2024-03-28T17:45:57Zhttp://etd.uwc.ac.za/oai/requestoai:etd.uwc.ac.za:11394/18852017-08-01T19:37:50Zcom_11394_131com_11394_4col_11394_3259
African military intervention in African conflicts: an analysis of military intervention in Rwanda, the DRC and Lesotho
Likoti, Fako Johnson
Thompson, Lisa
School of Government
Faculty of Economics and Management Sciences
Conflict management - Africa
Sub-Saharan
Humanitarian intervention - Africa
Sub-Saharan Peacekeeping forces - Africa
Sub-Saharan Africa
Sub-Saharan - Politics and government
Philosophiae Doctor - PhD
The dissertation examines three military interventions in Sub-Saharan Africa which took place in the mid and late 1990s in Rwanda, the DRC and Lesotho. These interventions took place despite high expectations of international and regional peace on the part of most analysts after the collapse of cold war in 1989. However, interstate and intrastate conflicts re-emerged with more intensity than ever before, and sub-Saharan Africa proved to be no exception.The study sets out to analyse the motives and/or causes of military interventions in Rwanda in 1990, the DRC in 1996-7, and the DRC military rebellion and the Lesotho intervention in 1998. In analysing these interventions, the study borrows extensively from the work of dominant security theorists of international relations, predominantly realists who conceptualise international relations as a struggle for power and survival in the anarchic world. The purpose of this analysis is fourfold; firstly, to determine the reasons for military interventions and the extent to which these interventions were conducted on humanitarian grounds; secondly, to investigate the degree to which or not intervening countries were spurred by their national interests; thirdly, to assess the roles of international organisations like Southern African Development Community (SADC), the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) and the United Nations, in facilitating these interventions; as well as to evaluate the role of parliaments of intervening countries in authorising or not these military interventions in terms of holding their Executives accountable. In this context, the analysis argues that the intervening countries; Angola, Botswana, Burundi, Chad, Namibia, Rwanda, Sudan, South Africa, Uganda and Zimbabwe appeared to have used intervention as a realist foreign policy tool in the absence of authorisation from the United Nations and its subordinate bodies such as the OAU and SADC.
South Africa
2013-08-08T10:34:16Z
2007/06/19 08:43
2007/07/20
2013-08-08T10:34:16Z
2006
Thesis
http://hdl.handle.net/11394/1885
en
University of the Western Cape
application/pdf
University of the Western Cape