FAO Quotables

"But being right, even morally right, isn't everything. It is also important to be competent, to be consistent, and to be knowledgeable. It's important for your soldiers and diplomats to speak the language of the people you want to influence. It's important to understand the ethnic and tribal divisions of the place you hope to assist."
-Anne Applebaum

Thursday, June 9, 2011

"How France Lost Africa to the U.S." or "What's New? I mean it's France" or "Why ACSS is great!"

This article is by G. Pascal Zachary (a former foreign correspondent for The Wall Street Journal, author of Married to Africa,  a professor of practice at the Walter Cronkite school of journalism at Arizona State University).  In a complete aside, check out the link to his book.  It looks like a very interesting read that would offer a more personal look into life in Africa. 


First of all, The Atlantic is one of my favorite magazines.  They publish consistently engaging articles and usually at least one that's Africa related (and a subscription is only $12 a year or so) each month.


This article immediately caught my attention because half of the nurses that my beautiful wife works with in her hospital are from various African countries.   I was surprised to read how closed off/caste-like the french business world is to European-educated Africans--I'd be curious to hear a counter-argument from a french businessman/company. 


 How France Lost Africa to the U.S. - The Atlantic


I've also included the abstract to the paper mentioned in Zachary's article.  Unfortunately neither you or I can cannot read the entire paper without subscribing to African Affairs (don't worry, it's not a dating website) or paying a one-time use fee of $25 !!!!!! (hahahah, seriously?) to read the article.  A subscription to the magazine (published 4 times a year) is only $22.  Wouldn't it be better to just charge .25 an article that would be available through a one-click connection to a paypal account (my .02). 


OR, as I just found out, if you have access to PROQUEST (through MERLN) you can read the whole article (and the whole magazine) for free.  How do you get this access you ask?  It's easy, you attend the great week-long "Introduction to African Security Affairs" course (or any of the other phenomenal ones they teach) that the Africa Center for Strategic Studies (ACSS http://africacenter.org/) puts on at least once a year.  All alumni from ACSS get access to MERLN!

Diaspora, faith, and science: Building a Mouride hospital in Senegal
by Ellen E. Foley and Cheikh Anta Babou
Ellen E. Foley (efoley@clarku.edu) is an Assistant Professor of International Development and Social Change at Clark University. Cheikh Anta Babou (cheikh@sas.upenn.edu) is an Associate Professor of History at the University of Pennsylvania.

Abstract
This article examines a development initiative spearheaded by the members of a transnational diaspora – the creation of a medical hospital in the holy city of Touba in central Senegal. Although the construction of the hospital is decidedly a philanthropic project, Hôpital Matlaboul Fawzaini is better understood as part of the larger place-making project of the Muridiyya and the pursuit of symbolic capital by a particular Mouride dahira. The dahira's project illuminates important processes of forging global connections and transnational localities, and underscores the importance of understanding the complex motivations behind diaspora development. The hospital's history reveals the delicate negotiations between state actors and diaspora organizations, and the complexities of public–private partnerships for development. In a reversal of state withdrawal in the neo-liberal era, a diaspora association was able to wrest new financial commitments from the state by completing a large infrastructure project. Despite this success, we argue that these kinds of projects, which are by nature uneven and sporadic, reflect particular historical conjunctures and do not offer a panacea for the failure of state-led development.


Links:
Diaspora, faith, and science: Building a Mouride hospital in Senegal
How France Lost Africa to the U.S. - The Atlantic
http://africacenter.org/
http://africacenter.org/2009/12/introduction-to-african-security-issues/
Married to Africa

Monday, June 6, 2011

FAO (Africa) Book List

I am always updating this book list so a few times a year I post the entire list as a blog posting (it's always readily accessible on my 'pages' tab).



"There is no FAO book list but THIS FAO book list and FUUO is the messenger of FAO book lists."

   I created this list because there isn't anyone else doing it at an easy to access space and because I LOVE BOOKS!  They are one of my greatest guilty pleasures! While this page is entitled THE FAO Book List, my intent is for it to be useful to any officer working with a certain region.              

       In creating THE list I have borrowed HEAVILY (thanks FAOWeb, AFRICOM and your contributors(COL C among them!) from other lists that I have come across and also relied heavily on my own research.  I have not read all of these books (the ones I have read are noted with a *) but will link them to my reviews once I do read them. 

   If you have suggestions please comment and I will add them.  As I have time I will hyperlink the book titles to their listings on Amazon.  Also, if you have a review/thoughts that you've written that you'd like me to link to I will do so happily.  Comments on books that are not emboldened and italicized are not my own.


ATTENTION:  IS THIS LIST TOO OVERWHELMING?  I'VE PUT TOGETHER  A STARTER READING LIST HERE.



AFRICA

A Hunter’s Wanderings in Africa by Frederick Courteney Selous

A Naturalist in Lake Victoria by G.D. Hale Carpenter


Africa in Chaos by George B. Ayittey



Africa’s Armies: From Honor to Infamy, a History from 1791 to Present by Robert Edgerton, 2002.  Academic study of military trends on the continent.



Devil on the Cross by Ngugi wa Thiong'o

Elimination of Mercenarism in Africa edited by Sabelo Gumedze.   Good luck finding this one on Amazon, but if you email me I will send you a digital (pdf) copy that I have. 



Into Africa, a Guide to Sub-Saharan Culture and Diversity by Yale Richmond and Phyllis Gestrin


In the Heart of Africa by Duke Adolphus Frederick of Mecklenburg


It's Our Turn to Eat by Michaela Wrong.  Recounts the story of John Githongo, who as part of the anti-corruption agency of the Kenyan government, uncovered widespread corruption.

Kim by Rudyard Kipling

Man-Eaters of Tsavo by J.H. Patterson

Politics and Society in Contemporary Africa by Naomi Chazan, et. al. Textbook covering political structures, social dynamics, ethnicity issues.

Queen Victoria’s Little Wars by Byron Farwell, 1972.   Covers British military expeditions in Africa, Asia and China.  Excellent synopsis of interventions in South Africa and Ethiopia.   An entertaining read.


The Africans by  David Lamb, 1987.  Older classic, hilarious, insightful.

The Black Man’s Burden: Africa and the curse of the Nation-State by  Basil Davidson, 1992. Textbook covering nationalism and imposed statehood  issues.

The Dragon's Gift: The Real Story of China in Africa - Hardcover (Jan. 25, 2010) by Deborah Brautigam

The Famished Road by Ben Okri.  This one comes highly recommended!

Meredith

The French Foreign Legion: A Complete History by Douglas Porch, 1991.  Provides a background on French conquests of Benin and Madagascar.  Also illuminates the history and culture of an enduring major actor in African history and current affairs.


The House at Sugar Beach: In Search of a Lost Africa Childhood by Helene Cooper.  Recommended to me by a Navy Africa FAO.  

The Land of Zinj by Captain Stigand


The Penguin Atlas of African History by Colin McEvedy, 1995.  Excellent reference work, good ethnic maps.

The Scramble for Africa: White Man’s Conquest of the Dark Continent from 1876 to 1912 by Thomas Pakenham, 1991.  Dry and long but an excellent explanation of the origins of colonial borders and colonial legacies.

*The Shadow of the Sun by Ryszard Kapuscinski


The Uganda Protectorate by Sir Harry Johnston

The Wretched of the Earth by Frantz Fanon

*The Zanzibar Chest by Aidan Hartley

Things Fall Apart: A Novel by Chinua Achebe  1959. Classic fiction.

Through Masai Land by Joseph Thompson

Travels with a Tangerine by Tim Mackintosh-Smith.  This is a book about Moroccan traveler Ibn Battutah's 29-year pilgrimage from his native Tangiers to Mecca.

Warlord Politics and African States by  William Reno, 1998. Political theory regarding collapsed states.

*What is the What by Dave Eggers.  Lost Boys of Sudan 'memoir.'


Foreign Aid/Peacekeeping/Piracy


Frontline Diplomacy: Humanitarian Aid and Conflict in Africa  by John Prendergast, 1996.  Describes pitfalls in humanitarian aid.

Lords of Poverty: Power , Prestige, and Corruption in the International Aid Business by  Graham Hancock, 1989.  Older classic, still gives insight into aid dynamics.

Mozambique: UN Peacekeeping in Action, 1992-94 by Richard Synge. Recommended to me. 

The Bottom Billion by Paul Collier.  Oxford press, 2007.   Fascinating policy prescription for US approach to Africa.  This will help you understand the debates swirling around in State and USAID.

West Africa

A History of West Africa 1000-1800.  by Basil Davidson, 1977.  Textbook.   Useful reference.

A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier  by Ismael Beah, 2007. Liberia, child soldier’s point of view.

Blood Diamonds  by Greg Campbell.  Nonfiction (thus unlike the movie).  History of Sierra Leone’s civil war.

Colonial Conscripts: The Tillailleurs Senegalais in French West Africa 1857-1960 by Myron Echenberg, 1991.  A must read if you’re assigned to French West Africa.

Segu by Maryse Conde.  Historical fiction, West African empires mid-1800’s.

The Mask of Anarchy  by Stephen Ellis, 1999. Liberia.  Part history, part socio-cultural study.

The Trouble With Nigeria  by Chinua Achebe, 1983.  African leadership crisis.

This Child Will Be Great: Autobiography of Ellen Johnson by Sirleaf, 2009. Liberia, Africa’s first female president.  Both insightful and an entertaining read.

This House Has Fallen: Midnight in Nigeria  by Karl Maier, 2000.  Anecdotal treatment of Nigeria.

Central Africa

A Plague of Caterpillars and the Innocent Anthropologist  by Nigel Barley, 1983.  British anthropologist in Cameroon, hilarious, insightful.


King Leopold’s Ghost  by Adam Hochschild, 1998.  Belgian Congo/Zaire, colonial horrors.

Shake Hands with the Devil by Romeo Dalliare. UN Force Commander’s account of the Rwandan genocide.  Explains dynamics of UN C2 during crises and illuminates the genocide from the point of view of someone who was vainly trying to stop it.   Depressing, but a must read nonetheless.

The White Man of God   by Kenjo Jumbam, 2003 (African Writer’s Series).  A Cameroonian village reacts to the arrival of missionaries.

The Wonga Coup  by Adam Roberts, 2006.  True story from Equatorial Guinea, reads like a spy thriller.


We wish to Inform You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed With Our Families by Philip Gourevitch. Anecdotal treatment of Rwandan genocide.  Influential book for Rye Barcott, author of It Happened on the Way to War: A Marine's Path to Peace (Part I, page 25)

East Africa



Darfur: The Long Road to Disaster by  Burr and Collins, 2006.  Explains the interplay between Chad, Libya and Sudan.   A necessary read if you’re going to one of those three countries.

Imperial Reckoning: the Untold Story of Britian’s Gulag in Kenya  by Caroline Elkins, 2005.   Very good history of the Mau-Mau rebellion.

Infidel  by Ayaan Hirsi Ali, 2007.  Somali-born woman, refugee in Kenya, runs away from a forced marriage in Europe, becomes Dutch parliamentarian and outspoken critic of Islam’s treatment of women.  Easy read and highlights many relevant issues.

Rogue Ambassador: An African Memoir  by Smith Hempstone, 1997. Kenya.
Southern Africa


Angola's Last Best Chance For Peace by Paul Hare.  Recommended to me.  

Birth by Peter Harris.   A gripping account of the turbulent days preceding the first democratic elections in 1994 in South Africa. 

Cry, Beloved Country by Alan Paton.  In search of missing family members, Zulu priest Stephen Kumalo leaves his South African village to traverse the deep and perplexing city of Johannesburg in the 1940s. With his sister turned prostitute, his brother turned labor protestor and his son, Absalom, arrested for the murder of a white man, Kumalo must grapple with how to bring his family back from the brink of destruction as the racial tension throughout Johannesburg hampers his attempts to protect his family. 

Fighting for Justice by Jay Naidoo.  Jay Naidoo was a tireless anti-apartheid campaigner in the 1980s, serving as the first General Secretary of Coastu, South Africa's largest union federation and the backbone of the internal mass struggles against apartheid. In 1993, he stepped down to lead twenty leaders from Cosatu into parliament on an ANC ticket, and was asked by Nelson Mandela to work as the Minister responsible for the Reconstruction and Development Programme, and then as the Minister of Communications. In 1999 Jay moved away from politics and entered the world of business, setting up the J&J Group, an investment and management company. 


Long Walk to Freedom.  Autobiography of Nelson Mandela, 1994.   It’s tough being an Africanist if you don’t know anything about South Africa or its greatest hero.


Mukiwa: A White Boy in Africa  by Peter Godwin.  Growing up during the Zimbabwean war for independence.


The Boer War  by Thomas Pakenham.   Definitive work on the topic.  Thus it’s a bit long.

When A Crocodile Eats the Sun  by Peter Godwin, 2006.  Anecdotal account of Zimbabwe falling apart, 2000-2005.

Culture and Religion-ISLAM

 African Christianity: Its Public Role by Paul Gifford, 1998.  Recent rise of Christianity,

African Religions and Philosophy  by John Mbiti, 1990. Best overview of traditional religions and world view, Ugandan author.
History of Islam in Africa by Levtzion and Pouwels. 
Into Africa: Intercultural Insights  by Richmond and Gestrin, 1998. Best overview of socio-cultural framework, guidebook for living and working with Africans.

The Development of Islam in West Africa  by Mervyn Hiskett, 1984.

The Failure of Political Islam  by Olivier Roy, 1994.   Fundamentalism, integrisme, and extremism. political influence.

Travels with a Tangerine by Tim Mackintosh-Smith.  This is a book about Moroccan traveler Ibn Battutah's 29-year pilgrimage from his native Tangiers to Mecca.


MIDDLE EAST

A History of the Modern Middle East by William L. Cleveland and Martin Bunton







A Political Economy of the Middle East: Third Edition by Alan Richards and John Waterbury






From Beirut to Jerusalem by Thomas L. Friedman


Lawrence Of Arabia by Sir Basil Henry Liddell Hart

 
Ottoman Centuries by Lord Kinross






*The Zanzibar Chest by Aidan Hartley


ASIA PACIFIC
Afghanistan: A Companion & Guide by Bijan Omrani and Matthew Leeming
Non-Fiction – A province by province guide to Afghanistan

Asia Looks Seaward: Power and Maritime Strategy (Praeger Security International) - Hardcover (Nov. 30, 2007) by Toshi Yoshihara and James R. Holmes

Non-Fiction – The two men who went through some significant events in South Asian history.

China's Energy Strategy: The Impact on Bejing's Maritime Policies by Gabriel B. Collins, Andrew S. Erickson, Lyle J. Goldstein, and William S. Murray

China Goes to Sea: Maritime Transformation in Comparative Historical Perspective by Andrew S. Erickson and Lyle J. Goldstein and Carnes Lord


Non-Fiction – Pakistan is their army and their army is Pakistan, understand them and you understand the country

Descent Into Chaos by Ahmed Rashid
Non-Fiction – The latest and greatest on US involvement in Afghanistan & Pakistan

Dragon By The Tail by John Paton Davies

Korea's Place in the Sun: A Modern History, Updated Edition - Paperback (Sept. 19, 2005) by Bruce Cumings

India: A History by John Keay
Non-Fiction – A good once-over on the sub-continent

Non-Fiction – Discover the source and legacy of everything you will see in Bangladesh / South Asia


Non-Fiction – No, you are not the first one to experience what you are about to experience, the more things change the more they stay the same

Shantaram by Gregory David Roberts
Fiction – Excellent primer on South Asian culture, he wished he had read it BEFORE he came there



Non-Fiction – Britain vs. Russia in the 19th century and how it affected (and still affects) Afghanistan and Pakistan 


The Great Partition: The Making of India & Pakistan by  Yasmin Khan Non-Fiction – A tragic story you need to understand

Non-Fiction – One of the earliest MNCs hard at work subjugating South Asia one deal at a time

The Indian Mutiny by Julian Spilsbury
Non-Fiction – 1857: The point when India became run by the UK and not “the company”


The Places In Between by Rory Stewart
Non-Fiction – A walk across Afghanistan from Herat to Kabul post-Taliban, very insightful

The State At War in South Asia by Pradeep P. Barua
Non-Fiction – A good account of South Asia warfare throughout the ages, it will shed light on what their militaries look back on when searching through history for lessons learned.

The Story of the Guides by G.J. Younghusband
Non-Fiction – A unit formed and led by the first FAOs and in the very spot we are mixed up in right now

Three Cups of Tea by Greg Mortenson.  Non Fiction.
*How to run an effective NGO in one of the most inhospitable areas on earth
*My full mixed Amazon review is here.  My one sentence summary: A great story...I just feel bad for his wife and children who played second fiddle.

Wellington in India by Jac Weller
Non-Fiction – The Tipu Sultan and the Battle of Assaye


EUROPE

Anti Americanism by Jean Francois Revel

The French Betrayal of America by Kenneth R. Timmerman

Of Paradise and Power by Robert Kagan 
 An essential read on the EU/US trans-Atlantic relationship. 
The Struggle for Europe by William Hitchcock.

SOUTH/LATIN AMERICA




 
GENERAL

A Force More Powerful by Peter Ackerman and Jack Duvall



Force and Statecraft by Gordon A. Craig and Alexander L. George



Guns, Germs and Steel by Diamond.  Posits the strong influence of geography on development.


Making War and Building Peace: U.N. Peace Operations by Doyle and Sambanis, 2006.   Statistical analysis of trends leading to success and failure in Peace operations.

*Matterhorn by Karl Marlantes.  My review on Amazon is available here and my full FUUO review is available here.  My two sentence summary:  We spend a disproportionate amount of time studying the facts, tactics, techniques and history of wars. I add this novel to my "must read for FAOs" list because it adds something missing: CONTEXT and TEXTURE.




*The Diplomat’s Dictionary by Chas W. Freeman, Jr.


*The Tipping Point by Malcom Gladwell

The Ugly American by William J. Lederer



CIVIL-MILITARY RELATIONS (from the excellent http://mountainrunner.us/ site)
  • Warriors and Politicians is an excellent book that looks at the unique c-m relationship in the United States. Charlie examines how the military, under dual / dueling masters of the Executive and Legislative branches, developed over the two plus centuries after the Revolution and within parameters established by Founding Fathers, many of whom were military veterans, were wary of a standing army. (Also worthwhile is his more detailed discussion about US Secretaries of Defense in SecDef.)
  • Issues of Democracy: a 1997 US Information Agency (USIA) publication on the importance of civil-military relations in democracy.
  • Center for Civil-Military Relations: it is noteworthy that it is the military itself that dedicates substantial resources to understanding the importance of civil-military relations while the civilian educational system fails to teach the same. (Note the forthcoming book on the CCMR site, Reforming Intelligence, is about Intel and not the military per se.)
  • The Origins of the American Military Coup of 2012: published in 1992 and revised over the years, Charles Dunlap's original portrayal of what happens when the US military decides to protect American society is scary. Turkey's military is known for intervening over the years to protect Kamalism and I've heard some in the US question why the US military doesn't do the same. Read this to understand the importance of a subordinate military.
  • H.R. McMaster's Dereliction of Duty : Johnson, McNamara, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the Lies That Led to Vietnam (a valuable read. McMaster is one of the new whiz kids working with Petraeus in Iraq)
If you really want to go academic, then the following will round out the essential reading list: