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Universidade Autónoma de Lisboa
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD1
Thematic Dossier - Emerging Powers In-between
Global and Regional Organizations
December 2025
205
EMERGING POWERS’ STRATEGY FOR POWER PROJECTION: NIGERIA’S
PEACEKEEPING THROUGH REGIONAL & INTERNATIONAL
ORGANIZATIONS
YUNUS ÖZTÜRK
y.ozturk@erdogan.edu.tr
Lecturer at the Department of International Relations, Recep Tayyip Erdogan University, Faculty
of Economics and Administrative Sciences (Turkey). ORCID: 0000-0002-6274-5230
Abstract
This study investigates Nigeria’s strategic utilisation of peacekeeping missions as an
instrument for regional influence in the post-Cold War African context. The restructuring of
global security arrangements following the Cold War created avenues for emerging powers to
redefine their regional roles and assert their influence, with Nigeria emerging as a leading
contributor to peacekeeping missions in several war-torn African countries. This study
examines Nigeria’s commitment to peacekeeping with a focus on its engagement at the
regional and global levels, to maximise its strategic interest while minimising resistance to its
hegemonic aspirations by Francophone West African states. Through a comparative case
analysis of Nigerian involvement in ECOWAS peace operations in Liberia (1989-1997) and
Sierra Leone (1997-2002), alongside its participation in the UN-AU Hybrid Operation in Darfur,
Sudan (2007-2020), and employing an eclectic theoretical approach, this study demonstrates
(i) Nigeria’s strategic rationale for prioritizing regional peacekeeping mechanisms over global
ones, (ii) the impact of Nigeria’s approach on its regional leadership position, and (iii) the
challenges Nigeria faced in maintaining such a security framework. By indicating how Nigeria
leverage peacekeeping missions to enhance international prestige and legitimise hegemonic
aspirations while navigating resource constraints and neighbouring states’ suspicions, the
study aims to contribute to scholarly debate on the intersection between emerging powers,
peacekeeping, and regionalism.
Keywords
ECOWAS, Hegemony, Nigeria, Peacekeeping, Regionalism.
Resumo
Este artigo analisa a utilização estratégica das missões de manutenção da paz pela Nigéria
como instrumento de influência regional no contexto africano pós-Guerra Fria. A
reestruturação dos acordos de segurança global após a Guerra Fria criou caminhos para que
potências emergentes redefinissem os seus papéis regionais e afirmassem a sua influência,
com a Nigéria a emergir como um dos principais contribuintes para missões de manutenção
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e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD1
Thematic Dossier - Emerging Powers In-between Global and Regional Organizations
December 2025, pp. 205-229
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International Organizations
Yunus Öztürk
206
da paz em vários países africanos devastados pela guerra. Este estudo examina o
compromisso da Nigéria com a manutenção da paz, com foco no seu envolvimento a vel
regional e global, para maximizar o seu interesse estratégico e minimizar a resistência às suas
aspirações hegemónicas por parte dos Estados francófonos da África Ocidental. Através de
uma análise comparativa do envolvimento nigeriano nas operações de paz da CEDEAO na
Libéria (1989-1997) e na Serra Leoa (1997-2002), juntamente com a sua participação na
Operação Híbrida da ONU-UA em Darfur, Sudão (2007-2020), e empregando uma abordagem
teórica eclética, este estudo demonstra (i) a lógica estratégica da Nigéria para dar prioridade
aos mecanismos regionais de manutenção da paz em detrimento dos globais, (ii) o impacto
da abordagem da Nigéria na sua posição de liderança regional e (iii) os desafios que a Nigéria
enfrentou para manter tal quadro de segurança. Ao indicar como a Nigéria aproveita as
missões de manutenção da paz para aumentar o prestígio internacional e legitimar as
aspirações hegemónicas, ao mesmo tempo que lida com as restrições de recursos e as
suspeitas dos Estados vizinhos, o estudo visa contribuir para o debate académico sobre a
interseção entre potências emergentes, manutenção da paz e regionalismo.
Palavras-chave
CEDEAO, Hegemonia, Nigéria, Manutenção da Paz, Regionalismo.
How to cite this article
Öztürk, Yunus (2025). Emerging Powers’ Strategy for Power Projection: Nigeria’s Peacekeeping
Through Regional & International Organizations. Janus.net, e-journal of international relations.
Thematic Dossier - Emerging Powers In-between Global and Regional Organizations, VOL. 16, Nº.
2, TD1, December 2025, pp. 205-229. https://doi.org/10.26619/1647-7251.DT0525.11
Article submitted on 13th May 2025 and accepted for publication on 15th September
2025.
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EMERGING POWERS’ STRATEGY FOR POWER PROJECTION:
NIGERIA’S PEACEKEEPING THROUGH REGIONAL &
INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
YUNUS ÖZTÜRK
Introduction
In the post-Cold War era, the increasing role of regional organisations, such as the African
Union, the Organisation of American States (OAS), and the Association of Southeast
Asian Nations (ASEAN), in conflict management and international peacekeeping has been
supported by Western powers, including the United States, the United Kingdom, and
France. These Western powers have promoted regional organisations as the primary
responsible actors for managing security challenges in their respective regions, under the
motto of “African solutions for African problems” in the African continent. In this context,
Nigeria has emerged as a leading contributor to peacekeeping missions since the early
1990s, deploying funds and troops to several operations across the African continent
under the auspices of the United Nations (UN), the African Union (AU), and the Economic
Community of West African States (ECOWAS) (Williams, 2008). Nigeria deployed over
200,000 soldiers to peacekeeping missions throughout the world from its independence
in 1960 to the late 2000s, accounting for almost 40% of all UN peacekeeping missions in
Africa, the Middle East, Asia, and Europe (Adebajo, 2008, p. 14). To resolve the crises in
the Mano River Basin, which lasted over a decade in the 1990s, for instance, Nigeria
sacrificed over 1,500 of its soldiers and invested more than $12 billion in peacekeeping
missions, despite its own dire economic conditions at that time (Adebajo, 2008, p. 20;
Bah, 2005, p. 78). Specifically, Nigeria provided about 90% of funding and 80% of
personnel for these peacekeeping missions contributing 12,000 soldiers out of 16,000
to Liberia and another 12,000 of 13,000 to Sierra Leone (Obi, 2009, pp. 121122, 125).
This substantial commitment to regional security through the ECOWAS Monitoring Group
(ECOMOG) clearly reflects Nigeria’s ambitions in West Africa: its utilization of
peacekeeping missions as an instrument of regional leadership despite its small
Francophone neighbours’ fears following the withdrawal of the Cold War overlay and the
reduction of French military presence in the post-1990 period (Bah, 2005, pp. 7980).
The end of the Cold War initiated a restructuring of global security arrangements in the
developing world, compelling regional powers to take responsibility for addressing their
common problems, which created avenues for emerging powers to redefine their goals
and assert their leadership in the regional security structure of Africa, Latin America, the
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Middle East, and Asia (Söderbaum & Tavares, 2009). Although the UN remains a key
player in maintaining peace and security throughout the world, its overstretch due to
resource limitations and high demand across multiple conflict zones, along with the lack
of political will by Western powers, has led to regional organisations expanding their
security mandates. This generated what Brosig (2013, p. 171) describes as “emerging
security regime complex[es],” characterised by overlapping institutional frameworks and
responsibilities conducted by both African and non-African actors simultaneously on the
continent. What Nigeria has been pursuing within this context is, as Adebajo (2008, p.
14) calls, “hegemony on a shoestring,” an ambitious strategy of regional leadership
despite significant constraints.
The Nigerian case exemplifies a dual engagement strategy employed by emerging powers
whereby they endeavour to enhance their regional influence through regional
organisations while maintaining their engagement with global institutions like the UN.
Since the 1990s, Nigeria has been at the forefront of constructing a regional security
mechanism in Africa through ECOWAS and AU engagements while maintaining its
consistent participation in UN peacekeeping missions throughout the continent. This dual
engagement strategy inevitably raises important questions with regard to Nigeria’s
foreign policy goals. If global institutions like the UN are considered somehow adequate
for maintaining peace and security in the world, why do emerging powers like Nigeria
prioritise regional organisations for specific initiatives such as peacekeeping? More
broadly, do regional organisations generally function as complementary frameworks to
global institutions, or do they merely indicate a shift toward regionalism in international
politics?
Nigeria’s engagements with regional and global institutions in peacekeeping deserve
particular attention for several reasons. First, the “messianic references” by Nigerian
political and military elites to power projection capabilities in the region indicate a
widespread belief that Nigeria has a “manifest destiny” for regional leadership as West
Africa’s largest economy and most populous nation (Bach, 2007). Second, Nigerian active
participation in West African peacekeeping missions offers valuable insights into how
emerging powers can utilise regional organisations to legitimise their leadership role or
reach hegemonic aspirations in their respective domains (Obi, 2009). Last, Nigerian
involvement in both regional (Liberia and Sierra Leone) and hybrid (Sudan) peacekeeping
operations provides an opportunity to examine the strategic interplay between regional
and global security engagements in an emerging power’s foreign policy.
Since the 1990s, the increasing number of peacekeeping operations by regional
organisations such as the AU, ECOWAS, and the Southern African Development
Community (SADC) has, unsurprisingly, received scholarly attention, including works by
Adebajo, Bellamy, and Williams. Analysing the peacekeeping trend toward non-UN peace
operations, for instance, Bellamy & Williams (2005) show that regional organisations
possess significant advantages in legitimacy, local support, and cultural understanding
due to their proximity to conflict zones. Peace operations conducted by individual states
or coalitions of the willing, on the other hand, often face accusations of neocolonialism
or pursuit of parochial interests, rather than upholding the UN’s principles and purposes.
Despite these theoretical arguments favouring regional initiatives in peacekeeping,
Williams (2008) persuasively argues that the “African solutions for African problems”
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mantra has significant limitations regarding capacity, resources, and competitive
interests of regional actors. Within this scholarly debate, the evolution of West African
security architecture since the 1970s provides a critical context for understanding
regional powers’ peacekeeping strategies. Through Nigeria’s transformational leadership
in ECOWAS/ECOMOG peacekeeping missions, West Africa has gradually evolved from a
mere “security complexcharacterised mainly by security dynamics and, thus, mutual
suspicion among regional actors, into a “security community” with shared norms, values,
and practices (Bah, 2005; Jaye, 2008). Nevertheless, the West African security
complex/community and Nigerian leadership position, in particular, have continuously
faced significant constraints. As Bach (2007) notes, Nigerian regional ambitions reflect a
position of “dominance without power,” indicating grandiose roles and goals but limited
capacity and resources. Furthermore, these constraints extend beyond limited resources
and capacity to negative perceptions of Nigerian hegemonic ambitions by Francophone
neighbouring states in the region (Adebajo & Landsberg, 2003).
In this context, this paper posits that Nigerian dual engagement with regional
organisations (e.g., ECOWAS, AU) and global institutions (e.g., UN) in peacekeeping
demonstrates a calculated approach to maximise its strategic interests in West Africa
while minimising potential risks and costs associated with hegemonic aspirations.
Drawing on Prys's (2010) typology of regional powers and particularly Pedersen's (2002)
conceptualization of “cooperative hegemony,” which explains how pivotal states mitigate
resistance from counter-hegemonic blocs of smaller states through regional
multilateralism, this paper contends that Nigerian peacekeeping strategy creates multiple
avenues for projecting regional and international influence through participation in both
regional and global organizations while mitigating the associated risks and costs. This
approach enables Nigeria to demonstrate its commitment to regional stability, thereby
enhancing its international prestige as a peace broker, while minimising expenditures of
blood and treasure.
Through a comparative analysis of Nigerian peacekeeping missions in ECOWAS peace
operations in Liberia (1989-1997) and Sierra Leone (1997-2002) as well as its
participation in the UN-AU Hybrid Operation in Darfur, Sudan (2007-2020), this study
examines (i) the factors behind Nigeria’s rationale for prioritizing regional peacekeeping
mechanisms over global initiatives, (ii) the impact of such prioritization on Nigerian
regional leadership in West Africa, and (iii) the challenges Nigeria faces in maintaining
the regional framework and implications of such challenges for its regional influence. The
analysis primarily draws on primary sources, including official documents from ECOWAS,
the AU, and the UN, supplemented by secondary literature, such as historical analyses
and theoretical frameworks on peacekeeping and emerging powers’ power projections.
With these objectives and methods, this research aims to contribute to the scholarly
debate on the intersection between emerging powers, peacekeeping, and regionalism.
While advancing theoretical understanding of how emerging powers utilise peacekeeping
missions as a strategic tool for their regional influence and legitimacy, the study also
provides empirical insights into the complex interplay of regional and global security
initiatives in Africa. Furthermore, it assesses the sustainability challenges confronting
many African peacekeeping missions.
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The paper proceeds as follows. Reviewing relevant literature on regional powers,
peacekeeping, and African security architecture, the first section establishes the
theoretical framework for understanding peacekeeping as a strategic tool for regional
power projection. After briefly outlining the methodology in section two, the third section
examines the historical evolution of Nigerian peacekeeping strategy in Africa in relation
to Nigerian foreign policy. The following section analyses the three case studies in depth,
namely Nigerian peacekeeping operations in (i) Liberia and (ii) Sierra Leone under
ECOWAS and (iii) its participation in the UN-AU Hybrid Operation in Darfur. Synthesising
the findings from these case studies, the final section concludes with the significance of
the findings for understanding emerging powers’ strategic approaches to regional
organisations and regional security frameworks in a complex international order.
Theoretical Underpinnings
Any study on regional powers’ peacekeeping strategy requires a theoretical framework
that thoroughly addresses regional power dynamics and institutional arrangements. No
consensus, however, exists in the relevant literature on how to identify and differentiate
regional powers from middle and great powers. Nolte (2010, p. 893), in this regard,
offers a comprehensive definition of regional powers based on an extensive literature
review, conceptualising regional powers as possessing not only superior economic
resources and military capabilities but also the will to assume regional responsibilities
and leadership recognition by other actors. This definition highlights three crucial aspects
of regional powerhood, namely (i) superior material resources and capabilities relative to
other regional actors, (ii) leadership will and commitment to regional responsibilities, and
(iii) acceptance of that leadership by regional and international actors. This
multidimensional framework explains why Nigeria, despite its constraints, has
consistently pursued regional power status as West Africa’s gendarme through
peacekeeping initiatives (Adebajo, 2000). Nigeria possesses relatively superior resources
as well as capabilities and demonstrates the will to act as a responsible regional leader.
However, its leadership ambitions have been repeatedly challenged by smaller
neighbouring states concerned about Nigerian hegemonic aspirations, contributing to an
enduring, albeit diminishing, French military presence in the region after the Cold War.
Accordingly, Adebajo & Landsberg (2003, pp. 171172) characterise Nigeria’s regional
role as an “aspiring or potential hegemon” or a “pivotal state,” rather than a consolidated
regional hegemon. Contemporary analysis confirms that Nigeria’s hegemonic role within
ECOWAS faces significant constraints, as the withdrawal of Mali, Niger, and Burkina Faso
from ECOWAS in 2024 due to military coups demonstrates the limitations of traditional
hegemonic models, particularly when domestic challenges undermine regional leadership
in West Africa (Gbenga & Oluwatobi, 2025). This also aligns with the International Crisis
Group’s report (2024), arguing that Nigeria’s influence has waned over the past 15 years,
along with its contributions to continental peace and security, due to weak leadership,
political and economic crises, and acute security issues at home.
Building on Nolte’s (2010) conceptualisation, Prys (2010) develops a typology of regional
powers, distinguishing regional hegemonic, dominating, and detached powers, which is
a central framework to this study. The hegemonic model features a regional power
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perceived as exceptional, exercising leadership multilaterally through normative and
institutional mechanisms while providing public goods, such as security, for all. The
dominator model, however, relies on coercion, with the dominant power pursuing
parochial interests through unilateral actions rather than being recognised as an
exceptional leader. Unlike hegemons, dominators compel others to contribute to regional
arrangements rather than providing public goods unilaterally. Detached powers, in turn,
possess the necessary material resources and military capabilities but lack leadership
will, prioritising domestic or global concerns over regional engagement. Consequently,
their interactions with regional actors remain limited, exerting minimal influence on
regional affairs. Moreover, despite their resource abundance and capabilities, they are
not recognised as regional leaders (Prys, 2010, pp. 487496).
While Nigeria’s position in West Africa aligns most closely with the hegemonic model in
Prys’s (2010) typology, Pedersen's (2002) conceptualisation of “cooperative hegemony”
provides a more nuanced and accurate depiction. Cooperative hegemons essentially
establish stable, predictable, and somehow legitimate governance by encouraging
participation in regional initiatives through indirect influence, multilateral arrangements,
and mechanisms preventing free riding (Pedersen, 2002, pp. 683688). Under this
framework, Nigeria exercises regional leadership through multilateral institutional
frameworks and mechanisms like ECOWAS/ECOMOG, designed specifically to minimise
potential resistance from smaller Francophone states in West Africa. That is to say,
Nigeria strategically utilises regional peacekeeping missions under ECOWAS as power
projection tools in West Africa. As Beswick (2010) clearly demonstrates in her analysis
of Rwanda’s contribution to peacekeeping missions in Darfur, peacekeeping allows even
small states to gain operational experience for their military forces while simultaneously
reaffirming commitment to international norms, strengthening regional influence, and
enhancing international prestige. For Nigeria, often referred to as the “Giant of Africa”
(Adebajo, 2008, p. 12), regional peacekeeping missions translate its demographic and
economic advantages into regional leadership while mitigating fears of hegemonic
ambitions among smaller Francophone states through participation in regional
organisations.
As often stated, the end of the Cold War created multiple avenues for emerging powers
to exercise influence through evolving regional security architectures. Although this
development has produced “security regime complexes” where multiple actors,
institutions, norms and mandates play overlapping roles, resulting in inefficiency and
resource wastage (Brosig, 2013), regional powers have increasingly leveraged
peacekeeping initiatives to project influence in these complex environments. The post-
Cold War trend toward regionalisation of peacekeeping offers several advantages for
regional actors, including enhanced legitimacy, cultural awareness, and local knowledge
due to their proximity to conflict zones. Moreover, regional peacekeeping initiatives
reportedly allow for more flexible interpretation of mission mandates than the UN
missions’ doctrinal approach. Through examining how peace enforcement mechanisms
are understood differently by the UN and AU, De Coning (2017) demonstrates that
regional mechanisms provide greater flexibility for conducting effective operations
compared to the UN’s strict doctrinal approach. This adaptability enables more effective
and responsive interventions to regional conflicts on behalf of the international
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community (Bellamy & Williams, 2005, pp. 159167). Within the African security regime
complex, where shared regional understanding facilitates more assertive peacekeeping
missions than those led by the UN, Nigeria strategically utilises regional organisations to
maximise its influence while sharing peacekeeping burdens that would be impossible
under strict UN peacekeeping principles, namely consent, impartiality, and the limited
use of force. This approach explains Nigeria’s prioritisation of regional organisations like
ECOWAS for peace interventions in West Africa while simultaneously engaging with AU
and UN peacekeeping operations throughout (and beyond) the continent as a strategic
portfolio.
The evolution of African security architecture, in particular, reflects broader normative
shifts with regard to African conflict management, where two emerging powers, Nigeria
and South Africa, have leveraged peacekeeping to assert leadership in their respective
regions without necessarily contradicting sovereignty norms (Adebajo & Landsberg,
2003). While the Charter of the Organization of African Unity (OAU), particularly Articles
II and III, emphasized the Westphalian notion of sovereignty, territorial integrity, and
“non-interference” since the 1963 founding conference in Addis Ababa (OAU, 1963), the
Pan-Africanist vision of Nkrumah championed by Nigerian leader Obasanjo and South
African leader Mbeki during the late 1990s facilitated a gradual normative shift from a
state-centric regime survival approach to a more human security-oriented one.
1
The
imperative for such a shift from “non-interference” to “non-indifference” became evident
through multiple humanitarian catastrophes on the continent, particularly the Rwandan,
Liberian, and Somali civil wars.
The end of the Cold War and the subsequent call for “African solutions for African
[security] problems” by both African and Western leaders, along with the OAU’s failed
peace initiatives in the continent (e.g., Chad), renewed aspirations for an “African
Renaissance” and continental unity, culminating in the establishment of the African Union
(AU) in 2002. More importantly, compared to the OAU Charter, the AU Constitutive Act
imposes strict limitations on the principles of state sovereignty and non-interference,
particularly Articles III and IV (OAU, 2000), making it the first international treaty
recognizing the right to use military interventions by an international organization in its
members’ domestic politics (Franke, 2009, pp. 102106; Kindiki, 2007, pp. 4448). As
Franke succinctly puts it:
Under the AU, member states enjoy the privileges of sovereignty, such as non-
interference in their internal affairs, only as long as they fulfil their responsibility to
protect their citizens. If, however, states fail, for whatever reasons, to honour this
responsibility, the AU reserves for itself the right to intervene pursuant to a decision
of the Assembly in respect of grave circumstances, namely war crimes, genocide and
crimes against humanity” (2009, p. 106).
1
The Libyan leader Ghaddafi also proposed creating the “United States of Africa” in Sirte in 1999, advocating
for a continental organization focusing on collective security and conflict management. This proposal was
welcomed by both Mbeki and Obasanjo as it could potentially advance their reform agenda for the OAU. For
more information why these three leaders spearheaded the transformation of the OAU into the AU and how
they accommodated their diverging reform proposals, see Tieku (2004, pp. 253265).
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The reappraisal of security cooperation in Africa during the 1990s ultimately led to the
establishment of the African Union in Durban in 2002, which institutionalised the principle
of “non-indifference” and consequently created a considerably more proactive peace and
security framework. This new framework has created a plethora of multi-layered security
arrangements with several regional organisations (e.g., ECOWAS, SADC, IGAD, ECCAS,
and AMU; Franke, 2009, pp. 6376) along with the newly branded continental
organisation, the African Union. Such a cooperative structure, however, does not
necessarily undermine the authority and responsibility of regional organisations. Instead,
the AU has benefitted from their experience and comparative advantages for peace
operations. In this emerging decentralised security arrangement, the AU has served as
a “clearinghouse and framework for all initiatives, thus filling the conceptual and
institutional gap between the global level (the United Nations) and the regional level”
(Franke, 2009, p. 107). The regional organisations, in turn, have become responsible
actors in establishing continental security by eliminating potential competition among
various actors at multiple levels. Although such a security framework is criticised for
creating additional bureaucracy and thus preventing timely responses to grave
circumstances, the injection of all actors’ stakes into the process makes it less likely to
fail (Franke, 2009, pp. 106107).
The new African security mechanism, which gives African states agency in security
arrangements under the “African solutions for African problems” discourse, on the other
hand, faces substantial challenges before achieving success, particularly resource
limitations and capacity issues. These constraints provide context for Nigeria’s dilemma,
as it oscillates between hegemonic aspirations and leadership constraints due to
insufficient resources and limited recognition from small Francophone states in West
Africa. Nigerian dual engagement with regional and global institutions for peacekeeping
emerges from this dilemma, what Adebajo (2008) terms “hegemony on a shoestring,”
indicating an ambitious peacekeeping strategy for regional leadership despite significant
constraints.
2
The Mano River Basin crises of Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Côte d'Ivoire, in
particular, illustrate these challenges. In these cases, Nigeria-led ECOWAS missions
played a more significant role than the UN during the initial phases of peace processes.
In each intervention, the UN Security Council was reluctant to take a leading role initially;
instead, it opted to support ECOWAS missions politically and financially to maintain
regional stability. Yet when it became evident that ECOWAS was unable to exercise its
mandate properly due to resource constraints, the UN subsequently took over the
missions and played a decisive role in the outcome. Moreover, former colonisers, Britain
and France, provided financial and military support to peace operations in Sierra Leone
and Côte d'Ivoire, respectively, before the UN takeover. The common problems in these
interventions were ECOWAS’s lack of resources and capacity to run the operations, and
the lack of unity between ECOWAS and the UN for effective operations (Adebajo, 2011,
Chapter 5; Iwilade & Agbo, 2012). Clearly, Nigeria strategically utilised peacekeeping
initiatives as a tool of influence in the Mano River Basin crises while sharing the burdens
with other countries through both regional and global institutions, thereby gaining
2
For more information on what this term encapsulates, see Adebajo & Landsberg (2003, Chapter 9).
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international prestige and recognition while minimising expenditure of blood and
treasure.
Methodology
Despite extensive literature on the regional security framework in Africa (e.g., Adebajo
(2011); Baregu & Landsberg (2003); Bellamy & Williams (2005); Brosig (2013); Franke
(2009)), significant gaps remain in understanding Nigeria’s dual engagement strategy
with regional and global institutions in peacekeeping. Barnett & Finnemore (2004), for
instance, provide a theoretical framework for analysing how international organisations
exercise power; however, they devote insufficient attention to how regional powers
strategically navigate multiple institutional frameworks to enhance their international
influence, as observed in West Africa. Put differently, the existing literature offers limited
analysis of how emerging powers like Nigeria balance hegemonic aspirations in West
Africa with resource and leadership constraints through institutional mechanisms, such
as ECOWAS, AU, and UN. Although Adebajo (2002a) provides a detailed account of
specific peacekeeping operations in West Africa, there remains a need for a systematic
analysis of how Nigeria’s peacekeeping engagements form a coherent strategy for
international recognition, influence, and prestige. The continued relevance of examining
Nigeria’s dual engagement strategy is also underscored by recent regional crises that
have fundamentally challenged ECOWAS’s effectiveness and Nigeria’s hegemonic
capacity (International Crisis Group, 2024; Gbenga & Oluwatobi, 2025), making this
study particularly timely for understanding the limits of regional hegemonic power. This
study, therefore, endeavours to address this gap by investigating Nigeria’s engagement
with regional and global institutions (ECOWAS, AU, and UN) in peacekeeping,
conceptualising these engagements as a calculated approach to both opportunities and
constraints in the evolving regional and global security landscape rather than discrete
commitments for regional peace and stability.
To this end, this study employs a comparative case study approach to examine the
Nigerian dual engagement strategy for regional power projection through peacekeeping
operations. Drawing from methodological approaches of Tardy & Wyss (2014) and Van
der Lijn & Avezov (2015), which analyze African peacekeeping frameworks and
operations (a.k.a. Africa as “the peacekeeping laboratory”) by focusing on institutional
arrangements, operational implementation, and stakeholder responses, the study
examines three carefully-selected cases representing different dimensions of Nigerian
peacekeeping strategy: ECOWAS interventions in (i) Liberia (1989-1997) and (ii) Sierra
Leone (1997-2002) and (iii) the UN-AU Hybrid Operation (UNAMID) in Darfur, Sudan
(2007-2020). These cases were selected based on the following three criteria: (i)
temporal variation to capture Nigeria's evolving peacekeeping strategy, (ii) institutional
diversity to examine Nigeria's engagements across different frameworks, and (iii)
strategic significance for Nigeria's hegemonic aspirations. To examine these cases, the
relevant data is derived from multiple sources to ensure a comprehensive analysis,
including primary sources from ECOWAS, AU, and UN documentation, complemented by
secondary sources from scholarly literature on Nigeria’s foreign policy, regional security
dynamics, and peacekeeping operations.
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Although such a methodological approach allows for systematic comparison across
different peacekeeping contexts while accounting for the complex interplay between
hegemonic aspirations and resource constraints, the study acknowledges its certain
limitations. First, access to relevant data on the Nigerian decision-making process is
constrained by limited transparency in security policies. Second, rather than covering all
Nigerian peacekeeping missions, the study instead examines only three representative
cases. Last but not least, due to the nature of small-N case analysis, certain causal claims
regarding the external validity of these three cases should be presented with caveats.
Nevertheless, by examining Nigerian peacekeeping strategy across different institutional
frameworks and time periods, this study endeavours to identify patterns in Nigerian
peacekeeping while accounting for contextual variations. Consequently, the study reveals
how Nigeria navigates the complex interplay between hegemonic aspirations, resource
constraints, and institutional arrangements in its pursuit of a strategic dual engagement
through peacekeeping.
Historical Context
Nigeria's peacekeeping strategy, which began shortly after independence in 1960 through
participation in the UN Operation in the Congo (ONUC), has undergone significant
evolution that must be understood within the broader contextual shifts in Nigeria’s foreign
policy priorities as well as regional leadership aspirations. Such a historical trajectory, no
doubt, reveals how Nigerian engagement has gradually transitioned from a primarily UN-
focused approach to a more pronounced emphasis on regional frameworks such as the
ECOWAS and AU. This evolution, moreover, represents not merely a tactical adjustment
but a strategic reorientation of Nigeria’s approach to regional security frameworks and
arrangements.
As previously noted, Nigeria perceives itself as having a “manifest destiny” in West Africa
due to its demographic and economic advantages, while simultaneously functioning as a
dominant actor without power, reflecting its challenge of projecting regional influence
despite limited resources and capacity constraints (Bach, 2007). Unlike South Africa,
another significant hegemonic power emphasising economic integration and institutional
development under its regional leadership, Nigeria has primarily utilised security
mechanisms, particularly peacekeeping missions, as a cost-effective means of
demonstrating its leadership in West Africa (Adebajo & Landsberg, 2003, Chapter 9). The
peace operation in Liberia during the 1990s, in particular, shaped Nigeria’s subsequent
approaches to peacekeeping operations in Sierra Leone, Guinea-Bissau, and Côte d'Ivoire
(Obi, 2009, pp. 122130). These early interventions and experiences have also informed
Nigeria’s navigation of regional and global peacekeeping frameworks and arrangements.
The creation and evolution of regional organisations, such as ECOWAS and the AU, have
been significantly shaped by the clash and accommodation of regional powers’ interests.
In this context, regional powers like Nigeria have sought to influence the institutional
design of regional organisations in order to facilitate their leadership aspirations in their
respective regions (Tieku, 2004, pp. 250251).
Although Nigeria’s first peacekeeping contributions began shortly after its independence
in 1960 with the ONUC, it maintained a consistent, if limited, presence in UN-led peace
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operations during the 1960s and 1970s, deploying troops to missions beyond Africa,
including the Iran-Iraq border and Lebanon. These early engagements established
Nigeria as a significant contributor to international peacekeeping efforts, aligning with its
post-civil war foreign policy orientation (Adebajo, 2002a, pp. 2830). Moreover, these
initial contributions largely reflected Nigeria’s commitment to multilateralism, particularly
the UN system, rather than explicit regional leadership aspirations in West Africa. The
1980s, however, marked a transition in Nigeria’s strategy towards regional security
arrangements. As Bach (2007, p. 303) notes, its growing economic power through oil
revenues and demographic weight generated “messianic references” for Nigerian
leadership in West Africa. This self-perception was largely considered natural by the
Nigerian political elite, given their country’s relatively superior economic and
demographic advantage compared to small Francophone West African states like Burkina
Faso and Côte d'Ivoire (Ivory Coast). The same period, however, witnessed the
limitations of Nigerian regional leadership due to domestic political, economic, and social
problems (Adebajo, 2002a, p. 34; Olonisakin, 2000, pp. 117118), characterizing Nigeria
as “dominance without power” and highlighting the gap between Nigeria’s hegemonic
aspirations and effective capabilities for such a role (Bach, 2007, p. 302). These
underlying tensions would eventually shape Nigeria’s approach to regional security
frameworks and arrangements since the 1990s.
Although Nigerian military regimes under Generals Babangida (1985-1993) and Abacha
(1993-1998) were particularly active in developing and supporting the emerging regional
security mechanisms in the first three decades following Nigerian independence, the
transition to civilian rule under former-General Obasanjo in 1999 paved the way for a
more institutionalised approach to Nigeria’s peacekeeping strategy. As Olonisakin (2000,
Chapter 4) highlights, while the two former leaders eagerly utilized ECOWAS/ECOMOG
as a tool for legitimizing their military regimes internationally, showing that Nigeria
deserves a permanent seat in the UN Security Council, and projecting Nigeria’s power
regionally, Obasanjo emphasized multilateral frameworks and regional partnership
among Anglophone, Francophobe, and Lusophone countries in West Africa. As mentioned
previously, such transition in Nigeria’s peacekeeping strategy coincided with the
transformation of the OAU into the AU and its new peace and security architecture, in
which Nigeria under Obasanjo, along with South Africa’s Mbeki and Libyan leader
Ghaddafi, played a significant role (Franke, 2009).
A turning point in Nigeria’s peacekeeping evolution was the outbreak of Liberian civil war
(1989), when growing regional instability in West Africa and limited international
response eventually led Nigeria to spearhead the establishment of the ECOWAS
Monitoring Group (ECOMOG) in 1990 (Olonisakin, 2000, pp. 9199). In this first major
African-led peacekeeping operation on the continent, Nigeria provided approximately
80% of ECOMOG’s troops and contributed almost 90% of its funding (Adebajo, 2002b,
p. 48; cf. Olonisakin, 2000, pp. 109110). This substantial commitment of blood and
treasure for West African regional stability enabled Nigeria to largely shape ECOMOG’s
policies in the region. In other words, the Liberian intervention by ECOMOG represented
a watershed moment in West Africa, establishing Nigeria’s hegemonic role in regional
security arrangements and thus creating an institutional framework through which
Nigerian leadership was exercised.
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The evolution of ECOWAS’s security mechanisms during the 1990s, in particular, reflected
Nigeria’s strategic vision for West African security framework. As Adebajo & Landsberg
(2003, pp. 189191) and Jaye (2008) demonstrate, the development of ECOWAS from
a purely regional economic organization to one with significant security functions under
ECOMOG largely occurred under Nigerian leadership and thus mostly reflected its regional
security priorities and aspirations. For instance, the 1991 Declaration of Political
Principles condemning any seizure of political power by armed force (ECOWAS, 1991),
the 1993 revision of the ECOWAS treaty formalizing its fundamental principles and
security mandate (ECOWAS, 1993), the 1999 Protocol Relating to the Mechanism for
Conflict Prevention, Management, Resolution, Peacekeeping, and Security (ECOWAS,
1999), and the 2001 Protocol on Democracy and Good Governance emphasizing zero
tolerance for political power obtained or maintained by unconstitutional means (ECOWAS,
2001), along with the establishment of the Standby Force and the Early Warning System,
further institutionalized Nigerian approach to regional security governance and
engendered a security culture in West Africa, consisting of new norms, procedures, and
capabilities (Jaye, 2008; Aning, 2007). With these new frameworks and arrangements
on regional security governance, Nigeria gained legitimate international platforms for
exercising leadership while distributing peacekeeping burdens among regional actors,
primarily small Francophone states wary of Nigeria’s hegemonic aspirations in West
Africa, as well as former colonial powers, namely France and Britain.
Nigeria’s approach to peacekeeping has been particularly pronounced in West Africa,
where it has led contributions to several ECOWAS missions, including Liberia (1989-
1997), Sierra Leone (1997-2002), Guinea-Bissau (1998-1999), and Côte d'Ivoire (2002-
2004). In these operations, Nigeria followed an institutionalized approach to internal
conflicts, demonstrating a consistent pattern of utilizing regional arrangements to
address security issues in its immediate neighborhood (Obi, 2009). This regional focus
extended beyond mere geographical proximity. Nigeria has also engaged with broader
continental security mechanisms, particularly through the AU, with its participation in the
UN-AU Hybrid Operation in Darfur (UNAMID) representing engagement beyond its
immediate neighborhood. Such a scope, undoubtedly, reflects strategic calculations
regarding Nigeria’s sphere of influence and hegemonic aspirations in the region and the
continent. Nevertheless, Nigeria’s contributions to peacekeeping operations beyond West
Africa remained limited and selective, as its continental aspirations often stretched its
limited resources and capabilities, creating tensions between hegemonic aspirations and
practical constraints, domestic backlash against hegemonic overextension, and
competition with South Africa, which is another potential hegemon in the continent
(Adebajo & Landsberg, 2003; Bach, 2007). All these constraints and tensions compelled
Nigeria to adopt a more selective stance in peacekeeping engagement within and beyond
West Africa.
Case Studies
As outlined in the methodology section, Nigeria’s strategy for power projection through
peacekeeping can be better understood through examining its engagements across
various institutional frameworks and arrangements. This section, therefore, analyzes
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three representative cases illustrating Nigeria’s approach to peace operations: the
ECOWAS interventions in (i) Liberia, (ii) Sierra Leone and (iii) Nigeria’s participation in
the UN-AU Hybrid Operation in Darfur, Sudan. It is important to highlight that these
cases span different time periods, institutional contexts, and regional settings; thus,
offering a comprehensive view of Nigeria’s strategically calculated and selective
peacekeeping approaches.
ECOWAS Intervention in Liberia (1989-1997)
Following Charles Taylor’s National Patriotic Front of Liberia (NPLF) attacks against
Samuel Doe’s regime in the late 1980s,
3
the conflict rapidly escalated into a full-scale
civil war with unfolding humanitarian disaster and a steady stream of refugees to
neighboring countries. As the international community, including Liberia’s Cold War
patron the US and the UN, remained unwilling to intervene, the ECOWAS Monitoring
Group (ECOMOG) intervention in the Liberian civil war (1989-1997) became imperative,
with Nigeria stepping in as a regional hegemon to fill the security vacuum in West Africa.
Although some argue that General Babangida’s friendship with Samuel Doe initially
motivated the Liberian intervention, the primary concern was that Charles Taylor’s
successful overthrow of the Liberian government would embolden other rebel groups in
the region to challenge central governments (Obi, 2009, p. 122). Nigerian then-President
Babangida viewed the unfolding crisis as both a humanitarian emergency as well as a
threat to regional stability through its spillover effects in West Africa, thus requiring
Nigeria as a regional actor to intervene to mitigate refugee flows and potential regional
contagion. Nigeria, however, did not undertake such an operation solely for altruistic
reasons. The ECOMOG intervention under ECOWAS also served Nigeria’s parochial
national interests, including its aspirations for regional hegemony, the protection of
Nigerian expatriates in West Africa, and the diversion of domestic socio-economic
problems (Adebajo, 2002a, pp. 4849; Adibe, 1997, pp. 473474).
Table 1. Nigerian Participation in Regional & Continental Peace Operations, Selected Cases
Country
Mission
Type
Mandate
Nigerian
Role
Troop
Contri-
bution
Financial
/
Logistical
Contribu-
tion
Liberia
ECOMOG
Dominant
Yes
(~80%)
Yes
(~90%)
3
The NPLF’s nucleus compromised approximately 12,500 rebels, primarily Gio soldiers and Nimba farmers who
had been marginalized under Samuel Doe’s brutal exclusionary regime (Olonisakin, 2000, Chapter 3).
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Peace
Enforce-
ment
End civil war
& restore
order
Sierra
Leone
ECOMOG
Peace
Enforce-
ment
Reverse
coup &
restore
government
Dominant
Yes
(~90%)
Yes
(~90%)
Sudan
(Darfur)
UNAMID
Robust
Peacekee
-ping
(Hybrid)
Protection of
civilians,
facilitation of
humanitarian
aid &
support
peace
process
Limited
Yes
(~10%)
Not
specified
Source: Compiled by the author.
Within a short period of time, Taylor controlled most of Liberia, including the capital
Monrovia, which ultimately transformed the Nigerian-led ECOMOG cease-fire monitoring
mission into a peace enforcement force to control local developments (Adebajo, 2002a,
p. 52; Olonisakin, 2000, pp. 102107). Rather than acting unilaterally, Nigeria worked
through ECOWAS in order to establish ECOMOG as a multinational force, securing support
from other West African states including Ghana, Guinea, Sierra Leone, and The Gambia.
Through this multilateral approach, Nigeria gained not only legitimacy for the intervention
but also shared the cost and blood with other participating states. Nevertheless, Nigeria’s
deployment of ECOMOG without a strong legal basis compromised its legitimacy, thus
enabling Taylor and the NPLF to challenge the intervention (Adebajo, 2002a, p. 52; Adibe,
1997, pp. 475476; Olonisakin, 2000, pp. 110115). Generals Babangida and later
Abacha addressed these challenges by emphasizing humanitarian imperatives and
regional (in)stability,
4
thus establishing a precedent for regional intervention in
subsequent ECOWAS operations (Arthur, 2010). Despite ECOMOG’s initial success in
taking control of the capital and forcing rebel factions to sign 14 peace agreements over
the years, these accords proved short-lived primarily due to increased fractionalization
among Liberian rebel groups (Adebajo, 2002a, Chapter 3). With eight rebel factions
divided along ethnic and personal lines during the conflict,
5
ECOWAS, nevertheless,
4
Paradoxically, the leaders of ECOMOG-contributing states, including Nigeria’s Babangida and Abacha, had
seized power through undemocratic means despite their role in ECOMOG’s mission to counter Charles Taylor,
a Liberian warlord who had initiated an insurgency against Samuel Doe’s brutal regime. This contradiction
attracted significant criticism regarding the mission’s authenticity when led by former military rulers (Arthur,
2010, p. 10).
5
Despite the presence of eight rebel factions fighting during the civil war, none possessed a coherent ideology
aimed at fundamental transformation of the Doe regime. Instead, most warlords, including Charles Taylor,
focused on private wealth accumulation in a protracted civil war through exploiting Liberia’s natural resources,
such as diamonds, gold, timber, rubber, and iron ore (Adebajo, 2002a, pp. 4647; Reno, 1998, Chapter 3).
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successfully brought Charles Taylor and other potent armed factions to the negotiation
table in 1995 to reach a peace agreement under UN supervision, the Abuja Accord. In
the ensuing elections in 1997, the National Patriotic Party secured a majority of seats
while Taylor became president, winning 75% of the vote (Adebajo, 2002a, pp. 6366;
Obi, 2009, pp. 124127).
In 1998, ECOMOG withdrew from Liberia, leaving the UN mission in its place with limited
resources and personnel.
6
Most Liberians expected that Charles Taylor would embrace
peaceful mechanisms rather than pursuing politics through force. Despite optimistic
expectations about Liberia’s future, Taylor ruled the country with a heavy hand in a way
that he distributed economic resources and positions of authority to his loyalists through
a winner-take-all approach. The NPLF forces, for instance, were largely converted into
regular forces of Liberia, enabling Taylor to rule autocratically (Adebajo, 2002a, pp. 67
73). Consequently, Liberia experienced the recurrence of civil war within one year of the
1997 post-conflict elections. During this conflict, both Côte D’Ivoire and Guinea provided
financial and military support to Liberian rebel forces fighting against the Taylor regime,
namely the Movement for Democracy in Liberia (MODEL) and the Liberian United for
Reconciliation and Democracy (LURD) respectively. By 2003, these two rebel groups had
gained control over most of Liberia, placing Taylor in a precarious position. Furthermore,
the Sierra Leone Special War Crimes Court indicted Taylor for war crimes in Sierra Leone’s
civil war (1997-2002), where Taylor had maintained support for the Revolutionary United
Front (RUF), along with some rebel groups in Guinea. That same year, a new ECOWAS
mission (ECOMIL) was deployed to Monrovia, but this time with the international support.
Within a week, Charles Taylor resigned and went into exile, accepting asylum in Nigeria
as part of an ECOWAS-brokered Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) (Obi, 2009, p.
124).
Nigeria’s material contributions to ECOMOG, and later ECOMIL, in Liberia demonstrated
both its commitment to regional hegemony and its inherent constraints. Notably, Nigeria
provided approximately 80% of ECOMOG’s troops and funded almost 90% of this first
major African-led peacekeeping operation on the continent (Adebajo, 2002b, p. 48; cf.
Olonisakin, 2000, pp. 109110). Such commitment reflected Nigeria’s material
capabilities relative to other regional actors and its willingness to bear the cost and blood
of being a regional hegemon. Nigeria’s willingness, capabilities, and contributions,
however, generated backlash within ECOMOG as other contributing West African
countries expressed resentment toward Nigerian dominance in decision-making
processes and command structures (Adebajo, 2002a, p. 56; Adibe, 1997, p. 483). As
noted above, while ECOMOG was initially designed as a cease-fire monitoring mission, it
quickly became an enforcement force against Taylor’s powerful rebel force, NPLF. This
mission creep resulted primarily from ECOMOG’s limited preparation for complex
peacekeeping environments and the fluid nature of the conflict. Described by Gberie
6
The UN’s involvement in the Liberian civil war goes back to 1993 when the Security Council established the
UN Observer Mission in Liberia (UNOMIL) to support ECOMOG in implementing the Cotonou Peace Agreement.
The UN could only implement the revised Cotonou peace agreement in 1997 following years of failed
implementation attempts due to ongoing conflict among Liberian factions. The UNOMIL mission was over with
the establishment of a democratically elected government following the 1997 elections. In the post-election
period, the UN established the UN Peace-building Support Office in Liberia (UNOL) in lieu of UNOMIL to facilitate
post-conflict recovery efforts (Adibe, 1997, pp. 477481).
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(2003) as “an heroic failure,” the ECOMOG mission also encountered multiple challenges,
including inadequate planning, limited logistical support, coordination problems among
contributing states, questions over its impartiality due to personal ties among
participating states and Nigerian dominance in decision-making processes, particularly
from Francophone states (Adebajo, 2002a, p. 57; Adibe, 1997, pp. 482485; Arthur,
2010, pp. 1416; Olonisakin, 2000, Chapter 4). These challenges revealed the
discrepancy between Nigeria’s hegemonic aspirations in the region and its practical
constraints in conducting peacekeeping operations in complex environments.
Despite significant challenges, the Liberian intervention yielded several strategic benefits
for Nigeria. First and foremost, by leading the ECOMOG mission, Nigeria established itself
as the primary security provider in West Africa when or where international actors were
reluctant or unable to take the lead and bear the associated cost and blood. Furthermore,
the first major African-led peacekeeping operation on the continent created a practical
framework and procedures, thus a precedent, for subsequent regional peacekeeping
missions (Arthur, 2010). Considering all the challenges and benefits, the ECOMOG
mission yielded mixed results for Nigeria, oscillating between hegemonic aspirations and
resource constraints. This tension, furthermore, has remained a consistent feature of
Nigeria’s peacekeeping strategy since the late 1980s.
ECOWAS Intervention in Sierra Leone (1997-2002)
The ECOWAS intervention in Sierra Leone exemplified the evolution of Nigeria’s regional
peacekeeping strategy based on lessons from the Liberian civil war. Similar to Liberia,
conflicts in Sierra Leone erupted in 1991 when Foday Sankoh’s Revolutionary United
Front (RUF) forces, backed by Libya, Burkina Faso, and Charles Taylor’s NPFL yet
commanding minimal local support, attacked Momoh’s regime and seized the diamond-
rich southeast region. The reasons Taylor supported the RUF forces were to punish
Freetown for its contributions to the ECOMOG mission in Liberia, to fragment the fragile
ECOMOG coalition, to destabilize the whole region, and thus, to facilitate diamond exports
from Sierra Leone to Liberia (Adebajo, 2002a, pp. 54, 8283). In 1992, Momoh’s regime
was toppled by Valentine Strasser, an ex-ECOMOG army officer, who established the
National Provisional Ruling Council (NPRC), ultimately leading to ECOMOG’s mandate
expansion to Sierra Leone. Four years later, Julius Bio’s palace coup brought Ahmed
Tejan Kabbah, a former senior UN official, to power through the post-coup elections.
7
Through Côte d'Ivoire’s mediation, despite allegations of RUF favoritism, the Abidjan
Accord was signed in 1996, aiming to bring peace, stability, and economic development
to Sierra Leone.
8
The following year, however, Johnny Paul Koroma, a putschist in
previous failed coups, led a military coup, establishing the Armed Forces Ruling Council
7
Prior to the 1996 palace coup, Brigadier-General Bio notified Nigerian President Abacha of his planned coup.
Angered by Sierra Leone’s censure against Nigeria at the 1995 Commonwealth Summit, Abacha assured Bio
that Nigerian forces stationed in Sierra Leone would not intervene. Following the successful coup, Bio formed
close ties with Abacha. The same Nigerian forces, however, later played a significant role in thwarting several
coup attempts against the democratically-elected Kabbah government (Adebajo, 2002a, p. 85).
8
Being perceived as the only moral guarantor of the Abidjan Accord alongside the UN, the OAU, and the
Commonwealth, Côte d'Ivoire’s mediation effort reflected the historical subregional rivalry with Nigeria in West
Africa, dating back to the late 1960s when Côte d'Ivoire provided military support to the secessionist Biafra
during the Nigerian civil war (Adebajo, 2002a, p. 86).
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(AFRC), which subsequently invited the RUF to form a coalition. Kabbah, rejecting his
government’s overthrow through military means, called for help from the international
community (Arthur, 2010, pp. 89). Nigerian President Abacha, viewing Kabbah’s appeal
as an opportunity to mitigate his military regime’s international isolation, initiated a
regional plan to restore stability in Sierra Leone.
Through this Nigerian-led initiative, ECOWAS deployed ECOMOG II to Sierra Leone,
where forces, alongside a small UN Observer Mission (UNOSIL), confronted the AFRC and
RUF to reinstate Kabbah within a year (Adebajo, 2002a, pp. 8388; Obi, 2009, pp. 124
125).
9
Reflecting its dominance, Nigeria contributed approximately 90% of ECOMOG
troops in Sierra Leone (~12,000 soldiers) and consequently controlled most operational
decisions, with Nigerian military leaders often resembled their role to the US position in
NATO (Adebajo, 2002a, p. 91). Such a dominance demonstrated Nigeria’s superior
capabilities and resources relative to other regional actors, which simultaneously
generated regional resentment while providing multilateral legitimacy for Nigerian
hegemonic aspirations. As Adebajo succinctly puts it:
“[…] while Nigeria faced criticisms in its subregion for its military actions in Sierra
Leone, many of its critics refused to contribute the troops that could have diversified
the force and diluted Nigeria’s preponderant strength. […] It was sometimes easier
for ECOWAS states and the wider international community to criticize from the
sidelines and let Nigeria bear the financial and military burden, while doing nothing
to lighten this weight” (2002a, pp. 8990).
Unlike the Liberian case, multiple factors undermined an effective ECOWAS response in
Sierra Leone, including the internal divisions within ECOWAS regarding crisis response
strategies, limited capacity and resources of ECOMOG compared to the UN military
observers, interference from neighboring states, deteriorating relations between Nigerian
forces and Sierra Leonean citizens, and Nigerian domination of decision-making
processes at the expense of other contributing states. These challenges made it clear
that the Nigerian-led ECOWAS initiative would fail to defeat the AFRC and RUF forces
quickly (Adebajo, 2002a, pp. 9092; Arthur, 2010, pp. 1416; Obi, 2009, p. 125).
Furthermore, following Olusegun Obasanjo’s election as Nigerian President in 1999,
Nigeria began to reassess the costs and benefits of ECOMOG interventions amid domestic
economic and social problems. During his address to the 54th UN General Assembly in
1999, for instance, Obasanjo stated that “[f]or too long, the burden of preserving
international peace and security in West Africa has been left almost entirely to a few
states […] Nigeria’s continual burden in Sierra Leone is unacceptably draining Nigeria
financially. For our economy to take off, this bleeding has to stop” (p. 6).
Despite ECOWAS initiatives to appease the AFRC-RUF coalition to reinstate stability in
Sierra Leone following the gradual withdrawal of Nigerian forces from ECOMOG, the
rebels continued to attack Freetown and took UNAMSIL peacekeepers hostage to gain
more concessions. In response to increasing attacks, the international community,
9
Despite violating the UN security Council’s arms embargo, three private security firms, namely Sandline
International, Executive Outcomes, and International Alert, with connections to external actors (e.g., the UK,
South Africa) and diamond-mining firms (e.g., Branch Energy) also supplied weapons to ECOMOG’s ally, the
kamajor militias, to reinstate the Kabbah regime (Adebajo, 2002a, Chapter 4).
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particularly the former colonizer United Kingdom, deployed additional forces throughout
the country to contain the instability and oversee the 2002 elections, which Kabbah won
decisively (Adebajo, 2002a, pp. 9395). In 2003, the ECOMOG mission was gradually
replaced by the United Nations Peacekeeping Mission to Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL) as
Obasanjo announced that Nigeria would reduce its contributions to ECOMOG missions in
West Africa due to economic and social problems at home (Adebajo, 2002a, pp. 97100;
Arthur, 2010, pp. 1314; Obi, 2009, pp. 125126). As an illustration, Nigerian forces
were significantly reduced, with 8,500 soldiers withdrawn from Sierra Leone while the
remaining 3,500 soldiers were rehatted as UNAMSIL peacekeepers (Obi, 2009, pp. 121
122). Nevertheless, Nigeria assisted in training 8,500 Sierra Leonean military officers at
the Nigerian Defense Academy, complementing significant British training of the army
and police, to promote long-term security-sector reform (Adebajo, 2002a, p. 102).
In brief, by an attempt to restore democracy in Sierra Leone though ECOMOG, Nigeria
aimed to reach two primary goals. First, despite his own military seizure of power,
General Abacha sought to overcome international isolation and sanctions against his
military regime by restoring democracy in Sierra Leone as well as demonstrating Nigeria’s
indispensable peacekeeping role in West Africa, where the international community
remained hesitant to intervene, invoking the mantra of “African solutions for African
problems.” Second, and more importantly, by assuming such a burdensome role in this
volatile region, Nigeria aimed to assert its hegemonic aspirations, a position it had
pursued since the establishment of ECOWAS in 1975 to counter French influence and
formidable francophone states like Côte d'Ivoire (Adebajo, 2002a, p. 92). In essence, the
Sierra Leone intervention served as a showcase of Nigeria’s benevolent and cooperative
hegemonic role in addressing West Africa’s security issues, which could potentially
alleviate regional suspicions of Nigeria’s ultimate goals while simultaneously struggling
with economic and social challenges at home.
UN-AU Hybrid Operation in Darfur (2007-2020)
In comparison to ECOWAS interventions in Liberia and Sierra Leone, Nigeria’s
participation in the UN-AU Hybrid Operation in Darfur, Sudan between 2007 and 2020
demonstrates its engagement with continental peacekeeping while navigating the
complex relationship between regional and global security mechanisms. The Darfur
conflict erupted in 2003 when two rebel groups, namely the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA)
and the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM), launched an insurgency against Omar al-
Bashir’s government, criticizing the systematic political and economic marginalization of
African farmers and nomadic Arab tribes (e.g., Fur, Masalit and Zaghawa) through Arab
militia forces like the Janjaweed along with the Popular Defense Force (PDF) and the
Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) (Adebajo, 2011, p. 203; De Waal, 2007, pp. 10391040;
El-Tom, 2011). The international community responded to the ongoing humanitarian
crisis, including mass killings, village burnings, systematic rape, forced displacement,
and famine, in an evolving fashion, beginning with the establishment of an African Union
monitoring mission (AMIS) in 2004 on the basis of the Ndjamena Humanitarian Ceasefire
Agreement that later evolved into a hybrid UN-AU mission (UNAMID) in 2007, concurrent
with the 2009 arrest warrant issued by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for al-
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Bashir on charges of war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide (Flint & de Waal,
2008, Chapter 7; Kindiki, 2007, pp. 35; UNSC, 2005). Despite these international efforts
toward peace and stability in Sudan, little progress occurred until 2020 when the Darfur
Peace Agreement was reached,
10
largely because of an inconsistent international
response and dysfunctional Sudanese government (De Waal, 2007, pp. 10411043).
Once the shortcomings of the Ndjamena Agreement became clear, the African Union
peacekeeping mission (AMIS) proved inadequate to restore stability in Darfur due to its
constraints, and as Khartoum continued violating the UN Security Council’s resolution
(S/RES/1556 (2004); UNSC, 2004),
11
the international community, particularly
Americans,
12
began advocating for a UN mission with a robust mandate and sufficient
resources, which subsequently led to the deployment of UNAMID in 2007 without a
comprehensive peace strategy in the areas of ceasefire, civilian protection, and
disarmament (De Waal, 2007, pp. 10471049; Flint & de Waal, 2008, Chapter 7). From
2004 to 2006, seven rounds of peace talks were held in either Addis Ababa or Abuja,
with Nigerian President Obasanjo chairing most of the AU meetings. Through these peace
talks, the Darfur Peace Agreement began taking shape following the 2004 Ndjamena
Ceasefire Agreement (Adebajo, 2011, p. 205). When both China and Russia, two of the
five veto-wielding permanent members of the UN Security Council, agreed to deploy a
hybrid force with an “African Character” (S/RES/1769 (2007); UNSC, 2007), meaning
that core troops would come from the continent, al-Bashir reluctantly gave consent to
the UN peacekeeping mission despite his earlier characterization of UNAMID as an
imperial mission (Adebajo, 2011, pp. 207211; Gelot, 2012, p. 9).
The UN-AU Hybrid Mission was mandated to oversee the implementation of the 2006
Abuja Peace Agreement and to protect civilians with a $1.8 billion-a-year budget. As the
peace force required an African character, there were serious suspicions in the
international community about African states capacity to undertake such a mission.
Nevertheless, seven African countries alongside external actors such as Bangladesh,
China, Thailand and Nepal, contributed forces to Darfur. Nigeria, along with Rwanda, for
instance, deployed four battalions despite most deployed African forces lacking necessary
equipment and logistical support, which hampered their ability to conduct effective
military patrols and evacuation operations. Furthermore, most UNAMID patrols in the
region were suspended due to kidnapping or shots fired against UN personnel (Adebajo,
2011, pp. 211212, 215; Omorogbe, 2011, pp. 4854).
10
The Darfur Peace Agreement represents three sequential peace agreements signed between various parties
to the conflict, including the Sudanese government and rebel groups such as the SLA, the JEM, and the
Liberation and Justice Movement (LJM). These agreements were concluded in different locations over a
fourteen-year period: Abuja (2006), Doha (2011), and Juba (2020).
11
One year later, the UN Security Council adopted Resolution 1593 (2005), referring the situation in Darfur to
the ICC despite Sudan not being a party to the Rome Statute. Subsequently, the ICC issued an arrest warrant
for Omar al-Bashir in 2009 on charges of war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide (De Waal, 2007,
pp. 10411043; Flint & de Waal, 2008, Chapter 7).
12
Given the inaction of the Clinton administration regarding the Rwanda genocide in 1994, the US House of
Representatives and Secretary of State Colin Powell hastily designated events in Darfur as “genocide” amid
upcoming elections, contrary to UN findings and NGO assessments. In characterizing Khartoum’s response to
the insurgency as genocide, a grassroots movement called “Save Darfur!” played a significant role in mobilizing
international attention to the humanitarian emergency (Adebajo, 2011, p. 203; Flint & de Waal, 2008, Chapter
7).
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Despite these shortcomings and challenges, Nigeria continued to provide troops
(~3,000), logistical support, and leadership as force commander to the UN-AU Hybrid
Mission until its withdrawal in 2020. Compared to its interventions in Liberia and Sierra
Leone, Nigeria’s willingness to shoulder such a burden, albeit relatively small, in Darfur
reflects its continental leadership aspirations and institutional positioning, despite the
existence of alternative troop contributions and the geographic distance from its
traditional sphere of influence. Through the UN-AU partnership in Darfur, Nigeria sought
to achieve multiple strategic objectives, namely demonstrating its commitment to
continental security mechanisms, maintaining its influence within the evolving AU, and
sharing the associated costs and blood with other actors through the UN. Such a
balancing act demonstrates Nigeria’s peacekeeping strategy whereby it simultaneously
engages with regional (e.g., ECOWAS/ECOMOG, AU) and global institutions like the UN
to advance strategic benefits for hegemonic aspirations while managing resource
constraints and mitigating leadership suspicions through multilateralism. Furthermore,
such a hybrid mission aligns with the “African solutions for African problems” principle,
whereby UNAMID strengthens African security mechanisms by providing opportunities to
access UN logistical, technical, and financial support for African states. In sum, Nigerian
contribution to the UN-AU Hybrid Mission underscores its African leadership while
showing the importance of international partnerships for effectiveness and, more
importantly, legitimacy (Gelot, 2012, Introduction; Kindiki, 2007, Chapter 4).
Conclusion
Examining Nigeria’s dual engagement strategy for regional power projection through
peacekeeping missions in the ECOWAS, AU, and UN frameworks, this study contributes
to the scholarly debate on regionalism, emerging powers, and peacekeeping by offering
a more integrated analysis of how regional powers utilize multiple institutional
frameworks to maximize influence while minimizing associated costs. Analyzing Nigeria's
dual peacekeeping strategy across peace operations in Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Darfur,
Sudan, this research sheds light on strategic calculations that guide Nigeria’s approach
to regional security governance in Africa’s increasingly complex institutional landscape,
revealing tensions between hegemonic aspirations and leadership constraints in West
Africa and beyond.
Nigeria’s peacekeeping strategy represents a calculated approach to maximizing its
influence across West Africa and the broader continent while managing resource
limitations and leadership constraints, particularly in its Francophone-dominated
immediate region. Through ECOWAS, Nigeria seeks to establish itself as West Africa’s
security guarantor while creating necessary institutional mechanisms to legitimize its
regional hegemony. Through its engagement with the AU-UN Hybrid Mission in Darfur,
Nigeria aims to project its continental influence while sharing costs and blood of
peacekeeping with other contributing states. With such a dual engagement strategy in
peacekeeping through regional and global institutional mechanisms, Nigeria is able to
exercise leadership while mitigating resistance from neighboring states to its hegemonic
aspirations. Recent events, nevertheless, demonstrate that Nigeria’s hegemonic
aspirations face unprecedented challenges, particularly when domestic security crises
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limit its capacity to project power regionally, as evidenced by its inability to prevent the
withdrawal of three founding ECOWAS members in 2024 despite deploying economic
sanctions and diplomatic pressure.
The case studies provide significant information with regard to Nigeria’s evolutionary
peacekeeping strategy. The Liberian intervention primarily exemplifies Nigeria’s role as
a regional gendarme while highlighting its significant resource limitations and operational
challenges. The Sierra Leone intervention, on the other hand, demonstrates how Nigeria
refined its peacekeeping approach by developing more robust partnerships with
international actors without compromising its regional leadership. Finally, the Darfur
intervention illustrates Nigeria’s selective engagement with continental mechanisms
whereby it balances regional leadership aspirations with practical constraints of
geographic distance and resource limitations. In sum, these three cases demonstrate
both the potential and constraints of regional security mechanisms that shape Nigeria’s
peacekeeping strategy, necessitating a selective engagement in its commitments and
institutional arrangements to share burdens with international partners. Last but not
least, this study’s theoretical implications extend beyond Nigeria, representing a
significant adaptation strategy to limitations and constraints faced by emerging powers
in the Global South.
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