
Contents
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Congo's collapse Congo's collapse
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The UN calls, Ireland responds The UN calls, Ireland responds
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Tragedy at Niemba and a changing role for Ireland at the UN Tragedy at Niemba and a changing role for Ireland at the UN
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Conor Cruise O’Brien and the Katangan offensive Conor Cruise O’Brien and the Katangan offensive
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Maintaining the Irish presence Maintaining the Irish presence
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Coming of age: ONUC's impact Coming of age: ONUC's impact
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Notes Notes
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2 Ireland comes of age: Congo, peacekeeping and foreign policy
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Published:January 2013
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Abstract
This chapter outlines the difficulties that faced the ‘fire brigade’ states in their efforts to translate their vision of international stability based on collective security into practice. On the surface, involvement in the UN peacekeeping operation in the Congo (ONUC; 1960–64) offered an opportunity to match anti-colonial rhetoric with practical action. In that sense the experience proved successful: peacekeeping became an important outlet for expressing Irish commitment to the UN. Yet the episode was, in large part, a chastening one. With its role limited by the influence of the Cold War powers, by the relative powerlessness of the UN, and by an increasingly vocal Afro-Asian bloc, the Congo experience forced Irish officials to come of age: to recognise the limits to their actions but also to accept their standing as pro-Western, pragmatic, European states.
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