10 results on '"Opération Serval"'
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2. Interview with Attaher Zacka Maïga: Networking Coordinator.
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PUBLIC administration , *VETERINARY services , *INTERNATIONAL organization , *SOCIAL interaction - Abstract
Attaher Zacka Maïga was born on 10 May 1963 in Bia, Bourem Cercle, Gao Region, Mali. He has spent his life in the service of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, joining the Mali Red Cross as a volunteer in 1987 before working for the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies as a nutritionist in a pilot centre for nutritional recovery and education in Bourem from January 1988 to June 1990. In 1990 and 1991 he acted as consultant to a number of organizations, including World Vision and UNICEF. In April 1992, Attaher Maïga joined the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) as a "resident" (i.e. local) employee. Since then, he has held many positions. From 1996 to 2000, he was in charge of the Gao office, which employed almost 100 staff, both resident and "mobile" (expatriate). He then took charge of the ICRC's programmes in northern Mali from 2001 to 2006, ran the organization's office in the Malian capital Bamako from 2007 to 2008 and was responsible for the Mali communication programme between 2009 and 2011. From November 2011 to November 2014, he was head of the ICRC's northern Mali sub-delegation, one of the first resident employees to lead an ICRC sub-delegation. Since 2015, Attaher Maïga has been Networking Coordinator for the ICRC's Mali delegation. In 1996, Mr Maïga initiated the ICRC's post-conflict programmes in his country, covering the fields of agriculture, veterinary services and health. In 2009, he launched a pilot migrant project in Kidal, northern Mali. These much-appreciated initiatives resulted in his being invited to participate in the 2010 Montreuil meeting, which laid the foundations for the reforms currently underway. Attaher was the first Mali focal point for the ICRC's Unit for Global Affairs. This role gave him a deeper understanding of trends in the Islamic world and enabled him to help the ICRC adjust its dialogue with Jihadist armed groups. Our interview with Mr Maïga highlights his extensive experience with one of the oldest humanitarian organizations and is an opportunity for him to share his understanding of the ICRC's interaction with the armed groups that controlled northern Mali in 2012, when he was representing the ICRC in the region. Attaher Maïga holds a degree in public administration from the Institut de Gestion et des Langues Appliquées aux Métiers, Bamako. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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3. Multilateralism as a tool: Exploring French military cooperation in the Sahel.
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Erforth, Benedikt
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INTERNATIONAL cooperation , *OPERATION Serval, 2013-2014 , *TERRORISM - Abstract
President François Hollande entered public office in 2012 with a non-interventionist agenda that promised to draw down French troops in Africa and promoted collective African and European mechanisms to reduce France's military footprint in the region. One year later, the same president deployed 4,000 combat troops to Mali, initially without any multilateral participation. To understand this apparent contradiction between multilateral rhetoric and operational unilateralism, this article looks at France's efforts in previous years to establish African and European military operations in support of the Malian state. The article finds that France's commitment to multilateralism is genuine yet not absolute – meaning that French policy-makers do not shy away from operational unilateralism if conditions on the ground seem to require swift and robust military action, as long as they can count on the political support of key international partners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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4. French Interventions in the Sahel
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Marchal, Roland and Villalón, Leonardo A., book editor
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- 2021
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5. Understanding Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb
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Boeke, S., Bakker, E., Berg, B. van den, Muller, E.R., Broeders, D.W.J., Dijk, J.W.M. van, Graaf, B.A. de, Osinga, F.P.B., Rietjens, S.J.A., and Leiden University
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Al-Qaeda ,Counterinsurgency (COIN) ,Sahel ,Terrorism ,Counterterrorism ,Insurgency ,Mali ,Military interventions ,AQIM ,Operation Serval ,Operation Barkhane - Abstract
This PhD investigates the development of Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, with a particular focus on the distinction between terrorism and insurgency. The findings have been published in five peer-reviewed articles, and are joined by an introductory framework and a concluding chapter. The scene-setter contextualizes the problem of terrorism in Mali, describes the fragmented landscape of jihadist groups, analyzes how Tuareg separatism led to AQIM's control of northern Mali, and illustrates how shortcomings in national and local governance fueled insecurity. The second conceptual article analyzed whether AQIM should be regarded as terrorism, insurgency or organized crime, and concluded that - at the time of writing (2016) - most indicators pointed to the group following a strategy of terrorism. A treatise on methodology investigated the discrepancy between the international community's perception of Mali pre-2012 as a stable 'posterboy for democracy', while it was Mali that suffered a near-complete collapse in 2012. It concluded that a quantitative risk approach, rather than a qualitative threat approach, contributed to this misperception. The fourth article applied the first trinity from Clausewitz’s opus On War to Operation Serval, the French military operation to oust AQIM from northern Mali in 2013. Clear political goals, contingency planning, an audacious military operation combined with luck all helped France secure an initial victory against AQIM. The final article focused on potential pathways for AQIM to end, and concluded that in 2021 AQIM followed a strategy of insurgency, while much of the international response remained rooted in the paradigm of counterterrorism.
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- 2022
6. Why did France intervene in Mali in 2013? Examining the role of Intervention Entrepreneurs.
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Henke, Marina E.
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INTERVENTION (International law) ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Foreign Policy Journal (CFPJ) is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2017
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7. Implementasi Budaya Strategis Prancis melalui Prinsip Anti-Terroriste dalam Operasi Serval (2013-2014)
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Ma’rifat, Filasafia Marsya
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National Grandeur ,Anti-Terroriste ,Strategic Culture ,Operation Serval - Abstract
Each country has its own Strategic Culture in maintaining its national defenseand security. In French case, its Strategic Culture emphasizes national grandeuror glory. Departing from de Gaulle’s vision in the past, France is a country thatremains actively involved in maintaining global peace and plays role as an intermediary,mediator, and critic within the dynamics of international relations.France also has the principle of “Anti-Terroriste” which sees that terrorism as amajor threat to its national defense and security. It should be noted that Francehas a long history of war on terror, as it had faced in the 1970, 1985, and 1990s.In today’s world, acts of terrorism is even more sophisticated, complex, and globalized.Through Operation Serval in 2013, it could be interpreted as France’sconsistency in combating terrorism in Mali, West Africa. By using the concept ofStrategic Culture and four analysis variables, which is identity, values, norms,and perceptive lens, this paper intends to analyze the basic foundation and directionof France’s Strategic Culture and the accompanying interests.
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- 2021
8. French intervention in Mali: strategic alliances, long-term regional presence?
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Wing, Susanna D.
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INTERVENTION (International law) ,TUAREG Rebellion, Mali, 2012 ,OPERATION Serval, 2013-2014 ,RELIGIOUS extremists ,COUNTERTERRORISM ,ARMED Forces - Abstract
The March 2012 coup in Mali opened the door to expanded territorial occupation in northern Mali by Tuareg separatists and subsequently armed Islamist extremists. French forces intervened at the behest of the interim government in Mali. This article examines how various actors frame the conflict to their advantage. While the Malian government and France are allies, the position of various Tuareg actors shift over time as they strategize and weigh the value of allegiance with the French. Local extremist organizations are labeled as terrorists and are targeted as enemies. This article argues that the conflict has been decontextualized and framed within the ‘war on terror’. France’s decision to intervene and to expand their regional military presence, rather than exit, is legitimized by the framing of their intervention as integral to counterterrorism efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2016
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9. War at the Background of Europe: The Crisis of Mali.
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BESENYŐ, János
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WAR ,ISLAM ,POWER (Social sciences) - Abstract
In 2012 the seemingly stable country of Mali experienced a sudden collapse, this along with the declaration of independence of the brand new Tuareg state, the massive spread of extreme Islamism shocked the international community. Initial disbelief gave way to the UN Security Council's resolution to restore Mali's territorial integrity. Fueled by the fear of a greater and bloodier conflict and its overspill, limited military operations began. Along with the Economic Community of West African State-led operation, the country's former colonial master, France, began its own controversial military operation. Many people think that by doing so, France is trying to prove itself a great power and able to intervene on the world political stage according to its own diplomatic interest and being a force to contend with. Others however think that France is facing another Indochina-like fiasco in Mali. Who is right, will be determined by the failure or the success of the current operations and by the results of the restoration afterward. In this paper I would like to clarify the reasons for the events taking place in the country, their dynamics and possible consequences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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10. The War in Mali in the Shadow of the Palais de l'Élysée.
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Filippov, V.
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OPERATION Serval, 2013-2014 , *TUAREGS , *ISLAMIC fundamentalists , *PRESIDENTIAL elections , *ELECTIONS , *AFRICA-China relations , *MILITARY relations , *INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
The article discusses the 2013 French intervention in Mali to combat Tuareg separatists and Islamic fundamentalists, known as Operation Serval. It comments on the Islamic fundamentalists and extremists affiliated with the terrorist group Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) in Mali. The author reflects on military expeditions to Mali led by Mauritania beginning in 2010. Other topics include Malian President Amadou Toumani Touré, the presidential elections scheduled for 2012, and the involvement of China in Mali.
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- 2013
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