Proxy Wars on African Soil
Global Power Struggles, Local Catastrophes, and the Militarization of Dependency Conceptualizing Proxy War in International Relations Proxy wars are among the most destructive yet understudied mechanisms of global power politics. In international relations theory, a proxy war is typically defined as an armed conflict in which external powers pursue strategic objectives indirectly by supporting local actors—states, militias, or insurgent groups—rather than engaging in direct military confrontation. As political scientist Karl Deutsch famously described it, proxy wars are conflicts in which “the powers involved do not fight each other directly but use the territory and populations of third countries as substitutes” (Deutsch, 1964). Africa has been the most sustained theater of proxy warfare in modern history . From the Cold War through the post-9/11 era, African societies have repeatedly served as battlegrounds for ideological, strategic, and economic rivalries among global pow...