Preface Peacekeeping as a Foreign Policy Tool Background to the Chadian Crisis The First Peacekeeping Operations in Chad Planning a New OAU Peacekeeping Operation for Chad The 1981-1982 OAU Peacekeeping Force in Chad: A Political View The 1981-1982 OAU Peacekeeping Force in Chad: Contingents and Political Organization The 1981-1982 OAU Peacekeeping Force in Chad: A Military View Summary, Conclusions, and Impact on the Future of African Peacekeeping Appendix 1: Chronology (1979-1982) Appendix 2: OAU Status of Forces Agreement Bibliography Index
TERRY M. MAYS is Assistant Professor of Political Science at The Citadel in Charleston, South Carolina.
.,."timely and instructive...Mays has done a good job with his
materials, laid out his thesis clearly, and provided strong
argument..."-The Journal of Military History
?...timely and instructive...Mays has done a good job with his
materials, laid out his thesis clearly, and provided strong
argument...?-The Journal of Military History
?Discusses a peacekeeping operation by the Organization of African
Unity that involved battalion-size contingents from Nigeria,
Senegal, and Zaire to separate the sides in Chad's civil war;
examines Nigeria as the moving force behind the operation and
analyzes its motivations as a regional "hegemon."?-The Chronicle of
Higher Education
?Shows how, rather than being a strictly humanitarian mission, the
OAU's first peacekeeping operation envolved as a foreign policy
tool of Nigeria supported by France and the US.?-Africa Book Ceatre
Book Review
..."timely and instructive...Mays has done a good job with his
materials, laid out his thesis clearly, and provided strong
argument..."-The Journal of Military History
"Shows how, rather than being a strictly humanitarian mission, the
OAU's first peacekeeping operation envolved as a foreign policy
tool of Nigeria supported by France and the US."-Africa Book Ceatre
Book Review
"Discusses a peacekeeping operation by the Organization of African
Unity that involved battalion-size contingents from Nigeria,
Senegal, and Zaire to separate the sides in Chad's civil war;
examines Nigeria as the moving force behind the operation and
analyzes its motivations as a regional "hegemon.""-The Chronicle of
Higher Education
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