P
Prestwick
Guest
Oo-er:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/7221632.stm
I understand that Ireland going to Chad as part of a European Union peacekeeping force, completely seperate from the naughty French force whose role is to blatantly prop up the Chad regeime, but despite insisting that the Rebels won't mistake EUFOR for THE FRENCH, they probably will anyway in a deliberate attempt to make things as unstable and thus as difficult for Chad and the EU as possbile.
Now, I was wondering, is Ireland really ready for an assignment like this? This is a long way from annoying the British in Cyprus or writing stern letters to the Israelis in the Lebanon and it could get very, very nasty, especially considering that the rebels in Chad are backed by Sudan and that fighting from neighboring Darfur crosses regularly crosses the border. What has the reaction been in Ireland to this deployment?
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/7221632.stm
I understand that Ireland going to Chad as part of a European Union peacekeeping force, completely seperate from the naughty French force whose role is to blatantly prop up the Chad regeime, but despite insisting that the Rebels won't mistake EUFOR for THE FRENCH, they probably will anyway in a deliberate attempt to make things as unstable and thus as difficult for Chad and the EU as possbile.
Now, I was wondering, is Ireland really ready for an assignment like this? This is a long way from annoying the British in Cyprus or writing stern letters to the Israelis in the Lebanon and it could get very, very nasty, especially considering that the rebels in Chad are backed by Sudan and that fighting from neighboring Darfur crosses regularly crosses the border. What has the reaction been in Ireland to this deployment?