African-led peacekeeping fills a UN-sized hole

African-led peacekeeping fills a UN-sized hole

By Obi Anyadike, The New Humanitarian

It was grinding urban warfare. In one month alone, more than 50 African Union troops were killed – as were an unknown number of civilians. It wasn’t until October 2011 that AMISOM finally overran al-Shabab’s last strongholds in the north of the city. (See The New Humanitarian’s film Soldiers’ Stories, which followed Ugandan troops during the so-called “Battle for Mogadishu”.)

Ugandan troops of the African Union Mission to Somalia (AMISOM) during the final stages of an offensive to push al-Shabab militants out of the capital, Mogadishu.

This wasn’t peacekeeping in the traditional sense, where UN blue helmets oversee an existing peace agreement and use only minimum force. This was heavily militarised expeditionary peace enforcement – part of a trend in which conflicts have become more complex, and peace operations increasingly look like counter-terrorism missions. 

AMISOM was sent to Somalia in 2007 to support a weak but internationally backed transitional government against an insurgent movement that had grown out of resistance to a US-backed Ethiopian invasion in December 2006.

At the time, AMISOM was a unique military intervention. Although it deployed under AU command and control, it was dependent on a mix of international partnerships. Six African countries eventually provided the troops and the EU paid their stipends. AMISOM’s logistics operation was handled by the UN, the United States and other Western countries provided various training and equipment programmes, with the UN Security Council approving its overall mandate.

Eighteen years on, al-Shabab remains a potent presence in Somalia’s south-central countryside. AMISOM found itself hamstrung by inconsistent financing, shortages of equipment, poor coordination, and the complexity of Somalia’s domestic politics.

Rather than being on the front foot, it became a garrisoning operation. The Somali armed forces – that were supposed to take over – have remained fragile and externally dependent.

Two years ago, AMISOM was reconfigured as the African Union Transition Mission in Somalia, with an exit date set for the end of 2024. However, with the war stalemated, it is expected to be rehatted in 2025 as the AU Support and Stabilisation Mission in Somalia (AUSSOM).

The clue to its priorities are in the name – “stabilising” the country to provide the federal government the space to expand its legitimacy and challenge al-Shabab’s authority. Protection of civilians will also be an explicit function – a step towards addressing AMISOM’s worrying rights record, which undermined its support among Somali citizens.

Faster and cheaper

AUSSOM is an African-led peace support operation (PSO) – the latest iteration of a trend in interventions that have become an integral part of the international system’s response to security challenges on the continent.

They fill a vacuum created by an ideologically log-jammed and penny-pinching UN Security Council that has fallen out of love with large, multidimensional missions. African governments and regional organisations are not only taking on the responsibilities once assumed by the UN, they are also accepting riskier deployments that the UN’s Department of Peace Operations would tend to avoid.

UN missions traditionally deploy with all-party consent, consolidating an existing peace agreement. African PSOs are geared to intervene offensively in ongoing conflicts. These are increasingly more transnational – involving violent extremism and banditry – which can generate monumental levels of violence and humanitarian suffering.

“The UN deploys where there is peace to be kept, African-led PSOs deploy where there is no peace at all,” said Andrew Tchie, a senior researcher at NUPI, the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs. “[PSOs] demonstrate a more local, context-specific response to insecurity, and the goal of turning to more self-help options.”

Yet the shift from UN peace operations towards militarised regional missions and so-called ad hoc coalitions can be worrisome, argues Eugene Chen, a senior fellow with the New York University’s Center on International Cooperation.

“In particular, this turn back towards counter-terrorism, peace enforcement, and other types of kinetic operations can actually be counter-productive in resolving conflicts,” he told The New Humanitarian. “It can exacerbate grievances and other socio-political and economic risk factors for violence.”

There is no one-size-fits-all approach for the form PSOs have taken. They have varied from a few dozen personnel, to the 22,000 troops AMISOM had at its height. Mandates also differ – from hard-edged cross-border counter-insurgency operations, to support for the Ebola health response. 

What they do share, however, is a common ability to deploy much faster and more cheaply than UN missions. They also typically work in tandem with the armed forces of the host government.

A patchwork of interventions

African-led PSOs include AU-run missions like AMISOM/AUSSOM. There are also deployments by regional economic communities (RECs), such as the Southern African Development Community (SADC) intervention in northern Mozambique in 2021; and  ad hoc, task-specific initiatives like the four-country Multinational Joint Task Force (MNJTF) tackling Boko Haram in the Lake Chad region.

These coalition arrangements, in particular, mark a significant shift from institutionalised responses to security challenges – and often come with very little human rights oversight.

Since 2004, the AU has had a framework in place for a continent-wide African Standby Force (ASF). It’s designed to be multidisciplinary – combining soldiers, civilians, and police – and coordinated by the five regional economic communities, with each brigade-sized military component capable of rapid deployment.

But it has remained on the shelf and has never actually been used.

Part of the problem is the flawed assumption – made 20 years ago – that underpins it: The AU’s Peace and Security Council, the continental organ responsible for the management of conflicts, was expected to initiate deployment of the ASF. But in fact it has been regional organisations that have increasingly asserted their primacy when it comes to security issues.

It was SADC that deployed troops to Mozambique in 2021, and SADC that took over in 2023 from an East African Community force that had struggled to restore stability to the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo. AU endorsement of these missions came after the fact.

With each conflict unique, more organic coalitions have increasingly become the norm – tailored to the specific context. Like REC deployments, these are typically short-term missions, aimed at restoring order before handing over to host governments.

“Some fear that ad hoc coalitions are a fragmentation of the international system and contribute to a kind of delegitimisation of the African Union and United Nations,” Cedric de Coning, a senior researcher at NUPI, told The New Humanitarian.

“I see ad hocism as the system has become more sophisticated and resilient, able to deal with problems in a greater variety of ways.”

Read more: African-led peacekeeping fills a UN-sized hole

Source: The New Humanitarian

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.