
	
	
	by Peter Feuilherade
	15 August 2012
	
	from
	
	DefenceManagement Website
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
 
	
		
			| 
			Peter Feuilherade, a former BBC 
			World Service Journalist, is a UK-based writer specialising in 
			Middle East affairs. 
			Peter Feuilherade sheds light 
			on the Pentagon's ongoing operations in Africa and the continent's 
			growing strategic importance to US interests… | 
	
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	 
	
	
	America's new and still evolving defence strategy is strongly focused on 
	Asia-Pacific and the Middle East, as well as heralding a new phase of 
	restraint in military spending. 
	
	 
	
	Over the next 10 years, the Pentagon faces 
	budget cuts of $487bn.
	
	On his first visit to Japan as Pentagon Chief in October 2011, US Defense 
	Secretary Leon Panetta stated that America would remain a global 
	economic and military power despite the cuts, and that the Asia-Pacific 
	region would be central to the US national security strategy. 
	
	 
	
	Washington's shift in focus towards Asia is in 
	response to China's growing military power.
	
	But the expanding US military presence in Africa suggests that Washington is 
	also increasingly concerned about the expansion of transnational terrorism 
	into the sub-Saharan region of the continent.
	
	US forces or advisers are active in the Horn of Africa, and East and Central 
	Africa, while in at least 10 countries in the Maghreb, the Sahel and West 
	Africa US personnel are providing counterterrorism training and building up 
	national armies.
 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	Africom
	
	
	Countering extremists is the top military priority for the continent, says 
	General Carter Ham, Commander of the US Africa Command (Africom).
	
	 
	
	
	
	Africom's mission, its website notes, is to,
	
		
		'protect and defend the national security 
		interests of the United States by strengthening the defense capabilities 
		of African states and regional organizations and, when directed, conduct 
		military operations, in order to deter and defeat transnational threats 
		and to provide a security environment conducive to good governance and 
		development'.
	
	
	Responsible for US military relations with 54 
	African countries, Africom's operational launch took place in 2008. 
	
	 
	
	With President George W Bush facing 
	almost unanimous opposition from African leaders to hosting the command on 
	the continent, its HQ was located in Stuttgart, Germany instead. 
	
	 
	
	Africom typically has fewer than 5,000 troops in 
	Africa at any time.
 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	Drones
	
	
	The US media spotlight turned briefly to Africa in 2011 when the US sent 100 
	military advisers, mostly Army Special Forces, to help soldiers from four 
	Central African countries - Uganda, Congo, South Sudan and the Central 
	African Republic - fight the rebel Lord's Resistance Army and capture its 
	leader Joseph Kony. 
	
	 
	
	But for several years, the US Air Force has been 
	flying drones over Northeast Africa and Yemen from bases in Djibouti and 
	more recently southern Ethiopia and the Seychelles.
	
	In combating the Somalia-based Islamic insurgent group al-Shabaab, only a 
	handful of US troops are involved directly, usually special forces who enter 
	the country on clandestine missions to kill militant targets. 
	
	 
	
	However, America has funded 9,000 African Union 
	troops from Uganda and Burundi, and provided background support to invading 
	Kenyan and Ethiopian troops, all involved in military operations against al-Shabaab.
	
	In March 2012, General Ham told the US House of Representatives Armed 
	Services Committee that al-Qaeda affiliates in East and Northwest Africa 
	posed the greatest security threat to the US. 
	
	 
	
	Noting that al-Qaeda and al-Shabaab (which has 
	recruited and trained dozens of American citizens) had publicly formalized 
	their longstanding merger, he described the stated intention of the leaders 
	of these extremist groups to work more closely together as "his greatest 
	concern".
 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	Unholy trinity
	
	
	On the other side of the continent, the US is conducting counterterrorism 
	training and equipping armies in,
	
		
			- 
			
			Algeria 
- 
			
			Burkina Faso 
- 
			
			Chad 
- 
			
			Mali 
- 
			
			Mauritania 
- 
			
			Morocco 
- 
			
			Niger 
- 
			
			Nigeria 
- 
			
			Senegal  
- 
			
			Tunisia 
	
	US involvement could escalate if events confirm 
	reports that some members of al-Qaeda's core leadership have moved to North 
	Africa from Pakistan after suffering heavy losses in US drone attacks there.
	
	US officials say there are 'clear indications' that al-Qaeda in the 
	Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) is involved in trafficking arms from Libya, and 
	that the upheavals in Libya and Tunisia have created opportunities for AQIM 
	to establish new 'safe havens'. 
	
	 
	
	The US, along with several European countries, 
	is concerned that AQIM and Boko Haram, the militant group from northern 
	Nigeria formed in the 1990s, together with al-Shabaab, are,
	
		
		"attempting to share training and to 
		collaborate in other ways in pursuit of their goal of attacking the US 
		and other foreign targets", according to a September 2011 speech by 
		General Ham. 
	
	
	Some analysts dismiss such an alliance as 
	unlikely, given the cultural and ethnic differences that separate the three 
	groups.
	
	Both AQIM and separatist Tuareg insurgents in northern Mali opposed to the 
	Malian government received sophisticated weapons from Libya in 2011, 
	allowing Tuareg rebels to resume armed operations inside Mali in January 
	2012.
	
	In March, a group of Malian junior officers, angered by the lack of 
	government support to help the army fight the rebels, seized control in a 
	coup, before agreeing to the return of civilian rule in mid-April. At the 
	time of writing, rebel groups remained in control of northern Mali, their 
	ranks reportedly swelled by foreign Islamist militants. 
	
	 
	
	The whole country was also mired in a regional 
	humanitarian crisis, with over 1.4 million Malians in need of emergency food 
	assistance, according to EU estimates.
	
	The New York Times recently described Mali as 'an impoverished desert 
	nation' and, 'an important American ally against the regional al-Qaeda 
	franchise'. 
	
	 
	
	Mounting insecurity there, and fears that destabilization could 
	spread to Niger and elsewhere in the Sahel region, suggest that the American 
	military mission in Mali is likely to have its work cut out combating 
	regional terrorism.
	
	The US will share similar concerns to France, which has warned that the 
	seizure of northern Mali by Tuareg separatists, in a loose alliance with 
	Islamic militants, could turn the region into an AQIM stronghold.
 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	Oil rush
	
	
	US military operations in Africa face a range of difficulties, including a 
	lack of bases and international agreements on flight paths, limited 
	communications and the reluctance of many African countries to have any 
	significant US force within their borders. 
	
	 
	
	One option for the US is increasing the use of 
	sea-based intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance.
	
	As the Pentagon cuts back on traditional military operations in the 
	post-Iraq and Afghan war era, and after defence budget cuts kick in, it will 
	rely increasingly on smaller elite units to carry out targeted operations.
	
	
	 
	
	US special operations forces (SOF) will 
	expand to maintain a continuous presence around the globe. 
	
	 
	
	SOF will,
	
		
		'begin to return to its roots as expert 
		trainers of counterterrorism forces in other countries', 
	
	
	...with a large portion of the worldwide SOF 
	presence focusing on Africa and the Pacific, according to Pentagon 
	officials.
	
	However, public opinion and legislators in the US are concerned about the 
	costs of military forays into Africa at a time of budget cuts, while the 
	deployment of advisers has prompted comparisons with the escalation of US 
	involvement in South Vietnam in the 1960s.
	
	In Africa too, the growing US presence is regarded with some suspicion.
	
	
		
		"After the Libyan case of 2011 (the 
		imposition of the no-fly zone) some African leaders, intellectuals and 
		policymakers are advocating change in the way international 
		organizations or individual states intervene in African political 
		crises. 
		 
		
		Some issues that make Africans suspicious 
		about US involvement include the increased deployments of special 
		forces, trainers and military contractors by the Pentagon, and the 
		political objectives behind some of the interventions," Dr Petrus De 
		Kock, Senior Researcher at the South African Institute of International 
		Affairs, told DMJ.
	
	
	America's critics, meanwhile, see Africa 
	becoming a battleground where the US and its European allies jostle for 
	access to the continent's strategic oil and mineral resources with China, 
	which has been striking commercial deals with governments across Africa for 
	decades.
	
	The last few years have seen significant new oil and natural gas discoveries 
	reported across East Africa, from the Horn of Africa in the northeast, down 
	to Tanzania and Mozambique in the south, and inland in Uganda and the 
	Democratic Republic of Congo around Lake Albert.
	
	As General Ham stated in March 2012: 
	
		
		"With six of the world's fastest growing 
		economies in the past decade, combined with democratic gains made in a 
		number of African nations in 2011, Africa's strategic importance to the 
		United States will continue to grow."
	
	
	For all parties involved, the stakes are high 
	and rising.