On July 26, Gen. Abdourahamane Tchiani detained Niger’s democratically elected president, Mohamed Bazoum, and installed himself as the head of the so-called National Council for the Safeguard of the Homeland, a military junta. Less than a week later, on July 30, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) issued the junta an ultimatum: Return the former president to power within one week or face the threat of additional sanctions and military force. The region has experienced a wave of coups in recent years, and ECOWAS is rightly concerned about their spread.
That ultimatum has since expired, with Tchiani remaining steadfast, sparking a crisis for ECOWAS. On Aug. 10, the bloc put its forces on alert, with member states Nigeria, Senegal, Benin, and Ivory Coast all pledging to contribute troops to restore democracy to Niger. Meanwhile, Burkina Faso and Mali—themselves both run by military juntas—have sent “solidarity” missions to Niger, bringing the region to the brink of war.
Not much is known about Tchiani himself, and the junta has been tight-lipped, leading to intense speculation about the motives for the coup. Much has been written about Tchiani’s role as the head of the presidential guard—charged with protecting Bazoum—and his alleged part in a previous foiled coup attempt. Rumors had been swirling that Bazoum had been planning to remove Tchiani, but little attention has been paid to his previous role as a United Nations peacekeeper.
Tchiani’s military career saw him serving on U.N. missions in Ivory Coast, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Sudan, in addition to several regional multilateral missions. His career is emblematic of a new crop of military professionals with significant international service records. Considering the historical evolution of peacekeeping allows us to contextualize these blue helmets-cum-coup plotters like Tchiani.
Since the end of the Cold War, the international community and the United Nations have increasingly funded the militaries of undemocratic or weakly democratic countries to feed the growing demand for peacekeeping. And countries such as Niger have been eager to pick up the mantle. In the five years enfolding the end of the Cold War, the United Nations authorized 20 new peacekeeping missions requiring an almost sevenfold growth in the number of troops, from 11,000 to 75,000. Today, that number tops 90,000 peacekeepers deployed worldwide.
At the same time, wealthy democracies retreated from peacekeeping, increasing dependence on countries such as Niger. Where previous missions largely involved observation along clearly demarcated cease-fire lines, post-Cold War missions—which are sometimes referred to as second-generation peacekeeping—were more demanding and typically bloodier. Troops are now regularly tasked with securing cease-fires between warring parties in ongoing civil wars.
In 1990, the top contributors of peacekeepers were Canada, Finland, Austria, Norway, Ireland, the United Kingdom, and Sweden—all liberal democracies. By 2015, they had been replaced by Bangladesh, Pakistan, Ethiopia, Rwanda, Nigeria, and Egypt, all less democratic states with histories of regime instability.
While the effects of peacekeeping on the countries where peacekeepers are deployed are positive and well-established, the effects on the states that send troops—like Niger—are heavily contested. Some analysts suggest that peacekeeping has salutary effects for democratization among sending states, socializing them to the norms of human rights and incentivizing them to follow the rule of law because “insubordination”—read, coups—would jeopardize future missions and the lucrative incentives that accompany them for the peacekeepers, who are compensated generously for the task. The U.N. spends more than $6 billion on peacekeeping annually, much of it going to troop reimbursements and material costs. Peacekeeping remuneration can make up a significant proportion of sending states’ military budgets as well as individual soldier take-home pay, particularly in less developed countries. Indeed, some countries are today alleged to peace-keep for profit.
But others caution that peacekeeping has more mixed effects, potentially entrenching autocratic rule and contributing to coup propensity in brittle democracies like Niger.
While peacekeeping may socialize sending states into the cosmopolitan values associated with the United Nations, there are all too many examples where abuses are tolerated and illiberal norms are instead strengthened.
And in reality, the international community has grown overly dependent on these countries for peacekeeping and has therefore been reluctant to sanction them, even when their behavior departs considerably from liberal norms. Indeed, some states have used peacekeeping to build more muscular armed forces. The result is often a more empowered military, throwing off the balance with civil authorities, often in countries with past histories of coups.
Niger has seen exponential growth in its own peacekeeping role, today contributing around 1,000 troops and security personnel (up from eight in the year in 2000). During that time, the international community has lavished funds on Niger—the United States alone has sent roughly $500 million in the last decade in addition to training and support—to improve its security and enhance its military. And the United Nations has heaped praise on Niger, thanking it for its peacekeeping contributions.
Yet the international community has also grown reluctant to criticize peacekeepers like Niger, often remaining silent in the face of gross human rights violations or democratic backsliding. And peacekeepers have been given license to ignore conditionality, such as the practice of tying aid to democratization.
That reluctance has been visible in the aftermath of the coup. A spokesperson for U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres has expressed “deep concern” for the events in Niger, but the organization has stopped short of issuing sanctions or halting aid in the wake of the coup. And while ECOWAS has cut power to the country, it has declined to exercise more forceful action, allowing its ultimatum to expire without consequence.
While the possible causes of coups are overdetermined, states that send peacekeepers with greater foreign training and experience are more likely to experience coups, with the peacekeepers themselves, like Tchiani, often responsible. Given peacekeepers’ history of predatory behavior at home, the notion that liberal norms somehow rub off in the peacekeeping process is a myth. Evidence from Niger suggests that peacekeeping may have played a role in recent events, providing the junta with greater means—including a more muscular and emboldened military—to interfere in the political affairs of the country.
The evidence suggests that peacekeeping constitutes a permissive condition for military intervention in politics—it amplifies the risk of coups but cannot be definitely said to cause them. That poses a challenge for policymakers.
The United Nations might consider actions to prevent leakage of funds or material intended solely for peacekeeping. This might be accomplished through greater scrutiny and oversight or the imposition of sanctions against peacekeepers who transgress the norms of the organization.
We might question the wisdom of building the capacity of peacekeeping countries with recent histories of coups. Instead, the U.N. should act to cut off those militaries that engage in coups, as it has threatened (but failed) to do in the past. For their part, wealthy democracies might assist, making up peacekeeping shortfalls by contributing greater numbers of troops themselves, rather than paying others to do so.
Jamie Levin is an assistant professor of political science at St. Francis Xavier University in Canada. Nathan Allen is an associate professor of political science at St. Francis Xavier University in Canada.