ABUJA, Nigeria
Defense chiefs of West Africa on Thursday, June 27 proposed a plan to deploy a 5,000-strong “standby force” to fight the region’s worsening security crises, a measure that analysts say might not work due to challenges of funding and division within the regional bloc.
The plan, which will cost $2.6
billion annually, was proposed to heads of state at a meeting of defense
officials in Nigeria's capital of Abuja. The plan was also aimed at preventing
further coups following a string of military takeovers that have destabilized
the region, Nigeria’s Defense Minister Mohammed Badaru said.
Thursday’s meeting is the
first time the bloc is mapping out publicly the financing of its
long-talked-about standby force. However, analysts identified challenges it
might face, including the shortage of funds from member states required to
contribute money and securing the support of coup-hit countries most affected
by the security crises.
“More than ever, we are at a
pivotal moment in the history of our community to address insecurity,” said
Omar Alieu Touray, president of the regional bloc of ECOWAS Commission, as he
urged member-states to support the force. Their proposals are expected to be
considered at the upcoming summit of the regional heads of state.
The resurgence of coups in
West and Central Africa – with four of its nations being run by military
governments – has divided the 15-nation ECOWAS and destabilized the region,
especially the coup-hit countries of Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger, which are worst-hit
by the deadly violence now spreading to coastal nations.
ECOWAS has unsuccessfully
tried to return democracies in these countries. Their best shot with now-lifted
economic sanctions resulted in the three coup-hit countries withdrawing their
membership and opening more windows for Russian mercenaries in the region.
Touray, the ECOWAS commission
president, said the bloc invited officials from the coup-hit countries of Mali,
Burkina Faso and Niger to attend Thursday’s meeting and join in forming such a
force. It was not immediately clear if the countries would agree to this.
“I don’t think ECOWAS has the
capacity to launch military interventions without foreign assistance,” said Ulf
Laessing, head of the Sahel program at the Konrad Adenauer Foundation.
Such a standby force can only
work if ECOWAS gets the commitment of all its member states and if the bloc
maps out a strategy to deal with Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger, said Kars de
Bruijne, a senior research fellow at the Clingendael Institute think tank.
“Delivering (on such plans)
has been the issue with ECOWAS for a long time,” he said.
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