Название: Foreign Intervention in Africa after the Cold War
Автор: Elizabeth Schmidt
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Историческая литература
Серия: Research in International Studies, Global and Comparative Studies
isbn: 9780896805040
isbn:
Suggested Readings follow chapters 2–12
Illustrations
Maps
0.2. North Africa, the Middle East, and Central Asia, 2018
5.1. Sudan and South Sudan, 2018
6.1. Rwanda, 2018
7.1. Democratic Republic of Congo, 2018
8.1. Liberia and Sierra Leone, 2018
9.1. Côte d’Ivoire, 2018
10.1. North Africa, 2018
11.1. Mali and Nigeria, 2018
12.1. The United States in Africa, 2018
Photographs
4.1. US Marines participate in UNITAF search in Mogadishu, Somalia
4.2. Children walk past graffiti criticizing UN special envoy Jonathan Howe
4.3. Ethiopian troops participate in AMISOM patrol in Somalia
5.1. Armed children in southern Sudan
5.2. JEM rebels in Darfur, Sudan
6.1. French soldiers pass Hutu Rwandan army troops in Rwanda
6.2. Children orphaned or displaced search for food in Zaire
7.1. Rwandan Hutu refugees on the jungle track in the DRC
7.2. Young soldiers of the Union of Congolese Patriots
7.3. Child gold miner in the DRC
7.4. Congolese army and MONUSCO reinforce their presence in the DRC
8.1. ECOMOG soldier from Nigeria provides security for ECOMOG personnel in Liberia
8.2. Unidentified rebel fighters during the Liberian civil war
8.3. RUF victim Abu Bakarr Kargbo, assisted by his son Abu
9.1. Rebel soldiers on patrol near the Liberian and Guinean borders in Côte d’Ivoire
9.2. Anti-Gbagbo protester in Abidjan
10.1. Tunisians protest the Ben Ali regime
10.2. Woman protesting the Mubarak government in Cairo
10.3. Egyptian protester mounts a bronze lion in Cairo
10.4. Rebels celebrate on abandoned Libyan army tanks
11.1. MNLA fighter stands guard in Mali
11.2. Ansar Dine fighter in Timbuktu, Mali
11.3. Chadian army soldiers participate in Operation Serval and AFISMA in Mali
11.4. French Operation Barkhane personnel speak with an elder in Mali
11.5. Nigerien soldiers fighting Boko Haram in Niger
Foreword
Elizabeth Schmidt’s earlier work, Foreign Intervention in Africa (2013), focused on the period 1945–91, with a brief concluding chapter on 1991–2010. This companion volume focuses on 1991–2017, with a final chapter highlighting the potential impact of the Trump presidency. Schmidt’s approach in the two volumes is similar. Her aim is not to provide a comprehensive narrative or advance an explanatory theory, but to introduce a series of case studies, taking into account global narratives and common factors as well as the particularity and nuances of each case.
Intended for undergraduate and graduate students as well as policymakers, humanitarian and human rights workers, activists, and other concerned citizens, both books provide succinct and readable narratives, without detailed footnotes but with abundant recommended readings for those who wish to dig more deeply into particular cases.1 As such, they are unique resources that provide an overview and introduction to the complex realities they portray, complementing but not duplicating more detailed scholarly or journalistic accounts of specific cases.
As this foreword is written in early 2018, the Trump presidency in the United States has been the catalyst for a level of uncertainty about the shape of the international political order not matched since World War II. Any predictions would be perilous, except to affirm that African countries will continue to be gravely affected by global political developments as well as by the distinct internal dynamics of specific countries and regions.
As Schmidt explains, global narratives are both essential and misleading in explaining the course and outcomes of intervention in specific conflicts. Thus the grand narrative of the “Cold War” between the United States and the Soviet Union, from 1945 to 1991, was decisive for interventions in African conflicts insofar as it motivated perceptions and policy in Washington, Moscow, and other capitals. Cold War perceptions conflating radical African nationalism and communism affected policymakers, the media, and public opinion, not only in countries such as the United States and South Africa, but also in transnational networks and multilateral organizations.
Even in this period, however, the Cold War paradigm was not fully hegemonic. The alternative framework of a united stand against Nazism, racism, and colonialism, linked to the common experience of World War II, was shared by Southern African liberation movements and by governments and movements around the world, including many in Western Europe and North America. An exclusive focus on the superpowers, moreover, ignores the distinct interests and roles of other external actors, including the European colonial powers and other communist states, most prominently Cuba and China. And finally, the interests of the African actors involved in conflicts, and the colonial and precolonial histories of specific countries, also shaped the outcomes. In some cases, African parties to conflict sought out foreign interventions—for their own reasons.
Unraveling the course of any specific intervention thus requires a high degree of granularity, at the risk of asking the reader to assimilate a potentially bewildering range of names and places. Political actors such as states, parties, and agencies are not unitary: each is made up of subgroups and individuals with distinct interests, ideologies, and analyses. Schmidt’s СКАЧАТЬ