Columbia International Affairs Online: Working Papers

CIAO DATE: 03/2010

Dilemmas of Regional Peacemaking: The Dynamics of the AU's Response to Darfur

A. Sarjoh Bah

March 2010

Center on International Cooperation

Abstract

The African Union’s (AU) peacemaking efforts in Darfur exposed the limits of implementing its ambitious peace and security agenda, and the absence of an effective international system to support regional peacemaking efforts. This paper contends that the AU’s efforts brought to the fore three critical issues: first, the gap between the AU’s mandate to intervene in situations involving war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide as provided for in its founding charter, the Constitutive Act, and its capacity to do so; second, the absence of an international system to support regional peacemaking, especially when it involves deploying complex multidimensional peace operations; finally, it brought into sharper focus the inherent tensions and contradictions surrounding existing norms and emerging concepts such as sovereignty, the responsibility to protect (R2P) and internationalized justice through the International Criminal Court (ICC). The paper focuses on the AU’s two pronged strategy in Darfur: Political and Military/ peacekeeping.