Affiliation:
1. Henning Tamm is a Postdoctoral Prize Research Fellow at Nuffield College, University of Oxford. Beginning in September 2016, he will be a Lecturer in the School of International Relations at the University of St Andrews.
Abstract
Despite their catastrophic proportions, the Congo Wars have received little attention from international relations scholars. At the heart of these conflicts were alliances between rebel groups and neighboring rulers. What are the origins of such transnational alliances, which have been a major feature of nearly all civil wars in post–Cold War Africa? Recent scholarship on external support for rebel groups does not offer a clear answer, either providing long lists of the goals that state sponsors may have or avoiding the question of motives altogether. A focus on political survival reveals that African rulers form alliances with rebels in nearby states to reduce the threats of rebellions and military coups that the rulers themselves face at home. Transnational alliances serve either to weaken a ruler's domestic enemies by undermining their foreign sponsors or to ensure the continued allegiance of key domestic supporters by providing them with opportunities for enrichment. Case studies of the alliance decisions made in the two Congo Wars by the rulers of Angola, Rwanda, Sudan, Uganda, and Zimbabwe show that their struggles for political survival account for why they sided either with their Congolese counterparts or with Congolese rebels.
Subject
Law,Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
44 articles.
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1. SYRIA: PROXY WARS IN THE MIDDLE EAST;Conflict Studies Quarterly;2024-01-15
2. Proxy Wars in Africa;Routledge Handbook of Proxy Wars;2023-07-11
3. Preventing Coups and Seeking Allies: The Demand and Supply of Alliances for Coup-Proofing Regimes;Journal of Conflict Resolution;2023-05-29
4. Conceptualizing Civil War Complexity;Security Studies;2023-01-01
5. Introduction;The Weaker Voice and the Evolution of Asymmetric Alliances;2023