- France–Mauritania relations
France–Mauritania relations are the relations between
France andMauritania . The relations date back to the colonial era when Mauritania was part ofFrench West Africa .History
Most of
Mauritania 's developmental assistance in the 1980s was provided byFrance , which was also the major supplier of private directinvestment . Bilateral accords signed with France in 1961 provided for economic, financial, technical, cultural, and military cooperation andaid . Although Mauritania opposed France onAlgeria n independence, nuclear testing in the Sahara, and French arms sales toSouth Africa , ties remained cordial through theDaddah term. French citizens worked in Mauritania as technical assistants in the government,administrators ,teachers , andjudges . Daddah frequently traveled to France, and French development aid flowed to Mauritania. The level of French involvement rose markedly following the outbreak of hostilities in theWestern Sahara . Between 1976 and 1979, when Mauritania unilaterally declared peace and withdrew from combat, French aircraft provided air support for Mauritanian troops fightingPolisario forces, and French paratroops were stationed atNouadhibou .Handloff, Robert E. "Relations with France". In [http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/mrtoc.html "Mauritania: A Country Study"] (Robert E. Handloff, editor).Library of Congress Federal Research Division (June 1988). "This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain."]Activity by Mauritanian dissidents in France, together with Mauritania's gradual policy shift toward the Polisario, resulted in a growing coolness toward Paris. In May 1979, Mauritania asked France to remove its troops from Nouadhibou. France continued to provide a high level of financial aid, although less than requested by the
Haidalla government, and this curtailment further strained ties. Following alleged accusations ofMoroccan support of acoup attempt in March 1981, Haidalla again turned to France to obtain guarantees of Mauritania's territorial integrity. Frenchpresident Georges Pompidou and Haidalla concluded an accord in 1981, as Morocco threatened to carry the struggle against Polisario guerrillas into Mauritanian territory. As Morocco's advancing sand walls increasingly obligated Polisario guerrillas to use Mauritania as a staging area, President Haidalla and, later, PresidentTaya sought and received guarantees of French support in August 1984 and June 1987.Current status
References
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