,
By Stijn Mitzer and Joost Oliemans
Saturday, the 6th of November 2004. Two Su-25UBs of the Force Aérienne de la
Côte d'Ivoire (FACI) strafe a French peacekeeper camp
in Bouaké. As sudden as the unprovoked attack had commenced its tragic results would become palpable: the deaths of nine French soldiers and another 31 wounded. This grave provocation would ultimately lead to the destruction of
the FACI and have drastic repercussions for Côte d'Ivoire for years to come. Just hours after the attack, all that
remained of its fledging air arm was a smoldering heap of junk.
The events leading up to this tragedy began to unfold on the 19th of September 2002, when the government of Laurent
Gbagbo found
itself in a precarious situation after the rebel umbrella organisation Mouvement Patriotique de Côte d'Ivoire (MPCI) took control over much of the northern part of the country, effectively splitting Ivory Coast into two. Also captured was Bouaké airbase, which
was home to six inoperational Alpha Jet light attack aircraft. Its confidence bolstered significantly by the capture of the jets, the MPCI boldly threatened to
reactivate the Alpha Jets to use them against their former owners which – having no combat aircraft of its own – could offer little to counter this threat. [1]