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Mercenaries in Africa after 1960

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mercenaries have played a vital role in the modern history of Africa from the independent movements of the 1960s up until the 2020s. Broadly the mercenary actions can be broken into two types of related actors, which can then be examined regionally. Mercenaries have been used to both influence conflicts in order to support or attack governments friendly to various foreign governments, notably the United States, Russia, France, the United Kingdom, Belgium, and many other foreign actors.[1][2][3][4] This is mainly done to maintain spheres of influence, and create friendly governments.[2] This was most prevalent during the Cold War era, but continues to this day, notably with the Russian Wagner Group.[4] The second group of actions are mercenaries working on behalf of large multinational corporations, helping to secure resource extraction areas. Oftentimes the support of mercenary groups to keep a leader or government in power comes at a large cost, that the government is unable to pay, who then offers the mercenary company or Private Military Company (PMC) rights to resource extraction areas such as diamond mines, oil fields or other valuable natural resource to pay for the services of the mercenary company. This has notably happened in Sierra Leone.[5] Legislation has been adopted by the OAU (Organization for African Unity) as well as the IRCC (International Red Cross Committee), and various African governments (notably South Africa) to attempt to regulate or ban the use and creation of mercenary companies.[6] This legislation has been mostly unsuccessful largely because world powers such as the United States and Russia continue to condone the use of mercenaries as a tool of state craft.[5] Many modern scholars consider the use of mercenaries in Africa to be a form of neocolonialism.[5]

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Transcription

Mercenaries and foreign actors

Mercenaries as actors for former colonial powers

During and directly after the African Independence movement foreign nations used mercenaries to influence the civil wars and violence in the newly created states. This group of mercenaries assisted the rise of leaders who were friendly to the previously colonizing nation.[1] These mercenaries can be considered an extension of the armed forces of the colonizing nation, able to operate with a thin veneer of deniability due to them not being directly enlisted in the colonizing states armed forces. Examples of this are the French Foreign Legion, as well as numerous other French mercenaries, the Dutch mercenaries in the Congo, the South African and British mercenaries in Angola, Namibia and Mozambique, as well as others.[5][3] These mercenaries were seen as a vital way to keep former colonies in the sphere of influence of the former colonizing power, and to ensure that the economic interests of the former power continued to be served by the newly independent state. The strategies employed by these groups included training and fomenting rebels, carrying out coup-de-tats, defending unpopular leaders, and political intimidation.

Dutch mercenaries in the Congo were involved in the secessionist movement of the Katanga Province directly after the Congo became independent from Belgium in 1960. The Katanga province was the site of large mineral wealth, and the Belgian government had a continued interest in accessing those resources. As such, Belgian mercenaries provided assistance to the Katangan secessionists, and were involved in the execution of Patrice Lumumba in 1961.[7] These efforts were relatively successful in that Joseph Mobutu became the leader of the Congo, and he would continue to provide access to the Katangan mines to the Belgian corporations that operated in the province.[7]

Mercenaries as Cold War actors

The second group of mercenaries are those that were employed by Cold War actors, most significantly the United States and Russia. These mercenaries were not deployed for an economic concern, but instead for ideological reasons, most often the fight against or for Communism.[2] The United States and allies in particular, used mercenaries to aid and encourage rebel factions, and right wing factions in Africa, as part of a global fight against communism (see Operation Condor). These mercenaries were often ideological radicals who had come to have a deep hatred for Communism. Additionally these mercenaries often had white supremacist connections, along with their right wing beliefs.[2] There was a large faction of Cubans and Cuban Americans who joined these efforts, after having fled the Cuban Revolution.[2] The use of mercenaries allowed the United States in particular to maintain its neutrality, and respect for self determination, while still being heavily involved in the creation and propping up of right wing dictatorships in many of these new states. Additionally, it allowed the United States, and allies such as the UK to continue to support the South African military, and other white supremacist groups in Southern Africa, while South Africa was under embargo for the Apartheid.[3][2]

The Angolan and Mozambican wars of liberation saw the involvement of large groups of foreign mercenaries. The CIA and South African support for UNITA and the FNLA was kept relatively covert, which relied on the use of mercenaries, and shipments of large amounts of weapons and other armament material.[2] South African mercenaries, Cuban exile mercenaries, and American mercenaries all played a role, fighting against the left aligned MPLA, and helping to prop up Jonas Savimbi's regime.[2] The conflict came to be a proxy war between the Western bloc and the Eastern bloc, with the USSR and Cuba mainly supporting the MPLA and the US and South Africa supporting UNITA and Jonas Savimbi.

Mercenaries and multinational corporations

In the more modern era, many governments, having been embarrassed or exposed for their support or ignoring of mercenaries have passed laws that prevent the creation and support of mercenary groups by their government, and within their nation.[8] Along with this there has been a corporatization of the private security industry, with the creation of Private Security Companies (PMC's) that operate in largely above-board manners. This newer era of mercenary action is deeply involved with control and extraction of resources in Africa, especially with valuable natural resources such as oil. gems, and other precious minerals.[5] The general business model is to protect the resource rich areas in exchange for the rights to extract them. This is usually done with the help of multiple corporations, with the PMC owning a large stake in the company that is then awarded the contracts by the government for which the PMC has provided security for. As long as the contracts continue to provide revenue flow, the government in question can afford to use the PMC to prop up the state, but if and when the revenue flow is lost, the PMC will pull out of the state, and the state most often reverts to the chaos that required the help of the PMC in the first place.[5] In this sense the actions of PMC's are seen as neo-colonialism by many experts.[5] Research seems to have shown that PMC's do little to help the long term stability of the state, and are wildly expensive[6] making them an ineffective tool of statecraft.

This exact business model was implemented in Sierra Leone in the 1990s. With the start of the Sierra Leonean Civil War in 1994, the rebels quickly captured the most important economic areas of the state, the mining areas. In order to protect the government in Freetown, the capital, and regain control of the country, the National Provisional Ruling Council (NPRC) government hired Executive Outcomes Ltd in March 1995.[5] They were paid US$1.25 million a month, and the NPRC granted large mining concessions to Branch Energy, a mining company that is partially owned by Executive Outcomes Ltd. The cost of maintaining Executive Outcomes soon became too much for the NPRC government, and in February 1997, they left.[5]

In the vacuum of force that occurred after this, the NPRC government was quickly overthrown by a coalition of the military and the Revolutionary United Front (RUF). In order to restore the government, the Sandline International Corporation was hired, paid for by the businessman Rakesh Saxena, who had a controlling interest in the company Diamond Works of Vancouver, which had bought Branch Energy.[5] In exchange for restoring the constitution, the Branch Energy company would be entitled to major mining concessions in Sierra Leone, and exempt from a law prohibiting the operation of mining companies without at least a 25% ownership by a Sierra Leonian citizen.[5]

Legality of mercenary actions

Mercenaries are banned by the 2001 United Nations Mercenary Convention, but many nations, notably the United States, France, South Africa, the United Kingdom, China and Russia have not ratified or signed it, and nations such as Belgium and others have signed with reservations, which significantly weakened the treaty. Domestically, France has banned all mercenaries from operating or recruiting within its borders.[8] South Africa, the home base of many African operating PMC's, has taken steps to regulate and outright ban the operation of mercenaries within the state, but has run into constitutional challenges, along with issues of being able to prosecute under the law.[6] Many African nations have banned the deployment of mercenaries within their borders, but lack the ability to enforce such laws. Many of the former colonizing powers, have used mercenaries as a tool for state interference.[2] This has changed somewhat with the corporatization of mercenaries, with legislation that legalizes their activity, as long as they operate only in the interests of the nation where they are based.[5] In September 2021, a United Nations working group called for the introduction of a "binding international legal framework" to regulate the actions of private military companies.[9] In February 2022 African Union Commissioner for Political Affairs, Peace, and Security Bankole Adeoye called for the "complete exclusion of mercenaries from the African continent."[9]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Rookes, Stephen; Bruyère-Ostells, Walter (2022-02-17). "Mercenaries in the Congo and Biafra, 1960-1970: Africa's weapon of choice?". Small Wars & Insurgencies. 33 (1–2): 112–129. doi:10.1080/09592318.2021.1957535. ISSN 0959-2318. S2CID 239664793.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Churchill, Ward (1980). "U.S. Mercenaries in Southern Africa: The Recruiting Network and U.S. Policy". Indiana University Press.
  3. ^ a b c Hughes, Geraint (2014-05-27). "Soldiers of Misfortune: the Angolan Civil War, The British Mercenary Intervention, and UK Policy towards Southern Africa, 1975–6". The International History Review. 36 (3): 493–512. doi:10.1080/07075332.2013.836120. ISSN 0707-5332. S2CID 153969333.
  4. ^ a b Troianovski, Anton (August 1, 2018). "Russian Filmmakers Killed in Africa Were Investigating Mercenaries Close to the Kremlin". The Washington Post. p. 29.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Francis, David J (April 1999). "Mercenary intervention in Sierra Leone: Providing national security or international exploitation?". Third World Quarterly. 20 (2): 319–338. doi:10.1080/01436599913785. ISSN 0143-6597.
  6. ^ a b c Bosch, Shannon; Maritz, Marelie (2017-06-09). "South African Private Security Contractors Active in Armed Conflicts: Citizenship, Prosecution and the Right to Work". Potchefstroom Electronic Law Journal. 14 (7): 70–125. doi:10.17159/1727-3781/2011/v14i7a2618. ISSN 1727-3781.
  7. ^ a b Heinz, Donnay, G, H (1970). Lumumba: The Last Fifty Days. New York: Grove.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ a b Michaud, Paul (October 2003). "No More Mercenaries". New African. p. 29.
  9. ^ a b Cascals, Antonio; Koubakin, Reliou (15 April 2022). "The rise of mercenary armies in Africa". Deutsche Welle. Retrieved 14 May 2022.

Works cited

Bosch, Shannon, and Marelie Maritz. “South African Private Security Contractors Active in Armed Conflicts: Citizenship, Prosecution and the Right to Work.” Potchefstroom Electronic Law Journal, vol. 14, no. 7, 2017, pp. 70–125., https://doi.org/10.17159/1727-3781/2011/v14i7a2618.

Churchill, Ward. U.S. Mercenaries in Southern Africa: The Recruiting Network and U.S. Policy. Indiana University Press, 1980.

Francis, David J. “Mercenary Intervention in Sierra Leone: Providing National Security or International Exploitation?” Third World Quarterly, vol. 20, no. 2, Apr. 1999, pp. 319–338., https://doi.org/10.1080/01436599913785.

Hughes, Geraint. “Soldiers of Misfortune: The Angolan Civil War, the British Mercenary Intervention, and UK Policy towards Southern Africa, 1975–6.” The International History Review, vol. 36, no. 3, 2014, pp. 493–512., https://doi.org/10.1080/07075332.2013.836120.

Michaud, Paul. “No More Mercenaries.” New African, Oct. 2003, pp. 29–29.

Rookes, Stephen, and Walter Bruyère-Ostells. “Mercenaries in the Congo and Biafra, 1960-1970: Africa's Weapon of Choice?” Small Wars & Insurgencies, vol. 33, no. 1–2, 2021, pp. 112–129., https://doi.org/10.1080/09592318.2021.1957535.

Troianovski, Anton. “Russian Filmmakers Killed in Africa Were Investigating Mercenaries Close to the Kremlin.” Washington Post, 1 Aug. 2018.

Heinz, G., and H. Donnay. Lumumba: The Last Fifty Days. New York: Grove, 1970.

This page was last edited on 19 March 2024, at 10:19
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