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United Nations Operation in the Congo

The United Nations Operation in the Congo (French: Opération des Nations Unies au Congo, abbreviated to ONUC) was a United Nations peacekeeping force deployed in the Republic of the Congo in 1960 in response to the Congo Crisis. ONUC was the UN's first peacekeeping mission with significant military capabilities and remains one of the largest UN operations in size and scope.[1]

Swedish ONUC peacekeeper in the Congo

Following its independence from Belgium on 30 June 1960, the Congo descended into chaos and disorder, prompting its former colonial power to invade under the pretext of restoring order and protecting Belgian nationals.[2] In response to the Congolese government's appeal for assistance, on 14 July 1960 the United Nations Security Council passed Resolution 143 (S/4387) calling upon Belgium to withdraw its troops and authorizing the Secretary-General to provide the Congolese government with military assistance. The first UN troops, drawn mostly from African and Asian states, reached the Congo the following day.[3]

In the face of worsening conditions—including an insurrection in Katanga, the assassination of Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba, the collapse of the central government, and the intervention of foreign mercenaries—ONUC's initial mandate gradually expanded to include protecting the territorial integrity and political independence of the Congo, preventing an impending civil war, and securing the removal of all unauthorized foreign armed forces.[4][5][6]

At its peak, UN forces numbered nearly 20,000 military personnel from over two dozen countries, led largely by India, Ireland, and Sweden.[7] During the peak of hostilities between September 1961 and December 1962, ONUC transitioned from a peacekeeping to a military force, engaging in several clashes and offensives against secessionist and mercenary forces. Following the reintegration of Katanga in February 1963, ONUC was gradually phased out, and civilian aid increased, becoming the single largest assistance effort by the UN up to that time.[2] UN personnel were withdrawn entirely on 30 June 1964.

Background

The Congo became independent on 30 June 1960, but the Belgian commander, Lieutenant General Émile Janssens, refused to rapidly "Africanize" the officers' corps of the Force Publique (the army), resulting in disorder and mutinies just four days after the Congo gained its independence. While the President, Josheph Kasa-Vubu and the Prime Minister, Patrice Lumumba were trying to negotiate with the mutineers, the Belgian government decided to intervene to protect Belgians that remained in the country. The interference from Belgium was seen as neo-colonial aggression from the Congolese government and Lumumba accused the Belgian officers of causing the mutiny and he also accused them of also trying to annex the Congo.[8] Belgium also, with the acceptance of Moïse Tshombé, sent troops to take over Katanga and establish a secession there to protect mining interests. Katanga was rich in minerals and natural resources, contributing to over 60% of the entire nation's raw materials. Katanga had some of the major sources of copper, cobalt, diamonds and uranium in the world, with the uranium being used for the nuclear bomb the US dropped on Hiroshima during World War II.[9]

On 10 July, Belgian troops were sent to Elisabethville, the capital of Katanga, to control the situation and protect Belgian civilians.[10] There were 100,000 Belgians living in the Congo at the time, and many were in a state of panic. The presence of Belgian troops was illegal under international law, as Congolese officials had not requested their presence.[11] With the help of the Belgians, who wrote all his declarations, Tshombé proclaimed the independence of the new State of Katanga over television on 11 July, announcing himself as president. It was widely regarded by critics from around the world that Tshombé was a puppet for the Belgians and their mining interests in Katanga.[12] On 12 July, the President and the Prime Minister asked for help from the UN. The UN Secretary-General, Dag Hammarskjöld addressed the UN Security Council at a night meeting on 13 July and asked the council to act "with utmost speed" on the request.

At the same meeting, the Security Council adopted Resolution 143 (1960), by which it called upon the Government of Belgium to withdraw its troops from the territory of the Congo. The resolution authorized the Secretary-General to facilitate the withdrawal of Belgian troops, maintain law and order, and help to establish and legitimize the post-colonial government in consultation with the Government of the Republic of the Congo. This mission was approved by a Security Council vote eight in favor and none against, with three countries abstaining which included the Republic of China, France and the United Kingdom. Both the United States and Soviet Union voted in favor.[13] This mandate was extended to maintain the territorial integrity of the Congo, particularly through the removal of the foreign mercenaries supporting the secession of Katanga. ONUC's intention was an unprecedented role for a UN peacekeeping force, as it was not self-evidently peacekeeping in nature.[14]

Operations

Deployment

The United Nations stated four goals for the operation: first, to restore law and order; second, to keep other nations out of the crisis; third, to help build the country's economy; and fourth, to restore stability. A peacekeeping force had landed in the country within 48 hours of the resolution, as well as civilian experts who were tasked with keeping the country's infrastructure operating smoothly.[13]

1960

Lumumba asked the United Nations to intervene and use military force to stop Tshombe's forces in Katanga. The first UN troops arrived on 15 July, many airlifted by the United States Air Force as part of Operation New Tape.[15] There was instant disagreement between Lumumba and the UN over the new force's mandate. Because the Congolese army had been in disarray since the mutiny, Lumumba wanted to use the UN troops to subdue Katanga by force and when they refused, he saw this as a betrayal to the United Nations' initial plans. Lumumba wrote to UN Secretary General Dag Hammarskjöld that from the text of United Nations Security Council Resolution 143 "it is clear that, contrary to your personal interpretation, the UN force may be used to subdue the rebel government of Katanga".[16] Secretary General Hammarskjöld refused. To Hammarskjöld, the secession of Katanga was an internal Congolese matter, and the UN was forbidden to intervene by Article 2 of the United Nations Charter. He argued that intervening in Katanga would mean the UN would be enforcing parts of the country and it would not be seen as peacekeeping.[8] Disagreements over what the UN force could and could not do continued throughout its deployment.

In response, Lumumba accused the UN of siding with Tshombe and foreign mining companies. Lumumba then asked the Soviet Union for assistance and received aid in the form of trucks and aircraft which deeply concerned the United States and their allies. Using material of the former Force Publique, Lumumba ordered the army to launch an attack on the breakaway Katanga provinc but failed to take it back. President Joseph Kasa-Vubu dismissed Lumumba on 5 September 1960 which was deeply condemned by the Congo's Houses of Parliament. Lumumba refused to step down. On 14 September Kasa-Vubu dissolved parliament and Joseph Desire Mobutu announced over the radio that he was going to be taking control over the country’s military.[17] After Lumumba had been dismissed, the UN general secretary's representative in the city of Léopoldville, Andrew Cormier, instructed that all airfields were to be closed and that the capital's main radio station was to be shut down as well. Lumumba was unable to fly in any troops that were loyal to him and he also lost his only means of mass communication.[18]

By 20 July 1960, 3,500 troops for ONUC had arrived in the Congo.[19] The 3,500 consisted of 460 troops from the Ethiopian Army (later to grow into the Tekil Brigade),[20] 770 troops from the Ghana Armed Forces, 1,250 troops from Morocco and 1,020 troops from the Tunisian Armed Forces.[21] The first contingent of Belgian forces had left Leopoldville on 16 July upon the arrival of the United Nations troops. Following assurances that contingents of the Force would arrive in sufficient numbers, the Belgian authorities agreed to withdraw all their forces from the Leopoldville area by 23 July. The last Belgian troops left the country by 23 July, as United Nations forces continued to deploy throughout the Congo. The buildup continued, ONUC's strength increasing to over 8,000 by 25 July and to over 11,000 by 31 July 1960. Troops had also arrived from countries such as Sweden, Norway, Ireland and Ethiopia. The UN secretary general stated there would be no troops from any of the great nations or from any countries that had an interest in the crisis that was occurring.[22] A basic agreement between the United Nations and the Congolese Government on the operation of the Force was finalized by 27 July.The United Nations set up headquarters in a seven story apartment building which was on the Boulevard d'Albert in the centre of Léopoldville.[22]

On 9 August 1960, politician Albert Kalonji declared the region of south-eastern Kasai, on the Congo's southern border with Portuguese Angola, to be the new Mining State of South Kasai (État minier du Sud-Kasaï) or Autonomous State of South Kasai (État autonome du Sud-Kasaï).[23][24] The use of the word "state" (état) was deliberately ambiguous, allowing Kalonji to avoid specifying whether the South Kasai claimed to independence as a nation-state in imitation of Katanga, or as a province within the Congo.[25] Due to rejection of requests to the UN for aid to suppress the South Kasai and Katanga revolts, the Lumumba Government decided to request Soviet assistance. De Witte writes that "Leopoldville asked the Soviet Union for planes, lorries, arms, and equipment. ... Shortly afterwards, on 22 or 23 August, about 1,000 soldiers left for Kasai."[26] De Witte goes on to write that on 26–27 August, the ANC seized Bakwanga, Albert Kalonji's capital in South Kasai, without serious resistance. "In the next two days it temporarily put an end to the secession of Kasai."[26]

Bloomfield wrote in 1963 that:[27]

[L]ocal authorities were sensitive of their new independence, nonetheless they were clearly waiting for someone to take action; indeed, the ONUC troops were initially welcomed as saviors from the Belgians. While relationships with the ANC (Armée Nationale Congolaise) were complicated by the latter's lack of responsible commanders at any level, in most instances the ANC during that first month did lay down arms wherever there were UN troops, and ONUC took over custody of arms, ammunition depots, and arsenals. Local UN commanders used their own judgment as to how to keep the Congolese troops under control, with outstanding success in many areas.

By February 1961, there were four factions in the Congo: Antoine Gizenga (leading Lumumba's followers), Joseph-Desire Mobutu, Tshombe, and the self-appointed King Albert Kalonji. There were four separate armed forces: Mobotu's ANC itself, numbering about 12,000, the South Kasai Constabulary loyal to Albert Kalonji (3,000 or less), the Katanga Gendarmerie which were part of Moise Tshombe's regime (totalling about 10,000), and the Stanleyville dissident ANC loyal to Antoine Gizenga (numbering about 8,000).[28]

1961

Early in 1961, Patrice Lumumba was assassinated. UN Swedish troops witnessed Lumumba being transferred to the city of Elisabethville after being captured by Mobutu's forces and he was badly bruised and beaten.[29] He was then executed by a Katangan firing squad and his body was dissolved in acid.[30] Jawaharlal Nehru reacted sharply. Calling it "an international crime of the first magnitude", he asked Hammarskjöld to take a tough line. When the Security Council passed a second resolution on 21 February 1961, Nehru agreed to send an Indian Army brigade of some 4,700 troops to the Congo.[31] The 99th Indian Infantry Brigade was thus dispatched. Thus United Nations mission was strengthened and expanded in response, in an effort to keep foreign mercenaries out of country. The second resolution stated it would restore order in the Congo while preventing civil war and it would see over the withdrawal of all foreign advisors in the country. It also stated it would urgently try and reconvene the Congo's parliament.[32] In August of that year, three of the four groups claiming control of the country, Lumumba, Mobutu and Kalonji, reconciled with help from the United Nations.[13] It resulted in the restoration of the country's parliament and prevented the outbreak of a large civil war. Tshombe's breakaway Katanga province was not part of this reconciliation. United Nations forces clashed with Tshombe's foreign mercenaries several times late in the year.

On 17 September 1961, UN Secretary General Dag Hammarskjöld was flying to Rhodesia to negotiate peace talks between the government and Tshombe when Hammarskjöld's plane crashed, killing him.[13] It was a response to the troubled Operation Morthor ongoing at the time. The circumstances of his death were suspicious, and there remains suspicion that his plane was shot down.[33][34] A recent book by Susan Williams (2011) uncovered evidence that a specially equipped fighter plane from the Belgian-led mercenary force referred to as the Katanga Gendarmerie shot down his plane. Hammarskjöld was succeeded by U Thant.

Swedish troops were assigned to keep order in a huge camp with approximately 40,000[35] refugees, which hastily grew up in just two weeks during August and September 1961.

After Hammarskjöld's death, his replacement, U Thant, took a more aggressive approach. Removing Tshombe from Katanga became the primary military objective for the UN.[citation needed] In December 1961, UN troops from Sweden, Ireland, India, and Ethiopia were involved in heavy fighting for Katanga's capital, Elizabethville. UN forces eventually managed to defeat the Katangan gendarmes in the city and took Elizabethville. During the fighting, eleven Swedish soldiers were taken prisoner; they were released on 15 January 1962 in exchange for Katangan gendarmes.

In August 1961, under the command of Indian Army's Brigadier-General K.A.S. Raja, the UN launched Operation Rumpunch, a surprise attack that led to the peaceful surrender of 81 foreign mercenaries.

Operation Morthor

 
United Nations peacekeeping forces of Iran, the Philippines and Sweden in Kamina Air Base, January 1963

On 13 September 1961, the most obvious example of the transition from peacekeeping to peace enforcement occurred when the Indian ONUC leadership on the ground leading an Indian brigade, launched "Operation Morthor" (Hindi: twist and break) and swiftly took control of Katanga. The operation was meant to be a stepped up version of the earlier Operation Rumpunch. However, Hammarskjöld was not fully informed and did not know the operation was happening.[4]

The operation led to a serious eight-day military engagement between ONUC and the Katangese forces. Tshombe's paid mercenaries were prepared for the UN forces and launched an effective counterattack.[4] Thirteen UN troops were killed as well as 200 Katangese civilians and troops. Operation Morthor was executed with Indian support, but without full approval by several member countries of the UN, particularly the UK, France, and United States. The Soviet Union was angrily accusing the US of supporting the assassination of Lumumba, a Soviet ally, and of installing American ally Mobutu as president. The Soviet state interpreted ONUC to now be acting as a proxy for the US rather than supporting the interests of the entire Security Council.[36]

During the fighting, the UN special representative in Katanga, Conor Cruise O'Brien, accounted that the Katanga secession movement was over.[37] Most observers interpreted that as meaning that the UN military forces had successfully defeated Tshombe's troops, but the announcement was premature in every possible way.[4]

During the operation, a company of 155 Irish UN troops was attacked by Moise Tshombe's forces in Katanga. The Irish were seriously outnumbered and outgunned, but managed to hold out for six days until they finally ran out of ammunition. The Irish managed to inflict heavy losses against Tshombe's foreign mercenaries, without any of their own being killed themselves. This event is known as the Siege of Jadotville.

End of the Katangan secession

 
Swedish troops plan offensive actions for Operation Grandslam

The United Nations launched Operation Unokat in early December 1961, which put pressure on Tshombe to enter serious negotiations with Congolese Prime Minister Cyrille Adoula. On 16 December the attack on Camp Massart took place were the stronghold of the Katangese Gendarmerie was captured. On 21 December Tshombe signed the Kitona Declaration, an agreement whereby he would recognize the authority of the central government and work to reintegrate Katanga into the Republic of the Congo.[38] However, Tshombe subsequently deferred to the Katangan Parliament and put off any action of reconciliation. In January 1962 the rival government of the Free Republic of the Congo was finally subdued and the UN was able to refocus its efforts on ending the Katangan secession. By then contact between the central government and Katanga had broken down, and ONUC intelligence reports indicated that the latter was rebuilding its forces.[39]

In August 1962 Secretary General Thant drew up a "Plan for National Reconciliation" by which Katanga would rejoin a federalized Congo. Adoula and Tshombe both accepted the proposal. Thant was wary of Tshombe's delaying tactics and applied increasing political pressure on the Katangan government to abide by the plan's timetable.[39] Still doubting the likelihood of a peaceful resolution of the Katangan secession, he sent Ralph Bunche to Léopoldville. There, Bunch worked with local UN Mission Chief Robert Gardiner and UN Force Commander Sean MacEoin to create a plan to achieve freedom of movement for ONUC personnel and eliminate the foreign mercenaries. By then it was obvious that Tshombe did not intend on rejoining the Congo; there were 300–500 mercenaries in Katanga (as many as there had been before previous UN operations) and new airfields and defensive positions were being constructed. ONUC personnel and even consuls from troop-contributing supporters of ONUC faced increasing harassment at the hands of Katangan forces.[40]

The situation came to a breaking point on 24 December 1962 when Katangan gendarmes brazenly attacked peacekeeping forces in Katanga, causing Thant to authorize a retaliatory offensive to decisively eliminate secessionist opposition.[41]

Major General Dewan Prem Chand launched Operation Grandslam on 28 December and by the end of the day UN troops had seized downtown Élisabethville.[40] Reinforced by recently amassed air power, United Nations peacekeepers successfully completed the first phase of the operation by the end of the year. In early January the United Nations forces turned their attention towards remaining strongholds in southern Katanga. Indian peacekeepers surpassed their orders and crossed the Lufira River ahead of schedule, generating panic behind the Katangan lines and causing an incident among United Nations leadership.[42] Tshombe, realizing that his position was untenable, sued for peace on 15 January 1963. Two days later he signed an instrument of surrender and declared the Katangan secession to be over.

Final activities

After Operation Grandslam, the United Nations shrank the force significantly, only keeping a small peacekeeping force in the country.

By autumn 1963 plans were underway to remove the United Nations force from the Congo after the reincorporation of Katanga.[43] At that time six battalions of UN troops were stationed in Katanga, one battalion was at Luluabourg, one at Force Headquarters, and administration personnel were at Leopoldville.

Canadian Brigadier-General Jacques Dextraze was sent to the Congo in 1963, to serve as mission Chief of Staff, effectively deputy to the mission's military commander. The military component headquarters, coordinated by Dextraze, was in the process of planning the mission's withdrawal in early 1964 as the Simba rebellion loomed.[44] Dextraze launched a small-scale operation during Pierre Mulele's Kwilu Province uprising of January 1964 in order to save at least some of the threatened aid workers and missionaries under attack from the jeunesse.

In May 1964 troops began to withdraw, beginning with the Irish unit in Kolwezi on 11 May, and ending with units in Leopoldville in June. The United Nations also maintained a large civilian staff of 2000 experts in the country throughout 1963 and 1964.[13] The final group of peacekeepers, 85 men of the First Nigerian Battalion and 58 men of the 57th Canadian Signals, departed Ndjili Airport in Leopoldville on 30 June. The last soldier to leave was UN Force Commander Major General Johnson Aguiyi-Ironsi.[45]

Criticisms of UN involvement

The UN were criticised numerous times during their involvement during the Congolese crisis about how they handled certain situations such as the death of Lumumba and the secession in Katanga. They suffered from many accusations after the death of the Prime Minister Lumumba as many believed he should have been better protected by the UN. The most well-known demonstration against the UN over Lumumba’s death was in New York, when African American protesters pushed their way into the UN building, unsettling the General Assembly; the UN’s office in Belgium was also attacked.[46]

The USSR also criticised the UN's involvement, and on 23 December 1960 Khrushchev addressed the General Assembly of the UN, highlighting the operation's controversial political direction along with the accusation that it was responsible for Lumumba's death, its moves favoring Lumumba's political opponents and also their lack of willingness initially to deal with Katanga. Norrie Macqueen writes that the UN's peacekeeping approach in the Congo had no clear place in the Soviets' view.

Khrushchev would go on to criticise the role of the Secretary General within the UN, claiming it was a position that gave one person far too much power. He suggested a radical reform which included abolishing the position of secretary general and replacing it with a troika system. It was inevitably rejected.[47]

National involvement and UN Commanders

Indian Army leadership

On 12 July 1960, after the Security Council adopted a resolution, calling on Belgium to withdraw its forces and the UN to assist the Congolese government, Hammarskjöld appointed as his special representative a senior Indian diplomat, Rajeshwar Dayal, who would later become India's foreign secretary. Lumumba's assassination shocked Jawaharlal Nehru who reacted sharply. Calling it "an international crime of the first magnitude", he asked Hammarskjöld to take a tough line. When the Security Council passed a second resolution on 21 February 1961, Nehru agreed to send an Indian Army brigade of some 4,700 troops to the Congo. Kasavubu and Mobutu took great exception to these moves. They had all along resented Dayal's and Nehru's support for Lumumba. Now they threatened dire consequences for the UN mission if Dayal remained at its helm. At Hammarskjöld's request, Nehru agreed that Dayal should step down.

Indian Army involvement then escalated. On 13 September, the 99th Indian Infantry Brigade launched Operation Morthor (Hindi: twist and break) that swiftly took control of Katanga. The staff officer who planned the operation would later become the chief of the Indian Army: Major Krishnaswamy Sundarji. It was in this context that the British government sought to arrange that fateful meeting between Hammarskjöld and Tshombe in Ndola, ostensibly to negotiate a ceasefire.

On the eve of Operation Rum Punch the UN had 5,720 troops in Katanga; there were 1,600 Indians, 500 Irish, and 400 Swedes in Élisabethville, 1,200 Indians in Albertville, 1,000 Indians at Kamina Base, 500 Indians at Kabalo, 400 Ethiopians and Indians in Manono, and 120 Irish in Jadotville.

Nehru's support for the UN in Congo was significant. India sent more troops than any country, and they were active throughout 1962 in stubbing out the secessionist forces, Indian Army units leading the fight. The UN forces were commanded by Indian officers including Major General Dewan Prem Chand. Even during the war with China, Nehru did not insist on an immediate withdrawal of the Indian brigade, but the Canberra bombers that it had deployed, were called back. The troops returned only after the mission was completed in March 1963.[31]

Malayan Army

Malaya (now Malaysia) was invited to send a contingent to serve in ONUC. The Prime Minister, Tunku Abdul Rahman Putra, in response to the United Nations' request offered a force of 120 men in a telegram to the Secretary-General on 4 August 1960. On 24 August, in another telegram to New York, the force level was increased to 450 men. Eventually, the force level was settled at 613 all ranks. The name given to this force for service with ONUC was Malayan Special Force or MSF in short. The original force was drawn from two of the finest units in the Federation Army - 4th Battalion, the Royal Malay Regiment and 'C' Squadron 2nd Reconnaissance Regiment (now 2 Armour). It had a complement of 42 officers and 571 other ranks.[48]

Swedish Armed Forces

 
Swedish UN soldiers armed with sub machine guns at one of the access roads to Niemba in November 1961.

Sweden had an active role in the UN forces during the crisis. When Dag Hammarskjöld established UN Mission ONUC he organized it into two parts: one military and one civilian. The Swedish Major General Carl von Horn became the head of the military part and the Swedish diplomat Sture Linnér was responsible for the civilians.[49] Both of them were subject to American Ralph Bunche, who was appointed head of the whole operation.

Air Force

In September 1961, in response to an appeal by the UN for military support, an initial force of five J 29Bs were stationed in the Republic of Congo, organized as the F 22 Wing of the Swedish Air Force.[50] It was subsequently reinforced by four more J 29Bs and two S 29C photo reconnaissance Tunnans in 1962. The J 29 was the only combat aircraft at the disposal of the UN, the J 29Bs dispatched receiving the UN identifying legend upon their fuselages.[50]

Most of the missions involved attacking ground targets with internal cannons as well as unguided rockets. No aircraft were lost in action despite large amounts of ground fire. The consensus of the crews and foreign observers was that the Tunnan's capabilities were exceptional.[51] (The Katanga secessionists used a few Fouga Magisters and other aircraft with relatively poor air combat capabilities.) The only aircraft lost was by a high-ranking officer who made a trial run and crashed during an aborted takeoff. When ONUC was terminated in 1964, some of the Swedish aircraft were destroyed at their base, since they were no longer needed at home and the cost of retrieving them was deemed excessive.[50]

Army

 
A Swedish Terrängbil m/42, painted in the scheme used in the Congo

From 1960 to 1964, the Swedish Army sent a total of nine battalions to Congo.[52] In the initial stage of the crisis, when whites in the Congo became targets during the riots, Dag Hammarskjöld assessed that it was important that there were white UN troops in the country. He therefore requested that Sweden and Ireland would send a battalion each, with the ulterior motive that they would more easily win the confidence of the whites than soldiers from African states. The first Swedish battalion arrived in Congo directly from Gaza (where it had been deployed under UNEF) on 22 July 1960. Initially, the Swedes patrolled in Leopoldville and guarded N'djili Airport in the city.

Swedes, like other UN troops, found difficulty keeping track of the fluent and rapidly changing political allegiances of the various groups, and the fighting they engaged in did not always have an apparent rational reason. In August, the Swedes moved to Elizabethville in Katanga, where they ended up in their first combat situation and suffered their first loss while escorting a train. The trains, which were carrying Katangan Baluba prisoners, were attacked by BaLuba, an ethnic group who supported the central government against Katanga.

The Swedes had to try to maintain order in a huge camp with approximately 40,000 BaLuba refugees in Kasai which was suddenly formed in just two weeks in 1961, with refugees fleeing Gendarmerie attacks in north Katanga.[52] In 1962, the Swedes moved to the Kamina base, near the town of Kamina. On New Year's Eve 1962, the UN troops advanced towards Kamina, cleared all the gendarmes' roadblocks, and managed to knock down the organized resistance.[53]

The Congo Crisis became by far the most serious international task the Swedish Armed Forces faced during the Cold War,[54] and it was the first time in 140 years that Swedish forces were forced into battle.[55] During the years in Congo, 40 Swedish soldiers were injured and 19 were killed. As late as 2004, it was made public that the corpses of two killed Swedes were eaten by locals, purportedly because cannibalism was believed by certain African groups to be a way to absorb the victim's strength. The event was considered very sensitive by the UN and the Congolese government and the incident was covered up.[56]

A total of 6,334 Swedes served in the Congo during the years 1960–1964,[57] 19 died and many wounded. Eleven soldiers were awarded the Swedish Vasa Medal for "extraordinary courage and commendable action to save human lives".[58] Two soldiers who received this medal were Stig von Bayer and Torsten Stålnacke.

Swedish ONUC Battalions 1960–1964

 
Major General Curt Göransson salutes the Swedish flag on his arrival in Elizabethville, Congo and the Swedish UN troops. To the left is Colonel Jonas Wærn and Colonel Olaf Egge (with dark glasses).

Information on the Swedish battalions' deployments in the Congo are as follows:[59]

Bat no. Strength Commander Time of service
VIII G 660 Col. Bernt Juhlin May 1960 – November 1960
X K 533 Col. Anders Kjellgren November 1960 – June 1961
XI G 603 Col. Gösta Frykman April 1961 – November 1961
XII K 567 Col. Jonas Wærn June 1961 – December 1961
XIV K 653 Col. Jonas Wærn December 1961 – May 1962
XVI K 662 Col. Sten-Eggert Nauclér May 1962 – October 1962
XVIII K 698 Col. Nils-Olof Hederén October 1962 – April 1963
XX K 528 Col. Nils-Olof Hederén April 1963 – December 1963
XXII K 303 Lt Col. Vollrath Tham December 1963 – May 1964

The first Swedish UN battalion in Sinai in 1956 was named Battalion 1. This numbering continued up to Battalion 9 which was initially deployed in the Sinai and later in Gaza. After Battalion 9 the numbering was changed to include only odd numbers starting with 11 and with the additional letter G for Gaza. Battalion 8 was transferred from Gaza to the Congo and then took the name Battalion VIII K (Kongo (Congo)). Ultimately, seven of the Congo battalions, 10 to 22, were recruited to serve in ONUC, while the other two were Gaza battalions transferred to the Congo as reinforcements.

Irish Army

The Irish Army's first large deployment to the Congo was in 1960. The 32nd Infantry Battalion was the first deployment of Irish troops overseas and they were woefully ill-equipped. The standard uniform was a heavy bullswool tunic and trousers and the service rifle was the .303 Lee–Enfield. Issues with kit were eventually solved, new lightweight uniforms were issued and the FN FAL rifle replaced the Lee–Enfield. The Irish Battalions had a huge area to patrol and not much transport to patrol it with. Most patrols consisted of a couple of Land Rovers or Willys CJ3As, carrying soldiers armed with rifles, Gustav M45 submachineguns and Bren Guns. One such patrol was ambushed at Niemba on 8 November 1960 by Baluba tribesmen. Of the 11 Irish soldiers, 9 were killed and only 2 escaped, while 25 Baluba were also killed in the battle. Trooper Anthony Browne was posthumously awarded the Military Medal for Gallantry (the highest Irish military award) for giving his life to save his comrade.[60] As a result of the ambush, the army equipped its contingent with 8 Ford armoured cars. These had been constructed in Ireland during the Second World War as a stop-gap armoured vehicle. Armament consisted of a single turret-mounted Vickers HMG. Modifications included extra ammunition storage, a searchlight and a cooling fan.

The most famous Irish action of the operation was the Siege of Jadotville where 150 Irish troops of "A" Company, 35th Battalion, held out against a much larger force of 3,000–5,000 Belgian, French, and Rhodesian led Katanga mercenaries and irregulars. The Irish fought until their ammunition ran out, inflicting hundreds of casualties on their opponents while suffering only several wounded. However, an attempt by Irish and Swedish reinforcements to relieve them failed, and in the end, the besieged Irish troops were forced to surrender.

A total of 6,000 Irish soldiers served in the Congo from 1960 until 1964, taking 26 casualties in that time. The Congo deployment resulted in greater investment by the government in personal kit and eventually, armoured personnel carriers.

Canadian Army

When violence erupted in the Congo, Canada had set aside an infantry brigade especially for the use of the United Nations. When Dag Hammarskjold received the offer to send the Canadian Brigade to the Congo, he refused stating that "If outside help was required to resolve the developing crisis, they preferred non-African states to be used as a last resort." The United Nations did not wish to turn the Congo Crisis into a Cold War proxy war and so tried to pick peacekeepers from neutral countries. This trans-Atlantic country would be Canada, even though as Dr. Spooner put it "Canada: [was] Just West of Neutral". Canadian forces were perfectly suited for a peacekeeping mission in the Congo because they were bilingual, which allowed them to communicate with the mostly English-speaking UN troops as well as the French-speaking Belgian and Congolese forces. They could also communicate with the Congolese people.

All of this occurred prior to there being an official request for assistance from the Congo. The first request for assistance from the Congo requested that the United Nations send technical assistance to support the Force Publique, the armed forces of the Congo. In response, "the secretary general suggested the dispatch of UN technical personnel to the Congo to assist in restoring order and discipline within the armed forces".[61] Canadian National Defence assumed that the United Nations would ask for French-speaking military advisers; the army maintained a standby list of one hundred officers, including many who were bilingual and could be posted abroad on short notice.[verification needed] Before Hammarskjold could put his plan into action, however, a second Congolese request arrived, sent directly to the secretary general from President Joseph Kasa-Vubu and Prime Minister Joseph Lumumba, "the Congolese leaders asked for UN military forces to counter the violent Belgian intervention". Again Canada offered combat troops stating that if the need arose for Canadian military intervention in the Congo Canada could also "deploy one of three French speaking battalions made ready for UN Service". The offer for combat troops was again refused, though Hammarskjold officially accepted the Canadian French-speaking officers. Colonel Jean Berthiaume of the Royal 22e Regiment led the UN effort as the mission's first Chief of staff.[62] Berthiaume was congratulated for his impressive organizational skills, but also for his bravery and for his "initiative, linguistic ability, and special aptitude for negotiating".[verification needed] He became the first Canadian since the 2nd World War to be awarded the rank of Officer of the Order of the British Empire.[63]

It was during this time that the first formal request for troops in the support of the UN mission was given to Canada, the request included Canadian signals and logistics personnel be sent to the Congo. From Canada the UN needed specifically signals personnel as well as quartermaster and maintenance personnel. The Canadian Signallers were to be used to send communication from the front to the headquarters and vice versa. They were stationed both at ONUC HQ as well as in 10 static signals stations spread throughout the country. Canada also sent a Provost Unit which attempted to promote law and order in the capital. "At any one time there were more Canadians serving at ONUC HQ than of any other nationality." In addition to the Signals Squadron, Canada also sent an advanced reconnaissance party consisting of six officers from the United Nations Military Observer Group in India. "These men were instructed to determine personnel and equipment requirements, as well as the organization requirements at HQ." The reconnaissance party found that "ONUC HQ personnel did not carry weapons and were able to move about freely without any trouble." The Canadian government, however, was scared that their French-speaking peacekeepers could get mistaken for Belgian paratroops, and so "peacekeepers were given small arms training ... depending on rank the troops were issued either Browning automatic pistols or C1 submachine guns, weapons the non-combatant peacekeepers carried for personal defence only."

It soon became clear that these fears were not unwarranted, Canadian peacekeepers were attacked by Congolese troops on several occasions. "The first incident of serious violence that occurred between Congolese and Canadians occurred at N'Djili Airport, and demonstrated how vulnerable the Canadians could be. Two groups of peacekeepers were waiting to depart on reconnaissance missions, when those destined for Luluabourg were delayed on the tarmac. A patrol of about ten to twelve Congolese soldiers suddenly rushed them ... the Congolese forced them facedown onto the tarmac, arms extended and then they kicked them." The commanding officer was then knocked out and the remaining Canadian soldiers were herded onto a truck. After about ten minutes the Canadians were rescued by a Danish officer and Ghanain troops. The UN as well as Canada reacted in outrage to this senseless attack against Canadian troops. In turn they praised the Canadian officer for not escalating the situation and responding in due discretion. It was recognized by all parties that the Canadian soldiers were capable of firing on the Congolese troops in self-defence but they did not.

Even though Canada was not in the Congo in a combat capacity, their involvement came under scrutiny from the USSR. The Soviets began to attack Canadian involvement directly, "they objected to the use of Canadian peacekeepers because Canada was one of Belgium's NATO allies". The Soviets even went so far as to demand "the withdrawal of armed groups from Canada". According to Scarnecchia, the Soviets "accused the RCAF of supplying weapons and armoured steel to Tshombe's forces in secessionist Katanga, they believed that this RCAF support was in line with Western interests." Although these allegations were never proven, in response, the Secretary-General of the UN transferred the RCAF contingent from performing airlift duties in support of the UN mission to a Pisa-Leopoldville airlift of food and aid. This transfer served to somewhat satisfy the Russians and any further scrutiny was mild in comparison. Instead of arguing against UN involvement in the Congo, the Soviets began to provide aid to Prime Minister Lumumba in Leopoldville. Along with the assassination of Lumumba and the death of Secretary-General Hammarskjold, this then led to the use of force by UN troops in the Congo being allowed by the UN. In 1961, UN troops under aggressive commanders pushed into Katanga, and began routing Tshombe's armed forces. As "clashes between Tshombe and UN forces grew more frequent, the UN moved even more aggressively, and eventually took control of key parts of the province".[64]

Canadians would play an important role in nearly every aspect of the UN mission in the Congo, from their detachment at Command HQ to the RCAF Pisa-Leopoldville Airlift on to the Signals Personnel stationed throughout the Congo. Though Canadian involvement came under Soviet attack the Canadian commitment to the mission did not waver and Canadian soldiers stayed in the Congo until the end of the mission in 1964. Canadian forces proved themselves admirably in tough situations when they were attacked by Congolese forces and responded with discipline and tact by not firing on their attackers.

The greatest strength which the Canadian Contingent in the Congo reached was 461, though 1,900 Canadian soldiers would serve there from 1960 to 1964. There were no casualties except the bruises and cuts given to the Canadian Forces by Congolese troops at N'Djili Airport.

During the ensuing Congo Crisis, about 1,800 Canadians from 1960 to 1964 served among the 93,000 predominantly African peacekeepers with the United Nations Operation in the Congo (ONUC), working chiefly as communications signallers and delivering via the Royal Canadian Air Force humanitarian food shipments and logistical support.[65] The Canadian participation stemmed more from overwhelming public opinion, and not decisive action on the part of the Diefenbaker government, according to historians Norman Hillmer and Jack Granatstein.[66] However, Diefenbaker reportedly refused to comply with numerous public calls for Canada to provide humanitarian relief to 230,000 Congolese famine victims in South Kasai in 1961 ostensibly because "surplus foodstuffs should be distributed to unemployed persons in Canada" as a first priority.[67][68] Two Canadians died from non-conflict-related causes, and, out of the 33 Canadians injured in the conflict, twelve received "severe beatings" by Congolese forces.[65] Although Patrice Lumumba dismissed the first incidences[spelling?] of these beatings, on 18 August 1960, as "unimportant" and "blown out of all proportion" in order for the UN to "influence public opinion", he attributed them a day later to the Armée Nationale Congolaise's "excess of zeal".[69] Historians have described these incidents as cases of mistaken identity under chaotic circumstances, in which Canadian personnel were confused by Congolese soldiers with Belgian paratroopers, or mercenaries working for the Katanga secession.[65][66]

Only a quarter of Canada's signallers extended their six-month tours of duty to a full year, and Canadian forces reportedly found the Congolese to be "illiterate, very volatile, superstitious and easily influenced", including an instance where a Canadian Lieutenant-Colonel successfully persuaded Kivu Province's Prime Minister to accept a relief contingent from Malaysia by explaining to him that the Malaysians were capable of diverting bullets in flight away from their intended path.[65] A recent study concluded that while the Canadian government "demonstrated a greater willingness to accommodate the Congolese prime minister Patrice Lumumba than other Western nations" and publicly did not side with either faction, it "[p]rivately ... favoured the more Western oriented [President] Kasavubu".[70] however financial assistance was turned down by Prime Minister John Diefenbaker. Canada's troops earned the trust of Joseph Mobutu, the latter visiting Canada in 1964 as President of Zaire, during which he acknowledged Canada's support in maintaining his country's territorial integrity.[65]

Ethiopia

Four hundred and sixty Ethiopian troops were among 3,500 UN soldiers to arrive by 20 July 1960. This initial contingent would form the Tekil (or "Tekel") Brigade, which was stationed in Stanleyville. Through the course of the operation, some 3,000 members of the elite Kebur Zabagna (imperial bodyguards)—about 10 percent of the Ethiopian Army's strength at that time—were raised by Emperor Haile Selassie, along with an air force squadron.[71] The Ethiopian 3rd Brigade was distinguished for having provided decisive artillery support in the UN's siege of Kibushi in late 1962/early 1963.[72][20]

Ghana, Nigeria, Egypt

Ghanaian and Nigerian troops also served in ONUC, the latter with the 99th Indian Infantry Brigade. The Nigerian 1st Battalion was among the last military forces in the country in 1964.[44]

An Egyptian battalion appears to have arrived by September 1960, but left by early 1961 after a dispute about the UN's role.[73] On 26 January 1961, the Secretary-General reported that United Arab Republic (a union of Egypt and Syria) requested that its contingent of roughly 510 personnel be repatriated by 1 February;[74] these troops allegedly comprised a parachute battalion based in Lisala in Equateur Province, where visits of UAR Ilyushin aircraft caused concern among UN officials.[75]


Indonesia

Information on the Indonesian Army contingents' deployments in the Congo are as follows

Contingent No. Strength Commander Time of service
Garuda II 1074 Col. Prijatna then Lt.Col. Solichin Gautama Purwanegara September 1960 – May 1961
Garuda III 3457 Brig.Gen. Kemal Idris then Col. Sabirin Mochtar early 1962 – late 1963

Force commanders of ONUC

  • Major-General Carl von Horn, Sweden, July 1960 – December 1960 (transferred from UNTSO)
  • Lieutenant-General Sean MacEoin, Ireland, January 1961 – March 1962[76]
  • Lieutenant-General Kebbede Guebre, Ethiopia, April 1962 – July 1963
  • Major-General Christian Roy Kaldager, Norway, August 1963 – December 1963
  • Major-General Johnson Aguiyi-Ironsi, Nigeria, January 1964 – June 1964

Legacy

ONUC was the first UN peacekeeping mission to employ force as a means of implementing the decisions of the Security Council. It was also the first mission to enforce a no-fly zone and an arms embargo.[77] As of 2021, it remains the most robust UN operation in terms of scope, scale, and use of force.[citation needed]

During the first three years of its operation, ONUC managed to successfully improve the internal security of the Congo.[78] On the eve of ONUC's departure, Adoula declared over radio that the mission was a "decisive factor" in restoring the Congo's unity and that it set "an encouraging precedent" for intervention in emerging states.[45]

In subsequent years, most Congolese came to view ONUC as an unwelcome foreign interference in their country's affairs.[79]

In popular culture

The Netflix film The Siege of Jadotville (2016) directed by Richie Smyth is based on Declan Power's book, The Siege at Jadotville: The Irish Army's Forgotten Battle (2005). The film tells the story of the Irish peacekeeping troop that held off Katangese and mercenary troops in the mining town of Jadotville, despite being heavily outnumbered.[citation needed]

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Bibliography

  • Boulden, Jane (2001). Peace Enforcement: The United Nations Experience in Congo, Somalia, and Bosnia. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 9780275969066.
  • Dorn, A. Walter (2016). Air Power in UN Operations: Wings for Peace. Military Strategy and Operational Art. Routledge. ISBN 9781317183396.
  • House, Arthur H. (1978). The U.N. in the Congo: the political and civilian efforts. University Press of America. ISBN 9780819105165.
  • Lefever, Ernest W.; Joshua, Wynfred (30 June 1966), (PDF), vol. 2, United States Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, archived from the original (PDF) on 23 April 2017
  • Mockaitis, Thomas R. (1999). Peace Operations and Intrastate Conflict: The Sword Or the Olive Branch? (illustrated ed.). Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 9780275961732.
  • Macqueen, Norrie. The United Nations, Peace Operations and the Cold War. London: Routledge, 2017.
  • Nzongola-Ntalaja, Georges (2007). The Congo, From Leopold to Kabila: A People's History (3rd ed.). New York: Palgrave. ISBN 978-1-84277-053-5.
  • Packham, Eric S. (1996). Freedom and Anarchy. New York: Nova Science. ISBN 1-56072-232-0.
  • Spooner, Kevin A. (2010). Canada, The Congo Crisis, and UN Peacekeeping, 1960–64. UBC Press. ISBN 9780774858953.
  • Williams, A Susan. Who Killed Hammarskjöld? : The UN, the Cold War and White Supremacy in Africa. London: C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd, 2016.
  • Zeilig, Leo. Patrice Lumumba : Africa’s Lost Leader. London: Haus, 2008.

Further reading

  • Abi-Saab, G. (1978), The United Nations Operation in the Congo 1960–1964 (Oxford: Oxford University Press).
  • Franck, Thomas M. (1962). "United Nations Law in Africa: The Congo Operation as a Case Study". Law and Contemporary Problems. 27 (4): 632–52. doi:10.2307/1190797. JSTOR 1190797.
  • Abi-Saab, Georges (1978), "The Initial Decision to Undertake a Peace-Keeping Operation in the Congo (July 1960)", The United Nations Operation in the Congo, 1960–1964, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 1–20.
  • Beauregard, JPRE (Summer 1989), "UN Operations in the Congo, 1960–1964", Canadian Defence Quarterly, 19: 27.
  • Bloomfield, Lincoln P (Spring 1963), "Headquarters-Field Relations: Some Notes on the Beginning and End of ONUC", International Organization, 17 (2): 377–89, doi:10.1017/s0020818300033804, S2CID 154573940.
  • "Dextraze in the Congo", Archives, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.
  • Chakravorty, B (1976), Prasad, SN (ed.), The Congo Operation, 1960–63, Delhi: Historical Section, Ministry of Defence, Govt. of India. Controller of Publications, PDD.37(N)/500.
  • Dorn, A Walter; Bell, David JH, "Intelligence and Peacekeeping: The UN Operation in the Congo 1960–64", International Peacekeeping.
  • Gibbs, D. (2000), ‘The United Nations, international peacekeeping and the question of ‘impartiality’: revisiting the Congo operation of 1960’, Journal of Modern African Studies, 38(3): 359–82. online
  • Gibbs, David N. (1993) "Dag Hammarskjöld, the United Nations, and the Congo Crisis of 1960–1: a reinterpretation." Journal of Modern African Studies 31.1 (1993): 163–174. online
  • Higgins, R. (1980), United Nations Peacekeeping 1946-1967: Documents and Commentary, Vol. III: Africa (London: Oxford University Press).
  • Lefever, Ernest W (1967) Uncertain Mandate: Politics of the U.N. Congo Operation (Baltimore, Maryland: The Johns Hopkins University Press; London: Cambridge University Press; Cambridge, UK) xvi and 254 pp. £3 11s. 6d.
  • Conor Cruise O'Brien (1962), To Katanga and Back, Hutchinson.
  • Scarnacchia, Timothy, "The Congo, Crisis, The United Nations, and Zimbabwean Nationalism: 1960–63", Journal of African Studies, 4.
  • "The Biggest Single Effort Under United Nations Colors", United Nations Review, 7: 6–7, 45–50, August 1960.
  • United Nations Security Council document S/4482 (financial aid to the Congo)

External links

  • Records of the United Nations Operation in the Congo (ONUC) (1960-1964) at the United Nations Archives

united, nations, operation, congo, confused, with, monusco, mission, united, nations, democratic, republic, congo, since, 1999, eufor, congo, 2006, this, article, unclear, citation, style, references, used, made, clearer, with, different, consistent, style, ci. Not to be confused with MONUSCO Mission of the United Nations in the Democratic Republic of the Congo since 1999 and EUFOR RD Congo in 2006 This article has an unclear citation style The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of citation and footnoting February 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may require copy editing for grammar style cohesion tone or spelling You can assist by editing it December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The United Nations Operation in the Congo French Operation des Nations Unies au Congo abbreviated to ONUC was a United Nations peacekeeping force deployed in the Republic of the Congo in 1960 in response to the Congo Crisis ONUC was the UN s first peacekeeping mission with significant military capabilities and remains one of the largest UN operations in size and scope 1 Swedish ONUC peacekeeper in the Congo Following its independence from Belgium on 30 June 1960 the Congo descended into chaos and disorder prompting its former colonial power to invade under the pretext of restoring order and protecting Belgian nationals 2 In response to the Congolese government s appeal for assistance on 14 July 1960 the United Nations Security Council passed Resolution 143 S 4387 calling upon Belgium to withdraw its troops and authorizing the Secretary General to provide the Congolese government with military assistance The first UN troops drawn mostly from African and Asian states reached the Congo the following day 3 In the face of worsening conditions including an insurrection in Katanga the assassination of Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba the collapse of the central government and the intervention of foreign mercenaries ONUC s initial mandate gradually expanded to include protecting the territorial integrity and political independence of the Congo preventing an impending civil war and securing the removal of all unauthorized foreign armed forces 4 5 6 At its peak UN forces numbered nearly 20 000 military personnel from over two dozen countries led largely by India Ireland and Sweden 7 During the peak of hostilities between September 1961 and December 1962 ONUC transitioned from a peacekeeping to a military force engaging in several clashes and offensives against secessionist and mercenary forces Following the reintegration of Katanga in February 1963 ONUC was gradually phased out and civilian aid increased becoming the single largest assistance effort by the UN up to that time 2 UN personnel were withdrawn entirely on 30 June 1964 Contents 1 Background 2 Operations 2 1 Deployment 2 2 1960 2 3 1961 2 4 Operation Morthor 2 5 End of the Katangan secession 2 6 Final activities 2 7 Criticisms of UN involvement 3 National involvement and UN Commanders 3 1 Indian Army leadership 3 2 Malayan Army 3 3 Swedish Armed Forces 3 3 1 Air Force 3 3 2 Army 3 3 3 Swedish ONUC Battalions 1960 1964 3 4 Irish Army 3 5 Canadian Army 3 6 Ethiopia 3 7 Ghana Nigeria Egypt 3 8 Indonesia 3 9 Force commanders of ONUC 4 Legacy 5 In popular culture 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 Further reading 9 External linksBackground EditMain article Congo Crisis The Congo became independent on 30 June 1960 but the Belgian commander Lieutenant General Emile Janssens refused to rapidly Africanize the officers corps of the Force Publique the army resulting in disorder and mutinies just four days after the Congo gained its independence While the President Josheph Kasa Vubu and the Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba were trying to negotiate with the mutineers the Belgian government decided to intervene to protect Belgians that remained in the country The interference from Belgium was seen as neo colonial aggression from the Congolese government and Lumumba accused the Belgian officers of causing the mutiny and he also accused them of also trying to annex the Congo 8 Belgium also with the acceptance of Moise Tshombe sent troops to take over Katanga and establish a secession there to protect mining interests Katanga was rich in minerals and natural resources contributing to over 60 of the entire nation s raw materials Katanga had some of the major sources of copper cobalt diamonds and uranium in the world with the uranium being used for the nuclear bomb the US dropped on Hiroshima during World War II 9 On 10 July Belgian troops were sent to Elisabethville the capital of Katanga to control the situation and protect Belgian civilians 10 There were 100 000 Belgians living in the Congo at the time and many were in a state of panic The presence of Belgian troops was illegal under international law as Congolese officials had not requested their presence 11 With the help of the Belgians who wrote all his declarations Tshombe proclaimed the independence of the new State of Katanga over television on 11 July announcing himself as president It was widely regarded by critics from around the world that Tshombe was a puppet for the Belgians and their mining interests in Katanga 12 On 12 July the President and the Prime Minister asked for help from the UN The UN Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold addressed the UN Security Council at a night meeting on 13 July and asked the council to act with utmost speed on the request At the same meeting the Security Council adopted Resolution 143 1960 by which it called upon the Government of Belgium to withdraw its troops from the territory of the Congo The resolution authorized the Secretary General to facilitate the withdrawal of Belgian troops maintain law and order and help to establish and legitimize the post colonial government in consultation with the Government of the Republic of the Congo This mission was approved by a Security Council vote eight in favor and none against with three countries abstaining which included the Republic of China France and the United Kingdom Both the United States and Soviet Union voted in favor 13 This mandate was extended to maintain the territorial integrity of the Congo particularly through the removal of the foreign mercenaries supporting the secession of Katanga ONUC s intention was an unprecedented role for a UN peacekeeping force as it was not self evidently peacekeeping in nature 14 Operations EditDeployment Edit The United Nations stated four goals for the operation first to restore law and order second to keep other nations out of the crisis third to help build the country s economy and fourth to restore stability A peacekeeping force had landed in the country within 48 hours of the resolution as well as civilian experts who were tasked with keeping the country s infrastructure operating smoothly 13 1960 Edit Lumumba asked the United Nations to intervene and use military force to stop Tshombe s forces in Katanga The first UN troops arrived on 15 July many airlifted by the United States Air Force as part of Operation New Tape 15 There was instant disagreement between Lumumba and the UN over the new force s mandate Because the Congolese army had been in disarray since the mutiny Lumumba wanted to use the UN troops to subdue Katanga by force and when they refused he saw this as a betrayal to the United Nations initial plans Lumumba wrote to UN Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold that from the text of United Nations Security Council Resolution 143 it is clear that contrary to your personal interpretation the UN force may be used to subdue the rebel government of Katanga 16 Secretary General Hammarskjold refused To Hammarskjold the secession of Katanga was an internal Congolese matter and the UN was forbidden to intervene by Article 2 of the United Nations Charter He argued that intervening in Katanga would mean the UN would be enforcing parts of the country and it would not be seen as peacekeeping 8 Disagreements over what the UN force could and could not do continued throughout its deployment In response Lumumba accused the UN of siding with Tshombe and foreign mining companies Lumumba then asked the Soviet Union for assistance and received aid in the form of trucks and aircraft which deeply concerned the United States and their allies Using material of the former Force Publique Lumumba ordered the army to launch an attack on the breakaway Katanga provinc but failed to take it back President Joseph Kasa Vubu dismissed Lumumba on 5 September 1960 which was deeply condemned by the Congo s Houses of Parliament Lumumba refused to step down On 14 September Kasa Vubu dissolved parliament and Joseph Desire Mobutu announced over the radio that he was going to be taking control over the country s military 17 After Lumumba had been dismissed the UN general secretary s representative in the city of Leopoldville Andrew Cormier instructed that all airfields were to be closed and that the capital s main radio station was to be shut down as well Lumumba was unable to fly in any troops that were loyal to him and he also lost his only means of mass communication 18 By 20 July 1960 3 500 troops for ONUC had arrived in the Congo 19 The 3 500 consisted of 460 troops from the Ethiopian Army later to grow into the Tekil Brigade 20 770 troops from the Ghana Armed Forces 1 250 troops from Morocco and 1 020 troops from the Tunisian Armed Forces 21 The first contingent of Belgian forces had left Leopoldville on 16 July upon the arrival of the United Nations troops Following assurances that contingents of the Force would arrive in sufficient numbers the Belgian authorities agreed to withdraw all their forces from the Leopoldville area by 23 July The last Belgian troops left the country by 23 July as United Nations forces continued to deploy throughout the Congo The buildup continued ONUC s strength increasing to over 8 000 by 25 July and to over 11 000 by 31 July 1960 Troops had also arrived from countries such as Sweden Norway Ireland and Ethiopia The UN secretary general stated there would be no troops from any of the great nations or from any countries that had an interest in the crisis that was occurring 22 A basic agreement between the United Nations and the Congolese Government on the operation of the Force was finalized by 27 July The United Nations set up headquarters in a seven story apartment building which was on the Boulevard d Albert in the centre of Leopoldville 22 On 9 August 1960 politician Albert Kalonji declared the region of south eastern Kasai on the Congo s southern border with Portuguese Angola to be the new Mining State of South Kasai Etat minier du Sud Kasai or Autonomous State of South Kasai Etat autonome du Sud Kasai 23 24 The use of the word state etat was deliberately ambiguous allowing Kalonji to avoid specifying whether the South Kasai claimed to independence as a nation state in imitation of Katanga or as a province within the Congo 25 Due to rejection of requests to the UN for aid to suppress the South Kasai and Katanga revolts the Lumumba Government decided to request Soviet assistance De Witte writes that Leopoldville asked the Soviet Union for planes lorries arms and equipment Shortly afterwards on 22 or 23 August about 1 000 soldiers left for Kasai 26 De Witte goes on to write that on 26 27 August the ANC seized Bakwanga Albert Kalonji s capital in South Kasai without serious resistance In the next two days it temporarily put an end to the secession of Kasai 26 Bloomfield wrote in 1963 that 27 L ocal authorities were sensitive of their new independence nonetheless they were clearly waiting for someone to take action indeed the ONUC troops were initially welcomed as saviors from the Belgians While relationships with the ANC Armee Nationale Congolaise were complicated by the latter s lack of responsible commanders at any level in most instances the ANC during that first month did lay down arms wherever there were UN troops and ONUC took over custody of arms ammunition depots and arsenals Local UN commanders used their own judgment as to how to keep the Congolese troops under control with outstanding success in many areas By February 1961 there were four factions in the Congo Antoine Gizenga leading Lumumba s followers Joseph Desire Mobutu Tshombe and the self appointed King Albert Kalonji There were four separate armed forces Mobotu s ANC itself numbering about 12 000 the South Kasai Constabulary loyal to Albert Kalonji 3 000 or less the Katanga Gendarmerie which were part of Moise Tshombe s regime totalling about 10 000 and the Stanleyville dissident ANC loyal to Antoine Gizenga numbering about 8 000 28 1961 Edit Early in 1961 Patrice Lumumba was assassinated UN Swedish troops witnessed Lumumba being transferred to the city of Elisabethville after being captured by Mobutu s forces and he was badly bruised and beaten 29 He was then executed by a Katangan firing squad and his body was dissolved in acid 30 Jawaharlal Nehru reacted sharply Calling it an international crime of the first magnitude he asked Hammarskjold to take a tough line When the Security Council passed a second resolution on 21 February 1961 Nehru agreed to send an Indian Army brigade of some 4 700 troops to the Congo 31 The 99th Indian Infantry Brigade was thus dispatched Thus United Nations mission was strengthened and expanded in response in an effort to keep foreign mercenaries out of country The second resolution stated it would restore order in the Congo while preventing civil war and it would see over the withdrawal of all foreign advisors in the country It also stated it would urgently try and reconvene the Congo s parliament 32 In August of that year three of the four groups claiming control of the country Lumumba Mobutu and Kalonji reconciled with help from the United Nations 13 It resulted in the restoration of the country s parliament and prevented the outbreak of a large civil war Tshombe s breakaway Katanga province was not part of this reconciliation United Nations forces clashed with Tshombe s foreign mercenaries several times late in the year On 17 September 1961 UN Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold was flying to Rhodesia to negotiate peace talks between the government and Tshombe when Hammarskjold s plane crashed killing him 13 It was a response to the troubled Operation Morthor ongoing at the time The circumstances of his death were suspicious and there remains suspicion that his plane was shot down 33 34 A recent book by Susan Williams 2011 uncovered evidence that a specially equipped fighter plane from the Belgian led mercenary force referred to as the Katanga Gendarmerie shot down his plane Hammarskjold was succeeded by U Thant Swedish troops were assigned to keep order in a huge camp with approximately 40 000 35 refugees which hastily grew up in just two weeks during August and September 1961 After Hammarskjold s death his replacement U Thant took a more aggressive approach Removing Tshombe from Katanga became the primary military objective for the UN citation needed In December 1961 UN troops from Sweden Ireland India and Ethiopia were involved in heavy fighting for Katanga s capital Elizabethville UN forces eventually managed to defeat the Katangan gendarmes in the city and took Elizabethville During the fighting eleven Swedish soldiers were taken prisoner they were released on 15 January 1962 in exchange for Katangan gendarmes In August 1961 under the command of Indian Army s Brigadier General K A S Raja the UN launched Operation Rumpunch a surprise attack that led to the peaceful surrender of 81 foreign mercenaries Operation Morthor Edit See also Siege of Jadotville United Nations peacekeeping forces of Iran the Philippines and Sweden in Kamina Air Base January 1963 On 13 September 1961 the most obvious example of the transition from peacekeeping to peace enforcement occurred when the Indian ONUC leadership on the ground leading an Indian brigade launched Operation Morthor Hindi twist and break and swiftly took control of Katanga The operation was meant to be a stepped up version of the earlier Operation Rumpunch However Hammarskjold was not fully informed and did not know the operation was happening 4 The operation led to a serious eight day military engagement between ONUC and the Katangese forces Tshombe s paid mercenaries were prepared for the UN forces and launched an effective counterattack 4 Thirteen UN troops were killed as well as 200 Katangese civilians and troops Operation Morthor was executed with Indian support but without full approval by several member countries of the UN particularly the UK France and United States The Soviet Union was angrily accusing the US of supporting the assassination of Lumumba a Soviet ally and of installing American ally Mobutu as president The Soviet state interpreted ONUC to now be acting as a proxy for the US rather than supporting the interests of the entire Security Council 36 During the fighting the UN special representative in Katanga Conor Cruise O Brien accounted that the Katanga secession movement was over 37 Most observers interpreted that as meaning that the UN military forces had successfully defeated Tshombe s troops but the announcement was premature in every possible way 4 During the operation a company of 155 Irish UN troops was attacked by Moise Tshombe s forces in Katanga The Irish were seriously outnumbered and outgunned but managed to hold out for six days until they finally ran out of ammunition The Irish managed to inflict heavy losses against Tshombe s foreign mercenaries without any of their own being killed themselves This event is known as the Siege of Jadotville End of the Katangan secession Edit Main article Operation Grandslam Swedish troops plan offensive actions for Operation Grandslam The United Nations launched Operation Unokat in early December 1961 which put pressure on Tshombe to enter serious negotiations with Congolese Prime Minister Cyrille Adoula On 16 December the attack on Camp Massart took place were the stronghold of the Katangese Gendarmerie was captured On 21 December Tshombe signed the Kitona Declaration an agreement whereby he would recognize the authority of the central government and work to reintegrate Katanga into the Republic of the Congo 38 However Tshombe subsequently deferred to the Katangan Parliament and put off any action of reconciliation In January 1962 the rival government of the Free Republic of the Congo was finally subdued and the UN was able to refocus its efforts on ending the Katangan secession By then contact between the central government and Katanga had broken down and ONUC intelligence reports indicated that the latter was rebuilding its forces 39 In August 1962 Secretary General Thant drew up a Plan for National Reconciliation by which Katanga would rejoin a federalized Congo Adoula and Tshombe both accepted the proposal Thant was wary of Tshombe s delaying tactics and applied increasing political pressure on the Katangan government to abide by the plan s timetable 39 Still doubting the likelihood of a peaceful resolution of the Katangan secession he sent Ralph Bunche to Leopoldville There Bunch worked with local UN Mission Chief Robert Gardiner and UN Force Commander Sean MacEoin to create a plan to achieve freedom of movement for ONUC personnel and eliminate the foreign mercenaries By then it was obvious that Tshombe did not intend on rejoining the Congo there were 300 500 mercenaries in Katanga as many as there had been before previous UN operations and new airfields and defensive positions were being constructed ONUC personnel and even consuls from troop contributing supporters of ONUC faced increasing harassment at the hands of Katangan forces 40 The situation came to a breaking point on 24 December 1962 when Katangan gendarmes brazenly attacked peacekeeping forces in Katanga causing Thant to authorize a retaliatory offensive to decisively eliminate secessionist opposition 41 Major General Dewan Prem Chand launched Operation Grandslam on 28 December and by the end of the day UN troops had seized downtown Elisabethville 40 Reinforced by recently amassed air power United Nations peacekeepers successfully completed the first phase of the operation by the end of the year In early January the United Nations forces turned their attention towards remaining strongholds in southern Katanga Indian peacekeepers surpassed their orders and crossed the Lufira River ahead of schedule generating panic behind the Katangan lines and causing an incident among United Nations leadership 42 Tshombe realizing that his position was untenable sued for peace on 15 January 1963 Two days later he signed an instrument of surrender and declared the Katangan secession to be over Final activities Edit After Operation Grandslam the United Nations shrank the force significantly only keeping a small peacekeeping force in the country By autumn 1963 plans were underway to remove the United Nations force from the Congo after the reincorporation of Katanga 43 At that time six battalions of UN troops were stationed in Katanga one battalion was at Luluabourg one at Force Headquarters and administration personnel were at Leopoldville Canadian Brigadier General Jacques Dextraze was sent to the Congo in 1963 to serve as mission Chief of Staff effectively deputy to the mission s military commander The military component headquarters coordinated by Dextraze was in the process of planning the mission s withdrawal in early 1964 as the Simba rebellion loomed 44 Dextraze launched a small scale operation during Pierre Mulele s Kwilu Province uprising of January 1964 in order to save at least some of the threatened aid workers and missionaries under attack from the jeunesse In May 1964 troops began to withdraw beginning with the Irish unit in Kolwezi on 11 May and ending with units in Leopoldville in June The United Nations also maintained a large civilian staff of 2000 experts in the country throughout 1963 and 1964 13 The final group of peacekeepers 85 men of the First Nigerian Battalion and 58 men of the 57th Canadian Signals departed Ndjili Airport in Leopoldville on 30 June The last soldier to leave was UN Force Commander Major General Johnson Aguiyi Ironsi 45 Criticisms of UN involvement Edit The UN were criticised numerous times during their involvement during the Congolese crisis about how they handled certain situations such as the death of Lumumba and the secession in Katanga They suffered from many accusations after the death of the Prime Minister Lumumba as many believed he should have been better protected by the UN The most well known demonstration against the UN over Lumumba s death was in New York when African American protesters pushed their way into the UN building unsettling the General Assembly the UN s office in Belgium was also attacked 46 The USSR also criticised the UN s involvement and on 23 December 1960 Khrushchev addressed the General Assembly of the UN highlighting the operation s controversial political direction along with the accusation that it was responsible for Lumumba s death its moves favoring Lumumba s political opponents and also their lack of willingness initially to deal with Katanga Norrie Macqueen writes that the UN s peacekeeping approach in the Congo had no clear place in the Soviets view Khrushchev would go on to criticise the role of the Secretary General within the UN claiming it was a position that gave one person far too much power He suggested a radical reform which included abolishing the position of secretary general and replacing it with a troika system It was inevitably rejected 47 National involvement and UN Commanders EditIndian Army leadership Edit See also Operation Rum Punch and Operation Grandslam On 12 July 1960 after the Security Council adopted a resolution calling on Belgium to withdraw its forces and the UN to assist the Congolese government Hammarskjold appointed as his special representative a senior Indian diplomat Rajeshwar Dayal who would later become India s foreign secretary Lumumba s assassination shocked Jawaharlal Nehru who reacted sharply Calling it an international crime of the first magnitude he asked Hammarskjold to take a tough line When the Security Council passed a second resolution on 21 February 1961 Nehru agreed to send an Indian Army brigade of some 4 700 troops to the Congo Kasavubu and Mobutu took great exception to these moves They had all along resented Dayal s and Nehru s support for Lumumba Now they threatened dire consequences for the UN mission if Dayal remained at its helm At Hammarskjold s request Nehru agreed that Dayal should step down Indian Army involvement then escalated On 13 September the 99th Indian Infantry Brigade launched Operation Morthor Hindi twist and break that swiftly took control of Katanga The staff officer who planned the operation would later become the chief of the Indian Army Major Krishnaswamy Sundarji It was in this context that the British government sought to arrange that fateful meeting between Hammarskjold and Tshombe in Ndola ostensibly to negotiate a ceasefire On the eve of Operation Rum Punch the UN had 5 720 troops in Katanga there were 1 600 Indians 500 Irish and 400 Swedes in Elisabethville 1 200 Indians in Albertville 1 000 Indians at Kamina Base 500 Indians at Kabalo 400 Ethiopians and Indians in Manono and 120 Irish in Jadotville Nehru s support for the UN in Congo was significant India sent more troops than any country and they were active throughout 1962 in stubbing out the secessionist forces Indian Army units leading the fight The UN forces were commanded by Indian officers including Major General Dewan Prem Chand Even during the war with China Nehru did not insist on an immediate withdrawal of the Indian brigade but the Canberra bombers that it had deployed were called back The troops returned only after the mission was completed in March 1963 31 Malayan Army Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Malaya now Malaysia was invited to send a contingent to serve in ONUC The Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman Putra in response to the United Nations request offered a force of 120 men in a telegram to the Secretary General on 4 August 1960 On 24 August in another telegram to New York the force level was increased to 450 men Eventually the force level was settled at 613 all ranks The name given to this force for service with ONUC was Malayan Special Force or MSF in short The original force was drawn from two of the finest units in the Federation Army 4th Battalion the Royal Malay Regiment and C Squadron 2nd Reconnaissance Regiment now 2 Armour It had a complement of 42 officers and 571 other ranks 48 Swedish Armed Forces Edit Swedish UN soldiers armed with sub machine guns at one of the access roads to Niemba in November 1961 Sweden had an active role in the UN forces during the crisis When Dag Hammarskjold established UN Mission ONUC he organized it into two parts one military and one civilian The Swedish Major General Carl von Horn became the head of the military part and the Swedish diplomat Sture Linner was responsible for the civilians 49 Both of them were subject to American Ralph Bunche who was appointed head of the whole operation Air Force Edit In September 1961 in response to an appeal by the UN for military support an initial force of five J 29Bs were stationed in the Republic of Congo organized as the F 22 Wing of the Swedish Air Force 50 It was subsequently reinforced by four more J 29Bs and two S 29C photo reconnaissance Tunnans in 1962 The J 29 was the only combat aircraft at the disposal of the UN the J 29Bs dispatched receiving the UN identifying legend upon their fuselages 50 Most of the missions involved attacking ground targets with internal cannons as well as unguided rockets No aircraft were lost in action despite large amounts of ground fire The consensus of the crews and foreign observers was that the Tunnan s capabilities were exceptional 51 The Katanga secessionists used a few Fouga Magisters and other aircraft with relatively poor air combat capabilities The only aircraft lost was by a high ranking officer who made a trial run and crashed during an aborted takeoff When ONUC was terminated in 1964 some of the Swedish aircraft were destroyed at their base since they were no longer needed at home and the cost of retrieving them was deemed excessive 50 Army Edit A Swedish Terrangbil m 42 painted in the scheme used in the Congo From 1960 to 1964 the Swedish Army sent a total of nine battalions to Congo 52 In the initial stage of the crisis when whites in the Congo became targets during the riots Dag Hammarskjold assessed that it was important that there were white UN troops in the country He therefore requested that Sweden and Ireland would send a battalion each with the ulterior motive that they would more easily win the confidence of the whites than soldiers from African states The first Swedish battalion arrived in Congo directly from Gaza where it had been deployed under UNEF on 22 July 1960 Initially the Swedes patrolled in Leopoldville and guarded N djili Airport in the city Swedes like other UN troops found difficulty keeping track of the fluent and rapidly changing political allegiances of the various groups and the fighting they engaged in did not always have an apparent rational reason In August the Swedes moved to Elizabethville in Katanga where they ended up in their first combat situation and suffered their first loss while escorting a train The trains which were carrying Katangan Baluba prisoners were attacked by BaLuba an ethnic group who supported the central government against Katanga The Swedes had to try to maintain order in a huge camp with approximately 40 000 BaLuba refugees in Kasai which was suddenly formed in just two weeks in 1961 with refugees fleeing Gendarmerie attacks in north Katanga 52 In 1962 the Swedes moved to the Kamina base near the town of Kamina On New Year s Eve 1962 the UN troops advanced towards Kamina cleared all the gendarmes roadblocks and managed to knock down the organized resistance 53 The Congo Crisis became by far the most serious international task the Swedish Armed Forces faced during the Cold War 54 and it was the first time in 140 years that Swedish forces were forced into battle 55 During the years in Congo 40 Swedish soldiers were injured and 19 were killed As late as 2004 it was made public that the corpses of two killed Swedes were eaten by locals purportedly because cannibalism was believed by certain African groups to be a way to absorb the victim s strength The event was considered very sensitive by the UN and the Congolese government and the incident was covered up 56 A total of 6 334 Swedes served in the Congo during the years 1960 1964 57 19 died and many wounded Eleven soldiers were awarded the Swedish Vasa Medal for extraordinary courage and commendable action to save human lives 58 Two soldiers who received this medal were Stig von Bayer and Torsten Stalnacke Swedish ONUC Battalions 1960 1964 Edit Major General Curt Goransson salutes the Swedish flag on his arrival in Elizabethville Congo and the Swedish UN troops To the left is Colonel Jonas Waern and Colonel Olaf Egge with dark glasses Information on the Swedish battalions deployments in the Congo are as follows 59 Bat no Strength Commander Time of serviceVIII G 660 Col Bernt Juhlin May 1960 November 1960X K 533 Col Anders Kjellgren November 1960 June 1961XI G 603 Col Gosta Frykman April 1961 November 1961XII K 567 Col Jonas Waern June 1961 December 1961XIV K 653 Col Jonas Waern December 1961 May 1962XVI K 662 Col Sten Eggert Naucler May 1962 October 1962XVIII K 698 Col Nils Olof Hederen October 1962 April 1963XX K 528 Col Nils Olof Hederen April 1963 December 1963XXII K 303 Lt Col Vollrath Tham December 1963 May 1964The first Swedish UN battalion in Sinai in 1956 was named Battalion 1 This numbering continued up to Battalion 9 which was initially deployed in the Sinai and later in Gaza After Battalion 9 the numbering was changed to include only odd numbers starting with 11 and with the additional letter G for Gaza Battalion 8 was transferred from Gaza to the Congo and then took the name Battalion VIII K Kongo Congo Ultimately seven of the Congo battalions 10 to 22 were recruited to serve in ONUC while the other two were Gaza battalions transferred to the Congo as reinforcements Irish Army Edit The Irish Army s first large deployment to the Congo was in 1960 The 32nd Infantry Battalion was the first deployment of Irish troops overseas and they were woefully ill equipped The standard uniform was a heavy bullswool tunic and trousers and the service rifle was the 303 Lee Enfield Issues with kit were eventually solved new lightweight uniforms were issued and the FN FAL rifle replaced the Lee Enfield The Irish Battalions had a huge area to patrol and not much transport to patrol it with Most patrols consisted of a couple of Land Rovers or Willys CJ3As carrying soldiers armed with rifles Gustav M45 submachineguns and Bren Guns One such patrol was ambushed at Niemba on 8 November 1960 by Baluba tribesmen Of the 11 Irish soldiers 9 were killed and only 2 escaped while 25 Baluba were also killed in the battle Trooper Anthony Browne was posthumously awarded the Military Medal for Gallantry the highest Irish military award for giving his life to save his comrade 60 As a result of the ambush the army equipped its contingent with 8 Ford armoured cars These had been constructed in Ireland during the Second World War as a stop gap armoured vehicle Armament consisted of a single turret mounted Vickers HMG Modifications included extra ammunition storage a searchlight and a cooling fan The most famous Irish action of the operation was the Siege of Jadotville where 150 Irish troops of A Company 35th Battalion held out against a much larger force of 3 000 5 000 Belgian French and Rhodesian led Katanga mercenaries and irregulars The Irish fought until their ammunition ran out inflicting hundreds of casualties on their opponents while suffering only several wounded However an attempt by Irish and Swedish reinforcements to relieve them failed and in the end the besieged Irish troops were forced to surrender A total of 6 000 Irish soldiers served in the Congo from 1960 until 1964 taking 26 casualties in that time The Congo deployment resulted in greater investment by the government in personal kit and eventually armoured personnel carriers Canadian Army Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message When violence erupted in the Congo Canada had set aside an infantry brigade especially for the use of the United Nations When Dag Hammarskjold received the offer to send the Canadian Brigade to the Congo he refused stating that If outside help was required to resolve the developing crisis they preferred non African states to be used as a last resort The United Nations did not wish to turn the Congo Crisis into a Cold War proxy war and so tried to pick peacekeepers from neutral countries This trans Atlantic country would be Canada even though as Dr Spooner put it Canada was Just West of Neutral Canadian forces were perfectly suited for a peacekeeping mission in the Congo because they were bilingual which allowed them to communicate with the mostly English speaking UN troops as well as the French speaking Belgian and Congolese forces They could also communicate with the Congolese people All of this occurred prior to there being an official request for assistance from the Congo The first request for assistance from the Congo requested that the United Nations send technical assistance to support the Force Publique the armed forces of the Congo In response the secretary general suggested the dispatch of UN technical personnel to the Congo to assist in restoring order and discipline within the armed forces 61 Canadian National Defence assumed that the United Nations would ask for French speaking military advisers the army maintained a standby list of one hundred officers including many who were bilingual and could be posted abroad on short notice verification needed Before Hammarskjold could put his plan into action however a second Congolese request arrived sent directly to the secretary general from President Joseph Kasa Vubu and Prime Minister Joseph Lumumba the Congolese leaders asked for UN military forces to counter the violent Belgian intervention Again Canada offered combat troops stating that if the need arose for Canadian military intervention in the Congo Canada could also deploy one of three French speaking battalions made ready for UN Service The offer for combat troops was again refused though Hammarskjold officially accepted the Canadian French speaking officers Colonel Jean Berthiaume of the Royal 22e Regiment led the UN effort as the mission s first Chief of staff 62 Berthiaume was congratulated for his impressive organizational skills but also for his bravery and for his initiative linguistic ability and special aptitude for negotiating verification needed He became the first Canadian since the 2nd World War to be awarded the rank of Officer of the Order of the British Empire 63 It was during this time that the first formal request for troops in the support of the UN mission was given to Canada the request included Canadian signals and logistics personnel be sent to the Congo From Canada the UN needed specifically signals personnel as well as quartermaster and maintenance personnel The Canadian Signallers were to be used to send communication from the front to the headquarters and vice versa They were stationed both at ONUC HQ as well as in 10 static signals stations spread throughout the country Canada also sent a Provost Unit which attempted to promote law and order in the capital At any one time there were more Canadians serving at ONUC HQ than of any other nationality In addition to the Signals Squadron Canada also sent an advanced reconnaissance party consisting of six officers from the United Nations Military Observer Group in India These men were instructed to determine personnel and equipment requirements as well as the organization requirements at HQ The reconnaissance party found that ONUC HQ personnel did not carry weapons and were able to move about freely without any trouble The Canadian government however was scared that their French speaking peacekeepers could get mistaken for Belgian paratroops and so peacekeepers were given small arms training depending on rank the troops were issued either Browning automatic pistols or C1 submachine guns weapons the non combatant peacekeepers carried for personal defence only It soon became clear that these fears were not unwarranted Canadian peacekeepers were attacked by Congolese troops on several occasions The first incident of serious violence that occurred between Congolese and Canadians occurred at N Djili Airport and demonstrated how vulnerable the Canadians could be Two groups of peacekeepers were waiting to depart on reconnaissance missions when those destined for Luluabourg were delayed on the tarmac A patrol of about ten to twelve Congolese soldiers suddenly rushed them the Congolese forced them facedown onto the tarmac arms extended and then they kicked them The commanding officer was then knocked out and the remaining Canadian soldiers were herded onto a truck After about ten minutes the Canadians were rescued by a Danish officer and Ghanain troops The UN as well as Canada reacted in outrage to this senseless attack against Canadian troops In turn they praised the Canadian officer for not escalating the situation and responding in due discretion It was recognized by all parties that the Canadian soldiers were capable of firing on the Congolese troops in self defence but they did not Even though Canada was not in the Congo in a combat capacity their involvement came under scrutiny from the USSR The Soviets began to attack Canadian involvement directly they objected to the use of Canadian peacekeepers because Canada was one of Belgium s NATO allies The Soviets even went so far as to demand the withdrawal of armed groups from Canada According to Scarnecchia the Soviets accused the RCAF of supplying weapons and armoured steel to Tshombe s forces in secessionist Katanga they believed that this RCAF support was in line with Western interests Although these allegations were never proven in response the Secretary General of the UN transferred the RCAF contingent from performing airlift duties in support of the UN mission to a Pisa Leopoldville airlift of food and aid This transfer served to somewhat satisfy the Russians and any further scrutiny was mild in comparison Instead of arguing against UN involvement in the Congo the Soviets began to provide aid to Prime Minister Lumumba in Leopoldville Along with the assassination of Lumumba and the death of Secretary General Hammarskjold this then led to the use of force by UN troops in the Congo being allowed by the UN In 1961 UN troops under aggressive commanders pushed into Katanga and began routing Tshombe s armed forces As clashes between Tshombe and UN forces grew more frequent the UN moved even more aggressively and eventually took control of key parts of the province 64 Canadians would play an important role in nearly every aspect of the UN mission in the Congo from their detachment at Command HQ to the RCAF Pisa Leopoldville Airlift on to the Signals Personnel stationed throughout the Congo Though Canadian involvement came under Soviet attack the Canadian commitment to the mission did not waver and Canadian soldiers stayed in the Congo until the end of the mission in 1964 Canadian forces proved themselves admirably in tough situations when they were attacked by Congolese forces and responded with discipline and tact by not firing on their attackers The greatest strength which the Canadian Contingent in the Congo reached was 461 though 1 900 Canadian soldiers would serve there from 1960 to 1964 There were no casualties except the bruises and cuts given to the Canadian Forces by Congolese troops at N Djili Airport During the ensuing Congo Crisis about 1 800 Canadians from 1960 to 1964 served among the 93 000 predominantly African peacekeepers with the United Nations Operation in the Congo ONUC working chiefly as communications signallers and delivering via the Royal Canadian Air Force humanitarian food shipments and logistical support 65 The Canadian participation stemmed more from overwhelming public opinion and not decisive action on the part of the Diefenbaker government according to historians Norman Hillmer and Jack Granatstein 66 However Diefenbaker reportedly refused to comply with numerous public calls for Canada to provide humanitarian relief to 230 000 Congolese famine victims in South Kasai in 1961 ostensibly because surplus foodstuffs should be distributed to unemployed persons in Canada as a first priority 67 68 Two Canadians died from non conflict related causes and out of the 33 Canadians injured in the conflict twelve received severe beatings by Congolese forces 65 Although Patrice Lumumba dismissed the first incidences spelling of these beatings on 18 August 1960 as unimportant and blown out of all proportion in order for the UN to influence public opinion he attributed them a day later to the Armee Nationale Congolaise s excess of zeal 69 Historians have described these incidents as cases of mistaken identity under chaotic circumstances in which Canadian personnel were confused by Congolese soldiers with Belgian paratroopers or mercenaries working for the Katanga secession 65 66 Only a quarter of Canada s signallers extended their six month tours of duty to a full year and Canadian forces reportedly found the Congolese to be illiterate very volatile superstitious and easily influenced including an instance where a Canadian Lieutenant Colonel successfully persuaded Kivu Province s Prime Minister to accept a relief contingent from Malaysia by explaining to him that the Malaysians were capable of diverting bullets in flight away from their intended path 65 A recent study concluded that while the Canadian government demonstrated a greater willingness to accommodate the Congolese prime minister Patrice Lumumba than other Western nations and publicly did not side with either faction it p rivately favoured the more Western oriented President Kasavubu 70 however financial assistance was turned down by Prime Minister John Diefenbaker Canada s troops earned the trust of Joseph Mobutu the latter visiting Canada in 1964 as President of Zaire during which he acknowledged Canada s support in maintaining his country s territorial integrity 65 Ethiopia Edit Four hundred and sixty Ethiopian troops were among 3 500 UN soldiers to arrive by 20 July 1960 This initial contingent would form the Tekil or Tekel Brigade which was stationed in Stanleyville Through the course of the operation some 3 000 members of the elite Kebur Zabagna imperial bodyguards about 10 percent of the Ethiopian Army s strength at that time were raised by Emperor Haile Selassie along with an air force squadron 71 The Ethiopian 3rd Brigade was distinguished for having provided decisive artillery support in the UN s siege of Kibushi in late 1962 early 1963 72 20 Ghana Nigeria Egypt Edit Ghanaian and Nigerian troops also served in ONUC the latter with the 99th Indian Infantry Brigade The Nigerian 1st Battalion was among the last military forces in the country in 1964 44 An Egyptian battalion appears to have arrived by September 1960 but left by early 1961 after a dispute about the UN s role 73 On 26 January 1961 the Secretary General reported that United Arab Republic a union of Egypt and Syria requested that its contingent of roughly 510 personnel be repatriated by 1 February 74 these troops allegedly comprised a parachute battalion based in Lisala in Equateur Province where visits of UAR Ilyushin aircraft caused concern among UN officials 75 Indonesia Edit Information on the Indonesian Army contingents deployments in the Congo are as follows Contingent No Strength Commander Time of serviceGaruda II 1074 Col Prijatna then Lt Col Solichin Gautama Purwanegara September 1960 May 1961Garuda III 3457 Brig Gen Kemal Idris then Col Sabirin Mochtar early 1962 late 1963Force commanders of ONUC Edit Major General Carl von Horn Sweden July 1960 December 1960 transferred from UNTSO Lieutenant General Sean MacEoin Ireland January 1961 March 1962 76 Lieutenant General Kebbede Guebre Ethiopia April 1962 July 1963 Major General Christian Roy Kaldager Norway August 1963 December 1963 Major General Johnson Aguiyi Ironsi Nigeria January 1964 June 1964Legacy EditONUC was the first UN peacekeeping mission to employ force as a means of implementing the decisions of the Security Council It was also the first mission to enforce a no fly zone and an arms embargo 77 As of 2021 it remains the most robust UN operation in terms of scope scale and use of force citation needed During the first three years of its operation ONUC managed to successfully improve the internal security of the Congo 78 On the eve of ONUC s departure Adoula declared over radio that the mission was a decisive factor in restoring the Congo s unity and that it set an encouraging precedent for intervention in emerging states 45 In subsequent years most Congolese came to view ONUC as an unwelcome foreign interference in their country s affairs 79 In popular culture EditThe Netflix film The Siege of Jadotville 2016 directed by Richie Smyth is based on Declan Power s book The Siege at Jadotville The Irish Army s Forgotten Battle 2005 The film tells the story of the Irish peacekeeping troop that held off Katangese and mercenary troops in the mining town of Jadotville despite being heavily outnumbered citation needed References Edit United Nations Operation in the Congo ONUC 1960 1964 UNARMS search archives un org Retrieved 26 April 2021 a b ONUC peacekeeping un org Retrieved 26 April 2021 Warnock A Timothy ed 2000 Short of War Major USAF Contingency Operations 1947 1997 PDF Air Force Historical Research Agency Retrieved 26 February 2015 a b c d Boulden 2001 pp 35 37 United Nations Operations in Congo 1960 1964 Reading Room Collections Collections Military Archives www militaryarchives ie Retrieved 26 April 2021 Prados John 2006 Safe for Democracy The Secret Wars of the CIA Rowman amp Littlefield p 278 ISBN 9781566638234 UN Operation in the Congo United Nations Archived from the original on 2 July 2007 a b Macqueen Norrie 2017 The United Nations Peace Operations and the Cold War London Routledge p 102 Wiiliams A Susan 2016 Who Killed Hammarskjold The UN the Cold War and White Supremacy in Africa London C Hurst amp Co p 32 Democratic Republic of Congo profile Timeline BBC News 15 November 2016 Retrieved 6 February 2017 The United Nations and the Congo HistoryLearningSite co uk Retrieved 14 February 2015 Williams A Susan 2016 Who Killed Hammarskjold The UN the Cold War and White Supremacy in Africa London C Hurst amp Co p 32 a b c d e Republic of Congo ONUC Background United Nations 2001 Archived from the original on 13 February 2005 Retrieved 14 February 2015 Morrison Alex 1997 James Kiras Douglas A Fraser eds Peacekeeping with Muscle The Use of Force in International Conflict Resolution Clementsport Nova Scotia Canadian Peacekeeping p 60 ISBN 978 1896551180 Warnock A Timothy ed 2000 Short of War Major USAF Contingency Operations 1947 1997 PDF Air Force Historical Research Agency Retrieved 26 February 2015 Letter to Dag Hammarskjold 14 August 1960 Writings of Patrice Lumumba Archived from the original on 8 November 2011 Retrieved 10 May 2012 Williams A Susan 2016 Who Killed Hammarskjold The UN the Cold War and White Supremacy in Africa London C Hurst amp Co p 37 Macqueen Norrie 2017 The United Nations Peace Operations and the Cold War London Routledge p 103 United Nations 1960 Questions relating to the situation in the Republic of the Congo Leopoldville PDF United Nations United Nations Retrieved 29 December 2016 Initial reports on the deployment of troops appear to be S 4389 18 July 1960 S 4417 c 23 July 1960 S 4475 30 August 1960 withdrawal of Belgian forces and S 4482 a b The Congo Crisis 28 May 2014 Retrieved 5 January 2017 first report by the Secretary General on the implementation of Security Council Resolution S 4387 CF 14 July 1960 S 4389 PDF United Nations 18 July 1960 Retrieved 29 December 2016 a b Williams A Susan 2016 Who Killed Hammarskjold The UN the Cold War and White Supremacy in Africa London C Hurst amp Co p 35 Packham 1996 p 37 Nzongola Ntalaja 2007 p 105 Ngapi Rich 15 August 2008 Congo Kinshasa Le 8 aout 1960 Albert Kalonji proclame l autonomie du Sud Kasai Le Potentiel Retrieved 25 November 2014 a b De Witte The Assassination of Lumumba 2001 p 16 Lincoln P Bloomfield Headquarters Field Relations Some Notes on the Beginning and End of ONUC International Organization Vol 17 Issue 2 April 1963 380 Gordon McDonald et al U S Army Area Handbook for the Republic of the Congo Leopoldville issued by the Foreign Area Studies Division of American University June 1962 p 620 Williams A Susan 2016 The UN the Cold War and White Supremacy in Africa London C Hurst amp Co p 39 Zeilig Leo 2008 Patrice Lumumba Africa s Lost Leader London Haus p 129 a b Srinath Raghavan 19 September 2016 When Indian troops entered Congo 55 years ago Mint Williams A Susan 2016 Who Killed Hammarskjold The UN the Cold War and White Supremacy in Africa London C Hurst amp Co p 40 Borger Julian 17 August 2011 Dag Hammarskjold evidence suggests UN chief s plane was shot down The Guardian London Retrieved 2 August 2014 Borger Julian 4 April 2014 Dag Hammarskjold s plane may have been shot down ambassador warned The Guardian Retrieved 2 August 2014 Svensk militar fredsbevarande utlandstjanst under Forenta Nationernas tidevarv 2009 Statens forsvarshistoriska museer in Swedish Archived from the original on 31 May 2009 Bellamy Alex J Williams Paul and Griffin Stuart Understanding Peacekeeping Cambridge UK Polity 2010 Callanan Frank O Brien Conor Cruise Directory of Irish Biography Retrieved 24 August 2022 Boulden 2001 p 38 a b Mockaitis 1999 p 35 a b Mockaitis 1999 p 36 Boulden 2001 p 39 Mockaitis 1999 p 37 Arthur House The UN in the Congo The Civilian Operations University Press of America 1978 p 166 a b Horn Bernd Harris Stephen John 1 January 2001 Warrior Chiefs Perspectives on Senior Canadian Military Leaders Dundurn pp 310 311 ISBN 9781550023510 a b Premier Adoula Resigns The New York Times 1 July 1964 Hebert Paul 2 February 2016 Stronger in Death than Alive Reactions to the Assassination of Patrice Lumumba in Montreal Black Perspectives Macqueen Norrie 2017 The United Nations Peace Operations and the Cold War London Routledge p 104 Ramli H Nik 10 October 2015 The Guardian of world peace The New Straits Times Retrieved 24 February 2021 Nilsson Thomas Persson Jimmy 2006 Kongokrisen FN insatsen 1960 64 i analys Congo Crisis Analysis of the UN mission in 1960 64 in Swedish Lund University Department of Political Science p 10 Retrieved 20 April 2016 a b c Widfeldt Bo 1966 The Saab J 29 Leatherhead Surrey UK Profile Publications Ltd p 9 J 29 SAAB 29 Flygande tunnan 1951 1976 avrosys nu Retrieved 4 December 2010 a b Stendahl Sandra 23 October 2014 Glomda minnen fran Kongo i dokumentar Forgotten memories of Congo in documentary Sydsvenskan in Swedish Retrieved 20 April 2016 Lakia Nina 18 June 2008 Svensk FN trupp i Kongo ar 1960 64 Swedish UN troops in the Congo in 1960 64 in Swedish Swedish Army Museum Archived from the original on 7 June 2008 Retrieved 16 November 2008 Ericsson Wolke Lars 28 October 2007 Lessons learned Svenska operativa och taktiska erfarenheter fran Kongokrisen 1960 1964 Lessons learned Swedish operational and tactical experience from the Congo Crisis 1960 1964 www ericsonwolke se in Swedish Archived from the original on 13 March 2013 Johnsson Fredrik 11 November 2007 Kongokrisen Congo Crisis P3 Dokumentar in Swedish Sveriges Radio Archived from the original on 3 February 2009 Hedlund Ingvar 27 October 2004 Svenska soldater ats upp i Kongo Swedish soldiers were eaten in Congo Expressen in Swedish Archived from the original on 17 December 2008 Retrieved 24 July 2015 Schori Pierre 21 January 2004 Glom bort konstbraket nu galler det folkmord Forget about the art fuss now it s about genocide Aftonbladet in Swedish Retrieved 24 July 2015 Sjostrand Carl ed 2006 Utlandsstyrkan i fredens tjanst forsvarsmaktens internationella insatser in Swedish Malmo Arena p 226 ISBN 91 7843 225 1 SELIBR 10271824 Tullberg Andreas 2012 We are in the Congo now Sweden and the trinity of peacekeeping during the Congo crisis 1960 1964 PDF Studia historica Lundensia 1650 755X Lund Lund University p 92 ISBN 978 91 7473 364 8 SELIBR 13520443 which cites Skold Nils 1994 Med FN i Kongo Sveriges medverkan i den fredsbevarande operationen 1960 1964 With the United Nations in the Congo Sweden s participation in the peacekeeping operation 1960 1964 in Swedish Stockholm Probus p 262 Appendix 12 6 ISBN 91 87184 31 1 SELIBR 7762917 Southern Command 1966 Volume 26 An Cosantoir Vol 26 Ireland Army Authorities p 254 Spooner 2010 p 34 Spooner 2010 p 107 Central Chancery of the Orders of Knighthood London Gazette Retrieved 15 May 2013 Lyman Princeton N Spring 2004 Ralph Bunche s International Legacy The Middle East Congo and United Nations Peacekeeping The Journal of Negro Education 73 2 163 of 159 170 doi 10 2307 3211272 JSTOR 3211272 a b c d e Gaffen Fred 1987 In the Eye of the Storm A history of Canadian peackeeping Toronto Deneau amp Wayne pp 217 239 a b Hillmer Norman Granatstein J L 1994 Empire to umpire Canada and the world to the 1990s Toronto Copp Clark Longman pp 255 256 Spooner 2010 pp 13 16 128 130 224 n 13 McCullough Colin 2011 Canada the Congo Crisis and UN Peacekeeping 1960 64 Kevin Spooner review The Canadian Historical Review 92 1 March 2011 210 212 Granatstein J L 1968 Canada Peacekeeper A survey of Canada s participation in peacekeeping operations in Peacekeeping International Challenge and Response Toronto The Canadian Institute of International Affairs p 161 Spooner Kevin A 2009 Just West of Neutral Canadian Objectivity and Peacekeeping during the Congo Crisis 1960 61 Canadian Journal of African Studies 43 2 303 336 Democratic Republic of Congo unveils its keenness to strengthen its wide ranging relations with Ethiopia Ethiopian Embassy in Kampala Uganda Retrieved 5 January 2017 Daragh Keane The Irsish Army in the Congo PDF Thesis Maynooth National University of Ireland St Patricks College Abbott Peter 2014 Modern African Wars 4 The Congo 1960 2002 Oxford Osprey Publishing p 12 ISBN 9781782000761 Report by the Secretary General on the Intended Withdrawals of Certain Contingents from the United Nations Force in the Congo PDF United Nations S 4640 26 January 1961 United Nations correspondence archives UAR ONUC PDF History Overseas Defence Forces Retrieved 5 January 2017 Dorn 2016 p 37 Lefever amp Joshua 1966 p 370 House 1978 p 120 Bibliography EditBoulden Jane 2001 Peace Enforcement The United Nations Experience in Congo Somalia and Bosnia Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 9780275969066 Dorn A Walter 2016 Air Power in UN Operations Wings for Peace Military Strategy and Operational Art Routledge ISBN 9781317183396 House Arthur H 1978 The U N in the Congo the political and civilian efforts University Press of America ISBN 9780819105165 Lefever Ernest W Joshua Wynfred 30 June 1966 United Nations Peacekeeping in the Congo 1960 1964 PDF vol 2 United States Arms Control and Disarmament Agency archived from the original PDF on 23 April 2017 Mockaitis Thomas R 1999 Peace Operations and Intrastate Conflict The Sword Or the Olive Branch illustrated ed Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 9780275961732 Macqueen Norrie The United Nations Peace Operations and the Cold War London Routledge 2017 Nzongola Ntalaja Georges 2007 The Congo From Leopold to Kabila A People s History 3rd ed New York Palgrave ISBN 978 1 84277 053 5 Packham Eric S 1996 Freedom and Anarchy New York Nova Science ISBN 1 56072 232 0 Spooner Kevin A 2010 Canada The Congo Crisis and UN Peacekeeping 1960 64 UBC Press ISBN 9780774858953 Williams A Susan Who Killed Hammarskjold The UN the Cold War and White Supremacy in Africa London C Hurst amp Co Publishers Ltd 2016 Zeilig Leo Patrice Lumumba Africa s Lost Leader London Haus 2008 Further reading EditAbi Saab G 1978 The United Nations Operation in the Congo 1960 1964 Oxford Oxford University Press Franck Thomas M 1962 United Nations Law in Africa The Congo Operation as a Case Study Law and Contemporary Problems 27 4 632 52 doi 10 2307 1190797 JSTOR 1190797 Abi Saab Georges 1978 The Initial Decision to Undertake a Peace Keeping Operation in the Congo July 1960 The United Nations Operation in the Congo 1960 1964 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 1 20 Beauregard JPRE Summer 1989 UN Operations in the Congo 1960 1964 Canadian Defence Quarterly 19 27 Bloomfield Lincoln P Spring 1963 Headquarters Field Relations Some Notes on the Beginning and End of ONUC International Organization 17 2 377 89 doi 10 1017 s0020818300033804 S2CID 154573940 Dextraze in the Congo Archives Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Chakravorty B 1976 Prasad SN ed The Congo Operation 1960 63 Delhi Historical Section Ministry of Defence Govt of India Controller of Publications PDD 37 N 500 Dorn A Walter Bell David JH Intelligence and Peacekeeping The UN Operation in the Congo 1960 64 International Peacekeeping Gibbs D 2000 The United Nations international peacekeeping and the question of impartiality revisiting the Congo operation of 1960 Journal of Modern African Studies 38 3 359 82 online Gibbs David N 1993 Dag Hammarskjold the United Nations and the Congo Crisis of 1960 1 a reinterpretation Journal of Modern African Studies 31 1 1993 163 174 online Higgins R 1980 United Nations Peacekeeping 1946 1967 Documents and Commentary Vol III Africa London Oxford University Press Lefever Ernest W 1967 Uncertain Mandate Politics of the U N Congo Operation Baltimore Maryland The Johns Hopkins University Press London Cambridge University Press Cambridge UK xvi and 254 pp 3 11s 6d Conor Cruise O Brien 1962 To Katanga and Back Hutchinson Scarnacchia Timothy The Congo Crisis The United Nations and Zimbabwean Nationalism 1960 63 Journal of African Studies 4 The Biggest Single Effort Under United Nations Colors United Nations Review 7 6 7 45 50 August 1960 United Nations Security Council document S 4482 financial aid to the Congo External links EditRecords of the United Nations Operation in the Congo ONUC 1960 1964 at the United Nations Archives Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title United Nations Operation in the Congo amp oldid 1130396065, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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