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Mauritania's Foreign Policy: the Search for Protection

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2008

Extract

Of the 21 members of the Arab League, the Islamic Republic of Mauritania has received perhaps the least attention, ranking far behind other North African states, much less those closer to the Arab—Israeli fault-line or the recent Gulf conflict. Mauritania's desperate economic condition (a G.N.P. per capita of only $446 in 1984) has been occasionally publicised, as well as advancing desertification (reaching even into the centre of the capital, Nouakchott), and the tensions between the ruling Beydane (‘white’) Arabs, supported by their cultural/political allies, and the black African tribes concentrated in the Senegal River valley that erupted into violence in April 1989, and which led to a near-war between Senegal and Mauritania.

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Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1992

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References

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11 Handloff, op. cit. p. 79.

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18 U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, World Military Expenditures and Arms Transfers, 1986 (Washington, DC, 1987), p. 85Google Scholar. Mauritania, by 1978, was spending over 60 per cent of its revenue on the military establishment.

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59 See Economist Intelligence Unit (E.I.U.) Country Report, Mauritania (London), No. 1, 1991, p. 38, and 1991–1992, p. 62; Parker, loc. cit. p. 167; and King, ‘Iraq's Growing Involvement in Mauritania’, p. 18.Google Scholar

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61 Ibid. 29 June 1990 and 8 February 1991 for details.

62 This may help to explain why few of the many severe criticisms made during 1988–91 about the régime's political alignment and human rights record were directed against Ould Taya personally.

63 Africa Confidential, 29 June 1990 and 8 02 1991.

64 See The New York Times, 24 April 1990, The Washington Times, 30 May 1990, and Africa Confidential, 24 August 1990 and 8 February 1991, reflecting a difference of opinion as to whether any missile-launch equipment was emplaced in Mauritania by August 1990.Google Scholar

65 ARB/PS, 27, 8, 15 September 1990, p. 9808.

66 Ibid. pp. 9811–2. See also, FBIS-NES, 18 October 1990, p. 16, for statement by Mauritania's Foreign Minister that his country opposes the invasion and annexation of Kuwait by Iraq.

67 West Africa, 28 January–3 February 1991, p. 113, and E.I.U. Country Report, Mauritania, No. 1, 1991, p. 39. The stories of refuge for Saddam Hussein's family were denied by Mauritania. See also, FBIS-NES, 17 and 22 January 1991, pp. 8 and 18, respectively.Google Scholar

68 ARB/ES, 27, 10, 16 October to 15 November 1990, p. 10169, for analysis. The effects of a rise in oil prices and the existing cessation of trade with Senegal made a bad situation even worse. These factors were discussed and analysed at length in a commentary by Agence France Presse broadcast by French Radio. See FBIS—NES, 17 October 1990, p. 14.Google Scholar

69 Africa Confidential, 24 August and 14 September 1990.

70 See ARB/PS, 28, 1, 1–31 January 1991, p. 9734, and West Africa, 1–7 April 1991, p. 483, 22–28 April 1991, pp. 600–1, 13–19 May 1991, p. 756, and 8–14 July 1991, p. 1124. Also, The Boston Globe, 21 August 1991.

71 E.I.U. Country Report, Mauritania, 3, 1991, pp. 11–12 and 34–5. For an assessment of the proposed reforms and the reaction of opposition forces, see ARB/PS, 28, 4, April 1991, pp. 10081–3, and West Africa, 29 April–5 May 1991, p. 654. On the promulgation of the constitution and multi-partyism, see ARB/PS, 28, 8, August 1991, p. 10230.

72 See Nordlinger, Eric A., Soldiers in Politics: military coups and governments (Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1977), pp. 65–6 (general observations), 88–92 (economic concerns and internal violence), and 149–59 (military attitudes in ‘communally divided societies’).Google Scholar