Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of maps
- Preface
- Chronology 1987–91
- Abbreviations
- PART 1 STRATEGY AND POLICY
- PART 2 NEW MAJOR PEACE OPERATIONS
- 3 An international obligation
- 4 Establishing the force
- 5 Success in Namibia
- 6 Shadows from a distant war
- 7 A mission of presence
- 8 The genesis of humanitarian demining
- 9 Balancing the risks
- PART 3 THE FIRST GULF WAR
- Conclusion
- Appendix A Australian participation in multinational peacekeeping operations, 1947–2007
- Appendix B Key United Nations Security Council resolutions and statements
- Appendix C Investigations into chemical warfare in the Iran–Iraq War, 1984–87 by Daniel Flitton
- Appendix D Gulf War syndrome by Rosalind Hearder
- Appendix E Major office bearers, 1987–96
- Bibliography
- Index
3 - An international obligation
Australia's commitment to Namibia: 1979–89
from PART 2 - NEW MAJOR PEACE OPERATIONS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of maps
- Preface
- Chronology 1987–91
- Abbreviations
- PART 1 STRATEGY AND POLICY
- PART 2 NEW MAJOR PEACE OPERATIONS
- 3 An international obligation
- 4 Establishing the force
- 5 Success in Namibia
- 6 Shadows from a distant war
- 7 A mission of presence
- 8 The genesis of humanitarian demining
- 9 Balancing the risks
- PART 3 THE FIRST GULF WAR
- Conclusion
- Appendix A Australian participation in multinational peacekeeping operations, 1947–2007
- Appendix B Key United Nations Security Council resolutions and statements
- Appendix C Investigations into chemical warfare in the Iran–Iraq War, 1984–87 by Daniel Flitton
- Appendix D Gulf War syndrome by Rosalind Hearder
- Appendix E Major office bearers, 1987–96
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The commitment of more than 600 soldiers, along with thirty civilian officials, to the United Nations Transition Assistance Group (untag) in Namibia in 1989 was the largest deployment of Australian forces overseas since the Vietnam War. untag was also the largest and most complex UN peacekeeping mission since the Congo in 1960–64 – one to which Australia made no formal contribution. Australia's previous peacekeeping missions – in Indonesia, Korea, Kashmir, the Middle East, Cyprus, Rhodesia/Zimbabwe and Iran – had all involved monitoring or observing a ceasefire by relatively small numbers of Australian military personnel or police. By contrast, untag's mission was to supervise Namibia's transition to independence, including the conduct of elections. Unlike previous missions, the civilian component (to which Australia contributed election monitors) was almost as large as the military force.
The mission was to a far distant area in which Australia apparently had little strategic or economic interest. Namibia is an arid, sparsely populated country on the Atlantic coast of southern Africa. With an area of 824,269 square kilometres it is slightly larger than New South Wales, but its population of barely a million was much smaller. And hardly anyone in Australia knew about Namibia. Australia had few commercial interests there, Australian tourists rarely visited, and there were no ties of race or family: the whites, who were less than a tenth of the population, were mainly Afrikaners or of German descent.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Australia and the New World OrderFrom Peacekeeping to Peace Enforcement: 1988–1991, pp. 53 - 82Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011