Does US military training incubate coups in Africa? The jury is
still out
Lee J. M. Seymour
Associate Professor of Political Science, Université de Montréal
Theodore McLauchlin
Associate Professor of Political Science, Université de Montréa
Military
officers overthrew Mali’s government in
a coup d’état on August 18, 2020. Among the more worrying aspects of the coup
is the fact that a number of the officers involved had received foreign training,
most notably from the United States.
In fact, this was
the second time in eight years that
US-trained officers in Mali had launched a coup. To paraphrase Oscar Wilde,
to lose one civilian government to a coup launched by foreign-trained officers
may be regarded as a misfortune; to lose two looks like carelessness.
For many
commentators with a strong sense of déjà vu, events in Mali reinforce suspicions of
a link between US training and coups d'état.
But does US
foreign military training provoke coups d’état? The short answer is we don’t
know. Until we know more, we should be sceptical of the blanket claim that it
does.
Initial evidence, much cited by
journalists, suggests a link.
Researchers Jesse
Dillon Savage and Jonathan Caverley find that US foreign military
training roughly doubles coup risk in
recipient states. They argue, plausibly, that foreign training grants
recipients credibility and power within the officer corps, which they can then
use to rally officers against shaky civilian governments.
What commentators
seldom note, however, is that this analysis is confined to just two US training
programmes. Yet the US has some 34 different
foreign military training programmes involving partners in almost every country
in the world.
Our research finds no
relationship between US military training and coups, even when looking at “most
similar” programmes to America’s International Military Education and Training
programme. Researchers at the RAND Corporation, a US
think tank, also analysed the link between
US training and military coups in Africa. They too cast doubt on the link
between the two.
And in a recent
dissertation, post-doctoral fellow Renanah Miles Joyce finds that, on
average, US training in Africa reduced military involvement in politics and
human rights violations.
Training and coups
There are other
reasons to be sceptical of the foreign-training-causes-coups hypothesis. First,
it should come as no surprise that Mali’s coup plotters received US training.
Between 1999 and 2016, US programmes involved 2.4 million trainees in
programmes that cost over $20 billion.
Officers in many
countries embark on the security equivalent of global training pilgrimages
through a transnational circuit of academies, exercises and manoeuvres. This
training is often the key to building a successful career.
Consider the
curriculum vitae of Mali’s coup plotters. Early reports suggest
that Assimi Goïta, who heads Mali’s junta, spent years training alongside US
special forces, regularly participated in US Africa Command’s multinational
Flintlock exercises, attended an 18-day seminar in Florida, and studied at the
American-German Marshall Centre.
His colleagues,
Colonel Malick Diaw and Colonel Sadio Camara, the coup’s purported architects,
were allegedly training
at the Higher Military College in Moscow before returning to Bamako in the days before the
coup.
For their part,
German officials admitted that
several coup plotters had been trained in France and Germany.
This might, at
first glance, suggest a connection between foreign training and coups. But, in
our view, it simply points to the ubiquity of foreign training in many modern
militaries. In addition, because training seeks to strengthen civil-military
relations, it tends to occur in coup-prone countries like Mali. History
suggests that coups tend to beget coups.
Foreign training
may not have much of an effect at all. At one end of the spectrum, large-scale
foreign training in Somalia, Iraq, or Afghanistan has met with failure and
frustration. Jahara Matisek, an assistant professor in the Department of
Military and Strategic Studies at the US Air Force Academy, has likened these
foreign-trained forces to Fabergé eggs,
“expensive and easily broken”.
At the other end,
many activities are limited to a handful of soldiers and last all of a few
days. This makes it hard to conclude that foreign training alone triggers major
changes in civil-military relations in recipient countries.
Political considerations
If we cannot make
a general claim about the training-coup link, perhaps a link can be found in
certain situations. For example, the kinds of training that are undertaken, and
how training intersects with local political conditions.
Some argue that
training focuses too much on technical and tactical expertise to the detriment
of democratic norms and military professionalism.
Yet, precisely
because improving civilian control of the military is a key objective, these
democratic norms feature prominently in curricula. The trouble seems to be that
it is difficult to transplant norms, as
the US and European Union are learning to their detriment, after years of
effort and tens of millions of dollars trying to reform Mali’s security sector.
It’s also the
case that norms of military professionalism are ambiguous and open to abuse. As
Professor Risa Brooks argues, norms of
professionalism in the US are not stopping American military personnel from
involvement in politics. And Professor Sharan Grewal provides evidence that US officers’ increasing politicisation
rubs off on their foreign trainees.
In the search for
more effective security partners, the US and its allies have increasingly
focused on elite units, including the special forces unit commanded by Mali’s
Colonel Goïta. While this intensive, long-term training can transmit skills,
it’s also at risk of
encouraging the formation of praetorian guards that threaten democratically
elected civilian governments.
Such training may
indeed create a dangerous nucleus of discipline, competence and power at the
centre of an otherwise dysfunctional state. In other cases, as in Mali’s
neighbour Chad, foreign training of the authoritarian regime’s elite forces may
help to help defend the regime against coups.
We have heard a
lot about foreign trainees in coups. We need to know a lot more about training
in the coups that do not happen.
https://theconversation.com/does-us-military-training-incubate-coups-in-africa-the-jury-is-still-out-146800
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