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Department of State
Washington, DC
February 6, 2013
* ACOTA is a program within the Office of Regional and Security
Affairs, Bureau of African Affairs at the Department of State. It began
as the Africa Crisis Response Initiative (ACRI) in 1997 with the mission
of enhancing the capacity of African partner nations to participate in
worldwide multinational peace operations. ACRI was restructured as ACOTA
in 2002 and incorporated into the Global Peace Operations Initiative
(GPOI) when GPOI was initiated in 2004
(http://www.state.gov/t/pm/ppa/gpoi/)
* The ACOTA Program Office (APO) manages the program and policies in
collaboration with the Department of State’s Bureau of
Political-Military Affairs, the Office of the Secretary of Defense, and
Africa Command (AFRICOM). The program provides extensive field training
for African peacekeepers plus staff training and exercises for
battalion, brigade, and multinational force headquarters personnel.
ACOTA also provides equipment for African multinational peace
operations’ trainers and peacekeepers.
* The decision by a partner nation to deploy ACOTA-trained troops is
a sovereign national decision. An ACOTA partner’s participation in
multinational peace operations normally falls under a mandate from the
United Nations, the African Union (AU), or a regional organization such
as the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).
* As an international partner, ACOTA seeks to complement and support
allied peacekeeping training efforts and welcomes their participation
in training events.
* The ACOTA program training is conducted by Department of State
civilian contractors. Additionally, U.S. active duty military serve as
mentors/trainers to troop contributing countries.
* Typical training packages include command and staff operations
skills, multinational peace support operations command, post exercises
and peace support operations soldier skills field training. A keystone
of the ACOTA program is that all training and equipping is tailored to
match an individual partner’s needs and capabilities.
* Respect for international standards of human rights is a
fundamental concept incorporated throughout the training. ACOTA stresses
Human Rights, HIV/AIDS awareness, combating sexual and gender-based
violence, identifying and reporting child soldiers and their
exploitation, identifying and reporting trafficking-in-persons, and the
protection of civilians and innocents, among numerous other humanitarian
and gender issues.
* ACOTA introduces the partner military to a range of multinational
peace operations, such as small unit leadership, convoy escort,
checkpoint operations, disarmament operations, safe weapons handling,
management of refugees and internally displaced persons, negotiations,
rules of engagement and command and control.
* Training includes extensive “train-the-trainer” activities to
establish an enduring multinational peace operations training capacity
in each partner nation. Maintenance of trainer skills and refresher
training as required are part of the long-term ACOTA program.
* Since 1997, ACOTA has provided training and non-lethal equipment
to 254,228 peacekeepers from African partner militaries in 257
contingent units. ACOTA’s 25 partners include Benin, Botswana, Burkina
Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Gabon, Ghana, Kenya,
Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique, Namibia, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda,
Senegal, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda and Zambia.
* These partners have sent peacekeeping contingents to varied
missions such as Sudan (AMIS, UNAMID, UNMIS and UNMISS), Sierra Leone
(ECOMOG and UNAMSIL), the Democratic Republic of the Congo
(MONUC/MONUSCO), The Central African Republic (MISAB, MINURCA, MICOPAX,
and MINURCAT II), Ethiopia-Eritrea (UNMEE), Cote d’Ivoire (ECOMICI and
UNOCI), Liberia (ECOMIL and UNMIL), Burundi (OMIB and ONUB), Kosovo
(UNMIK), Lebanon (UNIFIL), Somalia (AMISOM), Chad (MINURCAT II), and
humanitarian relief efforts in Mozambique.
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