Draft: Please do not quote or cite
African Militaries and Rebellion:
The Political Economy of Threat and Combat Effectiveness
Jeffrey Herbst*
Paper to be presented at the conference on “Civil War Duration and Post-Conflict Transitions,” University of California, Irvine, 18-20 May 2001.
Professor of Politics and International Affairs, Bendheim Hall, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544. Phone: 609 258-2160. Fax: 609 258-4772. [email protected]
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War in Africa, and in other parts of the world, has recently attracted
significant attention given the cost of those conflicts in human lives and damage
to national and regional economies. A growing and p roductive literature has
emerged focussing on the motivations of rebels during these wars. Important
econometric work has attempted to explain the economic and political
motivations of rebels (Collier and Hoeffler: 1998); there have been case studies
of different guerilla movements (e.g., Clapham: 1998); and cross-national
analysis of the organization of rebellion (Herbst: 2000a). However, there has
been no corresponding literature on, quite literally, the other side: the political
economy of how and why national militaries perform during civil war. This paper
will examine the political and economic determinants of how African militaries
face the threat of rebellion and of differential levels of effectiveness in combating
insurgents. It will thus attempt to complement the literature that has recently
emerged on rebellion with what might be called an examination of the industrial
organization of counter-insurgency.
The paper argues that the particular threat posed by insurgency in Africa
must be understood in order to analyze how militaries operate. By examining the
life cycle of rebellion in Africa, I conclude that some economic models of the
relationship between investments in national armies and combat cabilities are not
applicable to the way wars are actually fought. In particular, it is difficult to
associate investments in the military with force projection because it may only be
possible early in an insurgency to defeat rebels through military means.
However, few African armies are able to mobilize quickly enough to defeat an
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insurgency in its early phases. At the same time, who the enemy is—especially
whether citizens are asked to fight other citizens or foreigners—has an impact on
the ability to mobilize in the face of a threat. Yet the characteristics of the enemy
are often ignored when trying to model the military.
The Underdeveloped Study of Militaries
The failure to study militaries as important actors in rebellions is
surprising. Indeed, the most obvious question concerning almost all the civil
wars in Africa is: Why have militaries performed so poorly given that the actual
armed threat post by rebels (who are often poorly organized, employ large
number of child soldiers, and are inadequately funded) can best be described as
pathetic? For instance, the Revolutionary United Front in Sierra Leone, while
posing a persistent threat to the government in Freetown and adept at brutalizing
civilians, was never much of a fighting force and was effectively deterred by the
appearance of a few hundred British Marines and special forces units. Yet, very
few African armies have won outright victories against rebels or have been able
to change the military facts on the ground so that rebels would have to sue for
peace.
Indeed, the conduct of militaries during civil wars is a critical determinant
of the duration and course of conflict. Young makes the obvious point: “military
factors, although often neglected by academics, have often determined the
ultimate outcome of modern African insurgencies (1996, p. 179).” Similarly,
Russell noted in one of the rare systematic studies of rebellion “No mass
rebellion can succeed without the defection of some of the regime’s armed
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forces. . . In a situation where people are rebelling, the behavior of the armed
forces has been shown to be a decisive factor in the outcome of the rebellion.
For revolutionaries to come to terms with this means that they must devote a
great deal of thought to how to encourage defections from the police and the
army (1974, p. 87).” Similarly, Herbst (2000a) finds that the degree of threat post
by the armed forces of the state is a critical determinant of how rebels will
structure their own forces.
Unfortunately, beyond specialists writing for other security analysts, there
is only a poorly developed literature on African militaries qua militaries. Most of
the analysis on African militaries has focused on their roles in coups or as
leaders of government because most armies on the continent have interfered far
more often with their own political system than have fought on the battlefield.
Indeed, relatively few African militaries have had any experience in combat
although that observation is less true than it was a generation ago given the
number of African countries that are now at war. Thus, even the most critical
questions regarding the competence of national militaries to fight have only been
examined in a cursory manner. For instance, as William Thom notes, “The ability
of African armies to expand their force levels in response to hostilities is not well
understood, mostly because little is known about military reserves and
mobilization systems. The response is to rate mobilization as very low if not nil
(Thom: 1988, p. 20).” More generally, Snyder claims that “There is no well-
defined relationship between a nation’s security and its own and other states’
military expenditures (Snyder: 1986, p. 119).
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Understanding African Militaries
There are hints in the literature that militaries do not only fight for the
public good but also have economic agendas (Reno: 2000). However, there has
been no systematic study of how militaries operate from a political economy
perspective. The implicit assumption in the literature has been that while rebels
may have a host of motivations beyond their stated political and ideological aims,
militaries in Africa and elsewhere defend the state. For instance, Grossman
argues, “The function of the soldiers is to protect the income of the ruler’s
clientele either by deterring the potential insurgent leader from organizing an
insurrection or by counteracting actual insurgents (Grossman: 1995, p. 194).”
Olson has in many ways provided the best description of why rulers
provide security. In his model, if a leader is strong enough to hold territory and
monopolize theft--what Olson calls a “stationary bandit--” he has an interest in his
domain prospering. Olson argues that, “This encompassing interest leads him to
[the leader] . . . spend some of the resources that he controls on public goods
that benefit his victims no less than himself. . . he prohibits the murder or
maiming of his subjects. . . He serves his interests by spending some of the
resources that he controls to deter crime among his subjects and to provide other
public goods (Olson: 2000, p . 10).” This is an important explanation of how a
secure environment develops without having to assume good intentions on the
part of the leader. However, Olson does not suggest how even a leader with
significant interests in providing security can actually go about doing it. Indeed,
Olson appears to make a series of unexplored assumptions about how leaders
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can keep control over their security forces and have them continue to fight for
him when there are clear private gains to be made by the men with guns if they
follow their own agenda and not the leaders.
It is generally assumed that armies can be modeled using an easily
recognizable function that relates competence in combat to the inputs allocated
to the military. Thus, in Hirshleifer’s model, there is a “combat power function” in
which resources devoted to combat readiness determine success in
appropriation (1988, p. 207). Similarly, Polo describes a “black box” where, “We
assume military capacity to be an increasing function of the number of members
of the organization: all the relevant functions—monitoring, intelligence and
violence—require labor as a fundamental input (Polo: 1995, p. 89).” However, it
is important to note that Polo also includes a spatial dimension that complicates
the simple input model: “The second key feature is related to the spatial
dimension in which the military activity takes place: when an organization is
trying to hit a target, all the preliminary steps and the final violent action increase
in complexity with the distance of the target (Polo: 1995, p. 89).” This (relatively
rare) acknowledgement of the spatial dimension of conflict is important and, as
will be noted below, particularly appropriate to the kind of conflict African armies
are now fighting.
The problem with the relatively simple view of military prowess being
related to inputs is that it does not fit the observable facts. In countries where all
institutions are weak, armies cannot simply be assumed to just fight for leaders.
Indeed, national armies are often the most significant threats that leaders face.
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More generally, whether soldiers will risk their lives for a leader who may or may
not have paid them in the previous few months is a complicated question. Also,
classic questions of morale and esprit de corps—the obsession of many leaders
have even highly institutionalized armies—are always difficult to judge. Thus,
Thom has written, “Whether an army will fight rather than flee when faced with
organized armed opposition is both the simplest yet most difficult judgment to
make. In some instances the answer will differ depending on the nature of the
type of threat and the foe (Thom: 1988, p. 12).” Indeed, warfare in Africa is often
not so much a question of who dominates the battlefield but who runs away first.
For instance, during Laurent Kabila’s march on Kinshasa in 1997, the favored
rebel strategy was not to fight the national army but to devise methods that would
allow the government’s forces to implement their preferred strategy of continua l
retreat. This usually meant that the rebels would not completely encircle the
government forces but would usually leave a corridor for the troops to exit,
however ungracefully. Thus, as the rebels approached a town, the Zairian forces
would “panic, loot, then flee toward the next town where the process would be
repeated.” This pattern characterized most of the “fighting” during the war
although there were pockets of Zairian soldiers who held out and fought. (Thom:
1999, p. 117).
The Evolution of African Militaries
To gain a more nunaced understanding of why African militaries actually
fight, their evolution must be understood. The history of most African militaries
begins at independence in the 1960’s. While the Europeans mobilized large
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numbers of Africans to fight in each of the two world wars, these forces were
quickly drawn down once those conflicts ended. Most armies during the terminal
colonial period were more recognizable as mechanized police forces than as
combat units. In the British-ruled colonies, even during the terminal colonial
period, when security forces might have been expected to have grown due to the
nationalist upheavals, the number of men in arms was seldom over one per
thousand civilians compared to one in a hundred for Britain and other developed
countries. For both France and Britain, Gutteridge concludes that the low
number of men in arms suggests a, “willingness to operate locally on a very
narrow margin of safety in relation to any security crisis. . . . The European
powers in Africa raised local colonial military forces to fit their world -wide
strategic needs; and their criteria, therefore, rested inevitably on imperial rather
than on local policy. . .(Gutteridge: 1970, p. 316)”
African armies expanded rapidly after independence and took roughly
fifteen years to reach maturity. In 1963, at the dawn of independence, the
average African army had 0.73 soldiers for every thousand people. By 1979, that
figure had more than quadrupled to 3.10 soldiers per thousand citizens. As
economic crisis began to grip the continent, the size of African armies then
began to decrease so that by the mid-1990s, there were only two soldiers per
thousand citizens across the continent (calculated from Morrison, Mitchell and
Naber: 1989, pp. 167-8; U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency: 1985, p.
47 and ACDA: 1995., p. 54). African armies are, by comparative standards,
small. In 1997, African countries (including the relatively well funded countries of
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North Africa), had on average, only sixty-nine percent as many soldiers, per
thousand citizens, as the average developing country (2.2 versus 3.2) (U.S.
ACDA: 1999, table 1).
Inevitably, the picture of African militaries in general decline becomes
Table 1: Soldiers per thousand citizens, 1987 to 1997 Country Percent Change
1987 to 1997 Country Percent Change
1987 to 1997
Mozambique -82.6087 Sao Tome and Principe -21.5909Ethiopia -74.2857 Swaziland -17.9487Guinea -64.4444 Lesotho -16.6667Nigeria -58.8235 Eritrea -13.9535Equatorial Guinea -50.8475 Chad -12.5Mauritania -50.5495 Malawi -11.1111Ghana -50 Namibia -10.7143Guinea-Bissau -50 Mauritius -10Congo, Rep. -44.9275 Angola -4.25532Senegal -44.4444 Gabon -2.32558Madagascar -40 Kenya 0South Africa -37.931 Mali 0Cameroon -35.7143 Zambia 0Gambia, The -33.3333 Togo 4.166667Sierra Leone -33.3333 Cote d'Ivoire 25Tanzania -29.4118 Sudan 33.33333Niger -28.5714 Uganda 43.75Burkina Faso -27.2727 Botswana 52.94118Congo, Dem. Rep. -26.6667 Benin 55.55556Central African Republic -26.3158 Burundi 225Zimbabwe -24.4898 Rwanda 550Calculated from U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency: 1999. more complicated when the focus is placed on individual countries. Table one
arrays African countries according to the change in the size of their armies over
the last decade and does demonstrate a decline in the armed forces of most
countries. Indeed, most forces did experience a reduction not only in manpower
but also in underlying capabilities. As William C. Thom stated:
Most African state armies are in decline, beset by a combination of
shrinking budgets, international pressures to downsize and demobilize,
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and the lack of the freely accessible military assistance that characterized
the cold war period. With few exceptions, heavy weapons lie dormant,
equipment is in disrepair, and training is almost nonexistent. . . . the
principal forces of order are in disorder in many countries at a time when
the legitimacy of central governments (and indeed sometimes the state) is
in doubt (Thom: 1995, p. 3).
For instance, a parliamentary report on Zimbabwe’s army—long thought to be
one of the most competent militaries on the continent—found that the force had
only five percent of its vehicles in working order, monthly pilot training had been
abandoned, and seventy percent of the troops in one brigade had been off duty
for a year or more, on forced leaves to save money (Harare Zimbabwe Standard:
1998).
Increasingly, weak or failing states find it difficult to even pay key elements
of their security apparatus, causing a gradual decay in public order. Low or
negative per capita economic growth in many African countries suggests that this
sort of gradual dissolution will become even more common in the future. At the
same time, a few African countries have developed unprecedented abilities to
project force in other countries even while they are unable to control their own
territory. The ability of the Angolan military to move forces in division size
echelons to attack the regime of Patrick Lissouba in Congo-Brazzaville in 1997
was perhaps the best indication of the new capabilities of a small number of
African militaries to operate away from their own borders. Yet, at the same time,
the Angolan military has been unable to defeat the UNITA insurgency in the
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southern part of its own country. The ability of Uganda, Rwanda, Zimbabwe and
Namibia all to operate forward positions in Democratic Republic of Congo also
suggests that at least a handful of countries can operate in foreign theaters
although the internal defenses of these countries remains problematic. Indeed,
Uganda has become a significant military force in the Democratic Republic of
Congo even while it is unable to defeat insurgents coming into its own territory
from Sudan. As will be explained below, there are good reasons why countries
may decide to gain greater competencies in foreign adventurism than in internal
defense.
Threat Analysis
To better understand how African armies actually fight, and when they will
fight, it is important to understand the threat they face and their ability to respond.
Of course, the actual analysis of the relationship between the deployment of
soldiers, the use of coercion, and victory is, not surprisingly, a very difficult set o f
issues to understand. As Brockett notes, “The consequences of government
repression for mass protest and rebellion have been the subject of much
scholarly attention. Theories have been advanced for linear relationships, but in
both negative and positive directions. Curvilinear relationships have also been
proposed, again with the curves running in both directions. Each of these four
models have found some empirical support—but also contradiction—from a
variety of cross-national aggregate data studies (Brockett: 1995, p. 118).” In
order to get out of this analytic box, it is particularly important to describe the
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particular circumstances of combat in Africa and the possible strategies of rebels
and of national armies.
The context of most African countries about to experience conflict is that
intelligence of what is happening on the ground is weak. In Africa, even
countries with relatively well-resourced security and intelligence agencies often
do not understand how they have been penetrated by insurgents until after the
fighting has begun. For instance, the presence of cells of the terrorist Osama bin
Laden in Kenya, revealed after the US Embassy in Nairobi was blown-up in
1998, appears to have come as a surprise to the authorities. Similarly, South
African authorities have been generally unsuccessful in understanding the
degree to which foreign Muslim powers have developed ties with PAGAD, a local
vigilante/criminal gang. Countries with fewer intelligence resources often have
little idea that conflict is about to begin within their own territory.
Initial phases of insurgency
While every insurgency, like every unhappy family, is different, some
generalizations about the threat facing national armies across Africa can be
made. Insurgencies generally start small. The eleven men who started the
fighting in Eritrea (Pateman: 1998, p. 117), the famous twenty-seven fighters
who began the National Resistance Movement’s campaign in Uganda
(Museveni: 1986, p. 7), the approximately one hundred soldiers of the National
Patriotic Front that crossed into Liberia with Charles Taylor (Ellis: 1999, p. 110),
the thirty-five trained soldiers who started the RUF in Sierra Leone (Abdullah and
Muana: 1998, p. 177), the two hundred and fifty that started FRELIMO
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(FRELIMO: 1982, p. 147) are representative of how vulnerable and small rebel
movements are at the beginning. Of course, many rebel movements are
defeated early or simply collapse from their internal divisions, never to be heard
from again. As a result, rebel leaders are, literally from the start, acutely
conscious of the coercive power of the state and opportunities to seek refuge
from the state.
It is at this early stage, of course, that an insurgency is most likely to be
defeated. Brockett concludes from Central America: “during ‘normal conditions’
that is, prior to the onset of a protest cycle, escalating repression will deter
popular mobilization against the regime. In contrast, in the ascendant phase of
the protest cycle, the same repression is likely to provoke increased mass
oppositional activities (1995, p. 134).” It is not surprising that when the cost of
repression fall heavily on members of a small rebel movement that they are
individually deterred (if not killed outright) but that governments find it impossible
to keep the cost of repression for each individual from falling as insurgent group
size begins to grow rapidly.
For African militaries, even rebellions in the relatively vulnerable early
stages are difficult to defeat. Given how weak intelligence systems are and how
small the insurgencies are at the beginning, it is necessary to mobilize a
significant amount of firepower in a short period of time to fight rebels when they
are most vulnerable. Indeed, militaries with intelligence services far more
capable than African states routinely mistake insurgents for criminals in the early
days of a rebellion, thereby delaying the implementation of a counter-insurgency
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campaign (Rich and Stubbs: 1997, p. 7). African militaries are far less capable
than the national forces in Central America and they often operate over much
larger territories. The very smallness of insurgencies also makes them difficult to
detect and defeat and African countries are unlikely to have the necessary
intelligence assets and co-ordinated police/military capabilities to undertake
surgical strikes.
As a result, African militaries rely on relatively blunt strikes in the hope of
defeating even small groups. Also, given that the basic local political structures
of most African counties are so underdeveloped, they usually cannot marry force
projection with a nuanced political strategy: they have no carrots, only sticks.
Indeed, the state finds any kind of local vision that might emerge from even a
proto-insurgency movement to be extremely threatening (Watts: 1997, p. 36).
Thus the following description by Watts of Nigeria’s reaction to the Prophet
Maitatsine and his followers in Kano in 1980 is typical of what African states
would at least like to do to small groups of insurgents,
Federal Nigerian armed forces began a massive military assault on the
sleepy residential and commercial quarter of ‘Yan Awaki in the walled city
of Kano, in Northern Nigeria. Under ferocious aerial and ground
bombardment, somewhere between five and ten thousand people were
slaughtered, and another fifteen thousand injured. The body of the self-
proclaimed leader, Maitatsine . . . who was killed in the conflagration, was
exhumed by the military authorities from a shallow grave outside the city
walls where he had been laid to rest by his followers, and placed on
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display at the local police. . . Those federal authorities who engaged in
the bloodletting and who self-consciously sought to quite literally
obliterate a leader and a community which saw itself as incontrovertibly
Muslim in character and constitution, were acting on the instructions of a
civilian administration presided by an aristocratic northern Muslim
(President Shagari) and a government that was widely held to be
dominated by northern Muslim elites (the so-called “Kaduna Mafia”)
(Watts: 1997, pp. 36-7).
In fact, very few African armies would have been able to duplicate the firepower
utilized by the Nigerians against this minor religious group, although few would
hesitate if they could. More often, they attempt to use overwhelming force but
fail, often with disastrous consequences. For instance, in reaction to the
incursion of Charles Taylor’s one hundred guerrillas of the National Patriotic
Front of Liberia (NPFL) in Nimba County in 1989,
Government forces in the area had responded to the first NPFL attack by
detaining suspects, which in practice meant singling out young Gio men
for arrest or murder while committing other brutalities in a region which the
Krahn—dominated milita ry regarded as enemy territory. When the
government imposed a curfew throughout Nimba Country, thousands of
local people fled into Guinea and Côte d’Ivoire, leaving Armed Forces of
Liberia (AFL) troops to loot the empty towns they found. AFL counter-
measures were ineffective since the army was receiving no support from
any part of the population in Nimba County other than its Mandingo
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residents, many of them traders and shopkeepers. Substantial numbers
of government soldiers were deserting. . . (Ellis: 1999, pp. 77-8).
Mature insurgencies
If the small rebel group survives this initial onslaught, the government
must fight a more classic type of counter-insurgency war. As hard as it is for
African militaries to fight small gangs of insurgents, more widespread warfare
involving larger echelons of troops is even more difficult. As Thom once again
notes,
Counterinsurgency is a most difficult job for any military to perform, and it
requires African armies to perform in areas where they are the weakest;
i.e., aggressive, multiple field operations with little short term payoff that
must be sustained over long periods to achieve the ultimate goal. This
requires good logistic support, mobility, maintenance, training in small unit
tactics, good leadership, especially at the junior officer and NCO levels,
and an ability to integrate military intelligence with field operations (Thom:
1988, p. 7).
In addition, counter-insurgency places significant demands on a government to
co-ordinate the (very difficult) military tasks with a comprehensive political
strategy. The United States’ own doctrinal statement on low-intensity conflict
suggests just how difficult developing a comprehensive political/military counter-
insurgency campaign can be:
(Internal defense and development) focuses on building viable political,
economic, military, and social institutions that respond to the needs of
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society. Its fundamental goal is to prevent insurgency by forestalling and
defeating the threat insurgent organizations impose and by working to
correct conditions that prompt violence. . . The government often must
overcome the inertia and incompetence of its own political system before it
can cope with the insurgency against this system. This may involve the
adoption of reforms during times of crisis, when pressures limit flexibility
and make implementation difficult (Departments of the Army and Air
Force: 1990, pp. 9 -10).
Rebels generally have more choices as an insurgency proceeds. Indeed,
“It is relatively easy in military terms to operate successfully as a guerrilla force
against a black African state: strategic soft targets such as rail lines, bridges, oil
pipelines, power stations and transmission lines are difficult to protect, yet their
destruction has great economic and psychological impact (Thom: 1988, p. 8).”
This mode of attack allows guerillas to strategically retreat from the armed forces
of the state rather than have to fight, making counter-insurgency all the more
difficult. As Yoweri Museveni noted during his struggle for power in Uganda,
“Loss of territory is, at this stage, of no consequence. In our case, the more
important considerations are the preservation and expansion of our forces by
avoiding unnecessary casualties, and destroying the enemy’s means of making
war. . . (Museveni: 1986, p. 12).” As the conflict cycle proceeds, the tasks of
rebels become relatively easier while the government finds it increasingly difficult
to fight.
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The utility of African states’ limited military assets therefore begins to
decline as
Figure 1 about here
the insurgency continues. Indeed, the armies in Africa that have waged even
temporarily successful military campaigns have had to make extraordinary efforts
that go well beyond the capabilities of most national armies. For instance, the
Portuguese response to guerrilla mines in Angola and Mozambique was a
massive road tarring exercise that exceeded even what the British attempted in
Malaya or the US in Vietnam. More generally, the entire Portuguese Army and
Air Force was reconfigured to fight guerrillas (Beckett: 1985, pp. 145-6). Even
then, while the Portuguese army performed relatively well in Mozambique and
Angola for several years, especially considering the logistical task of operating so
far from Lisbon, eventually the colonizer lost the political struggle and left Africa
in defeat.
After the initial flurry of combat that reflects the government’s initial
attempt to obliterate the rebels and the insurgents’ desire to inflict a
psychological wound on the army, rebels often establish a base in the
countryside to organize a mobile force and recruit new soldiers. This was the
pattern of insurgents in Rwanda, Uganda and the Popular Movement for
Salvation in Chad. After logistical lines are consolidated, a push for the capital is
made. Some governments are so weak that they cannot defeat even this
lightening strike and the capital is overrun. Small countries are particularly
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vulnerable to this type of two-phase campaign (see generally, Young: 1996, p.
185).
Of course, many insurgents are not able to adopt a quick capital-first
strategy and get mired in the countryside. This may occur because of the
government is able to provide point defense of the major city or because the
territory is so big that the rebel’s base is far enough from the capital that their
limited logistical ability cannot triumph over unyielding geography (e.g., Angola,
Sudan). At this point, it is possible that a stalemate begins that can continue for
many years. On the hand, the rebels cannot defeat the government because
defeat is defined by the international community as militarily occupying the
capital (See, generally, Herbst: 2000b). On the other hand, the military
perquisites for fighting a protracted counter-insurgency campaign are simply
beyond the capabilities of most African militaries.
As a result, African states based in capitals and guerrillas anchored in
relatively large countrysides often reach a kind of equilibrium. The government
knows that it is too costly to attack the guerillas in order to defeat them and
therefore can define a territory that it can defend. It will be politically viable as
long as it controls the capital and some other towns. For instance, the
Rhodesian notion of “vital area ground--” territory whose capture or control would
result in or significantly contribute to national defeat--was developed in the
terminal stages of that national liberation struggle in what is now Zimbabwe.
Specification of what territory Salisbury had to control allowed a significant
portion of the countryside to be ceded to guerrillas. In fact, as figure two (from
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the Rhodesian central military authorities) demonstrates, a country’s leadership
in the midst of a brutal war can tolerate
Figure 2 about here
significant losses of territory without conceding defeat. However, the Rhodesian
strategy, while preventing outright military defeat, did not allow for victory
because small groups of guerrillas could easily operate in territory that was not
considered vital and thereby gain popular allegiance (Cilliers: 1985, p. 249).
Similarly, the French, as figure three suggests, tolerated a significant erosion of
their territory in Algeria before finally conceding defeat. Many other
Figure 3 about here
African governments have at various times lost significant control over their
hinterlands but remained in power because they had physical control of the state.
Thus, President Mobutu of Zaire was really little more than the mayor of
Kinshasa in his declining years while the governments of Sudan, Angola, and
Mozambique, among others, have lost control over significant parts of their
territory over many years although were not militarily defeated.
The model presented here directly contradicts significant assumptions of
some of the political economy models of conflict. For instance, in Hirshleifer’s
model that military forces are used when the decisiveness of conflict is
“sufficiently great ((1991, p. 197).” The problem with that model is that it does
not recognize the life cycle of insurgency and counter-insurgency. Military force
may only be sufficiently great to actually defeat insurgencies in Africa at the very
beginning of the conflict but that will be precisely the time that many armies will
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be unable to deploy. Hirshleifer assumes that military assets are always
available and can be deployed at any time. Such an assumption is unrealistic for
conflicts in Africa. More generally, the “blackbox” model of relating military
prowess to inputs simply fails to take account the growing disutility of military
forces as insurgencies progress.
The Ability to Mobilize
The ability of an African army to defeat rebels therefore greatly depends
on its ability to mobilize forces relatively quickly in the face of a growing enemy
threat. If it is able to mobilize and deploy the agents of violence, there is some
chance that it can crush an insurgency while the rebels are still particularly
vulnerable. However, as time goes on, it becomes increasingly difficult to fight
an insurgency and states therefore become vulnerable to outright defeat
(especially if they have a relatively small territorial base and face relatively adept
rebel fighters) or a prolonged war which neither side can win but which will
almost surely devastate the country. Indeed, a particularly important reason for
militaries to defeat insurgencies early on is so that leaders do not simply become
accustomed to the idea of becoming “stationary bandits” over smaller and
smaller pieces of their own territory and not even be interested in gaining control
over their own territory. The international community will tolerate this type of
shirking of responsibility but it is usually disastrous for the country.
Table 2 presents some instances of unsuccessful mobilization in the face
of an enemy while table 3 presents instances where African countries were able
to mobilize in the face of a growing enemy threat. I have used soldiers per
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thousand citizens as my major indicator of mobilization because budgetary data
on African militaries are completely unreliable and it is at least possible to
present a reasonable count of the number of soldiers in an army. As much as
possible, I have tried to have
Table 2: Unsuccessful Mobilizations During Conflict
Country Mobilization during crisis (soldiers/thousand
citizens) Congo-Brazzaville 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 4.2 4.1 4 3.9 3.8 Guinea 1987 1989 1991 1993 1995 1997 4.5 2.7 2.4 2.2 1.7 1.6Liberia 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 2.6 2.5 2.8 2.7 3.5 2.9Sierra Leone 1987 1989 1991 1993 1995 1997 1.5 1 1.1 1.2 1.1 1Somalia 1982 1984 1986 1988 1990 9.2 6.9 7.4 6.75.6 Sudan 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 3.4 4.5 4.3 4 2.9 2.8Uganda 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 0.7 0.9 1 1 1 0.9Zaire 1973 1975 1977 1979 1981 1983 2.8 2.2 2 0.8 1.5 1.3Zaire 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1 .9 .9 1.1
Source: Calculated from U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, various years.
22
Table 3: Successful Mobilizations During Times of Conflict
Country Mobilization during crisis Angola 1979 1981 1983 1985 1987 1989 7.2 7.6 7.4 8.7 9.4 12.9Ethiopia 1974 1976 1978 1980 1982 1984 1.3 1.8 6.1 6.5 6 4.5Mozambique 1979 1981 1983 1985 1987 1989 2.5 2.4 2.4 2.8 4.6 4.6Rwanda 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 0.8 4.1 4 3.9 6 5.5Somalia 1973 1975 1977 1979 1981 1983 8.3 9.4 16.1 15.4 9.2 7.7
Source: Calculated from U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, various years.
column five be the year in which the enemy threat became most obvious,
although some of the conflicts do not lend themselves to such neat chronologies.
For instance, 1990 is the year that Taylor invaded Liberia, 1986 is the year
Museveni toppled the government in Kampala, 1997 is the year Angola invaded
Congo-Brazzaville while 1994 is the year that the RFP invaded Rwanda. In other
conflicts, it is more difficult to cite a precise time as the conflicts emerged slowly
and then only gradually built to a crescendo. For instance, the threat to both
Sierra Leone and Guinea grew gradually during the 1990’s as instability from
Liberia spread westward. FRELIMO’s war with RENAMO in Mozambique and
UNITA’s battle with the MPLA government in Angola also gradually became
worse throughout the 1980’s. Thus, while the ability (failure) to mobilize is not as
clear in countries where the war came gradually, it is still possible to judge if they
were able to increase at least the size of their military in the face of a growing
enemy threat. It is notable that of the cases of failed mobilization, most of the wars had a
distinctly civil nature although, as in almost any civil war, there was a significant
international element. Thus, while Congo-Brazzaville was invaded by Angola,
Luanda was working in support of former President Denis Sassou-Nguesso who
23
had worked for years to destabilize his successor. Similarly, the wars in Liberia
and Sierra Leone are domestic conflicts, albeit fed by outsiders. Somalia in the
1990’s, Sudan and Uganda are civil wars classically understood. The failure to
mobilize is quite remarkable. For instance, Siad Barre’s army in Somalia actually
shrunk significantly as his country slid into civil war while the authorities in
Kampala were unable to increase their army at all in the endgame before
Museveni took over. The invasions of Zaire during the Shaba crises of 1977 and
1978 and by Ugandan, Rwandan and Angolan forces in support of Laurent
Kabila in 1996 and 1997 are the clearest examples of a foreign invasion which
was not met by significant mobilization.
The cases of successful mobilization are more clearly linked to external
invasion although some of the cases cannot be parsed cleanly. Somalia
mobilized to take what it viewed as the Somali portion of Ethiopia in 1977-78
while Ethiopia mobilized slightly later to defend itself. Similarly, the Hutu
authorities in Rwanda did mobilize in anticipation of the invasion by the RPF in
1994. Angola and Mozambique are more clearly civil wars but both Maputo and
Luanda had enemies (RENAMO and UNITA) that were directly tied to South
Africa. They could thus legitimately claim during at least pleas for mobilization
that they were under threat from foreign powers.
Why would governments have an easier time mobilizing in the face of
foreign threats than conflicts that are more internal in nature? Why do some
armies seem to operate well across borders while unable to defeat rebels in their
own country? At least part of the answer is that purely domestic conflicts within
24
African countries are a reflection of basic failures in institutions and policies.
Indeed, many failing African states cannot mobilize in the face of insurgency
because they do not have the resources or the capabilities to maintain even the
agents of violence in their country, despite the fact that the monopoly on
legitimate violence is the defining characteristic of the state. However, when a
state is attacked by another state, it may be because of reasons within the
invader and not because the target is necessarily dysfunctional. Thus, Somalia
attacked Ethiopia because it wanted to be reunited with the Somalis in the
neighboring countries not because of some fundamental institutional breakdown
in Ethiopia. As a result, Ethiopia was able to mobilize in the face of Somalia’s
attack and was able to defeat the enemy. Similarly, Ethiopia attacked Eritrea in
1998 not because Eritrea was failing but because of a complex set of commercial
and political conflicts between the two countries. Eritrea was therefore able to
mobilize against the Ethiopia attack although it did suffer a significant defeat.
Of course, it may also be easier to mobilize the population in the face of
an external threat. Indeed, the presence of a palpable external threat may be the
strongest way to generate a common association between the state and the
population. External threats have such a powerful effect on nationalism because
people realize in a profound manner that they are under threat because of who
they are as a nation; they are forced to recognize that it is only as a nation that
they can successfully defeat the threat. Anthony Giddens recounts the effects of
World War I: "The War canalized the development of states' sovereignty, tying
this to citizenship and to nationalism in such a profound way that any other
25
scenario [of how the international system would be ordered] subsequently came
to appear as little more than idle fantasy (Giddens: 1987, p. 235)." Michael
Howard notes the visceral impact of wars on the development of nationalism
throughout Europe:
Self-identification as a Nation implies almost by definition alienation from
other communities, and the most memorable incidents in the
group-memory consisted in conflict with and triumph over other
communities. France was Marengo, Austerlitz and Jena: military triumph
set the seal on the new-found national consciousness. Britain was
Trafalgar—but it had been a nation for four hundred years, since those
earlier battles Crecy and Agincourt. Russia was the triumph of 1812.
Germany was Gravelotte and Sedan (Howard: 1978, p. 9. Emphasis in
the original).
Inevitably, it is much more difficult to mobilize a population during a civil war
given that the conflict itself reflects fundamental dissatisfactions with the existing
political order.
Finally, African countries may be able to mobilize to attack other countries,
even while the security of their existing homeland is not guaranteed, simply
because the territory in other countries may be more valuable than their own
homelands. As noted above, large countries especially, can afford to have
insurgents control significant amounts of territory as long as they did not threaten
the capital. At the same time, territory in adjoining countries, or the policies of
those neighbors, may be more important to control or influence. For instance,
26
the government in Luanda probably felt it more important to intervene to
guarantee the course of events in Brazzaville—itself relatively close to Luanda—
even while the rebellion in the far south of Angola continued. Similarly, Uganda
seems to have thought it more important to try to change security arrangements
in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo than in its own north, probably
because events in eastern Congo posed a more significant threat to Kampala.
There have also been repeated reports—almost all unconfirmed—that Uganda
and other countries operating in DRC have been able to recoup some of their
expenses through theft of natural resources. While such cost recovery is much
harder than most people believe—running a mine is no guarantee of profit in the
Congo, as many other failed businesses have discovered—it may very well be
the case that controlling some territory of adjoining countries is potentially more
lucrative than defense of the homeland.
Again, models which try to associate the input of resources with military
prowess will not necessary predict correctly how African countries will react.
Mobilization in the face of an enemy is difficult and the ability to convince people
that they should fight and die for their country may depend on the enemy. At the
same time, leaders may make very different decisions on what they are going to
fight for given calculations about the relative value of particular pieces of territory
within or without their homeland. Two different types of threat—from internal civil
war and external enemies—confront African leaders and they may have very
different options according to what kind of war they are involved in.
27
Conclusion
This analysis of African militaries suggests that wars in Africa are far
harder to end than models which relate inputs to military prowess suggest.
Perhaps the only time when African armies—given their precarious state and
their difficulties in mobilizing to face domestic conflict—may have a good chance
of defeating an insurgency is at the start of hostilities. Of course, that is precisely
when African militaries are least prepared to fight. It is also important for
insurgencies to be defeated early because leaders may simply fight it to their
advantage to withdraw from territory and rule over less rather than fight hard as
the insurgency continues.
From a policy perspective, these findings may suggest that the optimal
level of investment in the military and security forces is higher than usually
believed. If it is essentially too late to invest in the military once fighting has
begun in earnest—at least in domestic conflicts—African countries may have to
have invest in more competent standing forces which could be used at the start
of an insurgency. However, such an investment in preparedness would also
mean that funds would often be used to ready an army that, as it turns out, would
not have an enemy to fight. The opportunity cost of such an investment would
therefore be quite high.
28
Figure 1: Effectiveness in Combat High Effectiveness in combat Low Time
29
Figure 2: Zimbabwe: Vital Area Ground
Source: Cilliers: 1985, p. 251
30
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