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View Full Version : U.S. OKs Peacekeepers to the Ivory Coast



Uncle Sam
02-18-2004, 05:54 PM
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20040218/D80PE3DO0.html



UNITED NATIONS (AP) - The United States has agreed to the deployment of more than 6,000 U.N. peacekeepers for war-divided Ivory Coast and has asked Congress for approval, Ambassador John Negroponte said Tuesday.

Negroponte said the request for congressional authorization was submitted last week. The United States will not contribute any troops to the force, but Congress needs to approve the request because the United States pays 27 percent of all U.N. peacekeeping costs.

Last month, France circulated a draft resolution calling for a 6,240-strong U.N. force and 150 civilian police to replace the 1,000 West African troops and 150 West African gendarmes now in the former French colony.

More than 4,000 French troops trying to help keep the peace will remain in the country but will not be part of the U.N. force.

The United States initially expressed reservations about the size of the proposed U.N. force. But Negroponte said the U.S. government has agreed to the deployment.

In a report last month recommending a U.N. force, Secretary-General Kofi Annan said the West African peacekeepers were overstretched and that requests for more money from donor nations hadn't been answered.

Paris initially pressed for a U.N. decision by Feb. 4, the date authorization for the small U.N. military liaison mission and the West African troops expired. The Security Council extended the authorizations until Feb. 27.

China's U.N. Ambassador Wang Guangya, the current council president, said he expects the U.N. force to be approved by Feb. 27.

The French want the U.N. force to monitor a cease-fire and assist Ivory Coast's transitional power-sharing government in disarming and repatriating the former combatants. They also want U.N. peacekeepers to help the government extend its authority throughout the country and prepare for elections in 2005.

Ivory Coast for decades was West Africa's most stable and prosperous country. It remains the world's largest cocoa producer, but a 1999 coup has ushered in political, regional, ethnic and religious tensions and violence.

The country has been split between rebel north and government south since rebellion broke out in September 2002 after a failed coup. The Security Council has called on the parties to implement the peace agreement brokered in France a year ago that ended major fighting.

usa320
02-18-2004, 06:30 PM
Will US forces be part of the deployment?

garyfanclub
02-19-2004, 11:59 AM
Hopefully not, our soldiers have bigger fish to fry, no need to waste top quality line infantry troops in peacekeeping duties when they could be put to better use in Iraq.

marktigger
02-19-2004, 12:50 PM
it'll probably be the usual suspects Ireland, Sweden, Belgium will provide a chunk of the rest plus some other countries who want chunks of their military paid for by the UN.

fantassin
02-19-2004, 01:05 PM
The MINUCI has been preparing this mission for a while.

http://www.un.org/Depts/dpko/missions/minuci/

The French have been asking for blue helmet for ages to replace their forces there; the US opposition was pure tit for tat after France's opposition to the war in Iraq.

I suppose the gradual warming up of the relationship between the two countries made this possible.

usa320
02-19-2004, 01:27 PM
I cant forsee any major American involvement. Maybe a MEU or QRF, but nothing more than security forces for the security forces.

marktigger
02-19-2004, 01:37 PM
usa320 there probably won't be anywhere near that number of US troops deployed. The op will be split between alot of countries like Malaysia, Ireland and i'm sure some of the arfican and souh americans will send troops.

fantassin
02-19-2004, 01:48 PM
They'll receive the usual contingent of frightened Pakistanis, shoe-less Bangladeshies, trigger-happy Jordanians, sleepy Ghaneans and stern looking Indians...if they are lucky.

Then they'll slowly get in the swing of things when the local prostitutes, sorry, students, will come and say "hello, it's love passing by..."

Hopefully, the stalemate wont last too long.

Royal
02-20-2004, 05:37 AM
They'll receive the usual contingent of frightened Pakistanis, shoe-less Bangladeshies, trigger-happy Jordanians, sleepy Ghaneans and stern looking Indians...if they are lucky.

Then they'll slowly get in the swing of things when the local prostitutes, sorry, students, will come and say "hello, it's love passing by..."

Hopefully, the stalemate wont last too long.

Yeah,

at least the stern Indians and ragged Kenyans can fight ;)