- Operation Deliverance
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Revolution – UN intervention – Consolidation – Advance of the ICU – Ethiopian intervention – Inter-factional war – Kenyan intervention
Operation Deliverance was a Canadian Forces peace keeping military operation in Somalia and formed part of the United Nations peacekeeping deployment to that country. The mission began on December the 3rd, 1992 and involved about 1,400 Canadian troops, a helicopter unit and the supply ship HMCS Preserver.[1][2]
By its end in the May of 1993, it turned into a political disaster for the Canadian Forces and was also marked by a few, low key, protest marches in both Somalia, Kenya and Ohio. This, among other things, caused the disbandment of the Canadian Airborne Regiment in1995 and numerous subsequent dismissals and resignations along the chain of command up to, but not including, the Minister of Defence. Regardless of this, Canada's mission objectives were largely completed including the freeing of a captured Canadian journalist and the defeat of the Somali war lord Mohamed 'Tiger' I. Barre[3][4].
See also
- Somalia Affair
- Canadian Airborne Regiment
- Somali Civil War
- 2010 Ayn clashes
Sources
Categories:- Conflicts in 1992
- Military history of Canada
- History of Somalia
- Somali Civil War
- Military history stubs
- Canadian history stubs
- Canadian military history stubs
- Somalia stubs
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