, African 615 0$aPeacekeeping forces 676 $a967.4304/2 700 $aMays$b Terry M$0253154 801 0$bDLC 801 1$bDLC 801 2$bDLC 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910971523703321 996 $aAfrica's first peacekeeping operation$94358568 997 $aUNINA