Niger’s coup is West Africa’s biggest challenge yet

Niger’s coup is West Africa’s biggest challenge yet

ECOWAS’s Sunday deadline to reimpose Niger’s president could be the starting pistol for war across West Africa.

FOREIGN POLICY

Like every fraught relationship, Niger’s crumbling commitment to the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) is ending with an ultimatum: Either reinstate democratically elected Nigerien President Mohamed Bazoum or face military intervention. Unsurprisingly, neither side is ready to concede power in this breakup.

Red flags broke out on July 26, when Gen. Abdourahamane “Omar” Tchiani and his junta-led forces ousted Bazoum and took control of the presidential palace. Less than 24 hours later, ECOWAS, a grouping of West African states, condemned the coup. The bloc imposed a strict economic sanctions campaign against Niger, suspending its transactions with neighboring countries and freezing Niger’s regional central bank assets. It also issued travel sanctions on Niger—an especially detrimental move given it could hinder the delivery of foreign aid, which makes up 40 percent of Niger’s national budget.

Most significantly, ECOWAS vowed to take “all measures necessary to restore constitutional order” in Niger, including the use of force. The deadline is Sunday. It’s a major step for the region, one that both embraces precedent while also defying expectations. And it could be the last hope (or straw) before cross-border conflict breaks out across West Africa.

Back up a minute. What even is ECOWAS?

Created in 1975, the 15-nation bloc was designed to “promote economic integration across the region.” Its principles center around establishing a single trading unit, similar to policies under the European Union, that promotes democratic governance and subregional cooperation. In this way, it is first and foremost an economic entity, not a military or political one.

But ECOWAS has fangs. It has two defense protocols that say any threat against a member state is deemed a threat against the greater community. And it has mustered troops to intervene in the past. So when instability rocked Niger, the seventh country in West and Central Africa to suffer a coup in recent years, ECOWAS saw intervention as part of its broader mission to support and protect West Africa, explained Cameron Hudson, a senior associate at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

“There is a shared sentiment among a handful, not all, but certainly a number of countries that are fearful of a contagion effect of coups in the region,” Hudson said. For them, anxiety centers on “the secondary and tertiary effects of allowing a string of coups to go unchecked, and to see jihadist groups spread the threat of Russian intervention.”

But what can ECOWAS actually do?

Nowhere in ECOWAS’s mission does it say the bloc has the power to deploy troops or intervene in another country’s political processes. And for the first 15 years of its existence, it didn’t. But then Liberia happened. In 1990, civil war plagued the coastal nation after the National Patriotic Front of Liberia, led by Charles Taylor, ousted then-President Samuel Doe in a conflict that started in December 1989. Fearing heightened refugee flows and the loss of foreign investment in Africa, ECOWAS took the unprecedented step of sending peacekeeping forces into Liberia. Those troops helped establish an interim government, create conditions for new elections, free political prisoners, and push for a cease-fire. By doing so, it formed an ad hoc body that could deploy troops into another country’s territory, thereby redefining the African Union’s traditional definition of sovereignty.

Since then, ECOWAS has deployed peacekeeping troops in Sierra Leone, Guinea-Bissau, Ivory Coast, Liberia (yes, a second time), Mali, and Gambia. Some of those missions established peace agreements; others failed to maintain lasting cease-fires, said Rama Yade, the senior director of the Atlantic Council’s Africa Center. “They have a long history of interventions, not always military. And they are backed by a very strong legal framework that forces the members to do something when their core principles are hit by undemocratic transitions or coups d’état.”

Nigeria and Senegal, at least, have already said they’d contribute troops to any intervention in Niger. But none of ECOWAS’s past intervention missions have faced a crisis as threatening to regional stability as the one in Niger. And that is because of Mali and Burkina Faso.

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