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October 1, 2007
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Monday
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Ramazan 18, 1428
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US Africa Command — a source of help
or trouble?
By Pascal Fletcher DAKAR: The US military presents its new
Africa Command (Africom) as a helping hand offering aid and training to the
world’s poorest continent, but many Africans fear it could bring double trouble
to a conflict-racked region.
US officials dress the new regional command to be launched on Monday in a shiny
altruistic uniform, saying it is designed to help Africa improve its own
stability and security through good governance, the rule of law and economic
opportunity.
But Africans, citing Iraq and Afghanistan, see twin dangers from Africom in the
form of increased US meddling and possible military intervention, and by making
Africa a target of America’s global enemies.
“The US military will only bring more harm to Africa,” said Bile Abdi, an
unemployed worker in Somalia, where US soldiers were killed during a disastrous
“humanitarian” intervention in the early 1990s. Some Somalis also criticise
recent US support for the Somali interim government and its Ethiopian allies
against Islamist forces as bringing more violence to the Horn of Africa.
“If America spreads itself in Africa, its enemies — Russia, Iran and China —
will definitely come too,” Abdi added.
Analysts say the United States wants to secure oil flows from a continent that
is already a
key source of US energy imports in a volatile world. Gulf of Guinea producers
like Nigeria and Angola will soon be supplying a quarter of US oil imports.
The deserts and mountains of the Horn of Africa and the arid Sahel have also
become a new frontier in the US global war on terrorism, in which sub-Saharan
oil suppliers may be vulnerable to violent Islamic militancy infiltrating down
from the north.US officials say Africom will mean no new military bases in
Africa — beyond an existing one in Djibouti.
“The US initiative is aimed at weakening the increased presence of other powers
like China,” said Algerian political sciences professor Ismail Maaref Ghalia.
“There are two major agenda items: one is to secure resource flows, especially
oil, and then counter-terrorism,” Peter Takirambudde, Africa Director of Human
Rights Watch, said.
He told Reuters that while Africom could boost international capacity to detect
and respond with credible force to African humanitarian catastrophes like Darfur
and their massive rights abuses, selfish strategic considerations may end up
prevailing.
“When you have conflicts involving counter-terrorism and energy security, both
tend to trump human rights,” he said.
Although Africom will initially remain based in Germany, it will eventually
transfer to the continent, and finding an African home poses a tricky diplomatic
problem.
Some US allies welcome the initiative.
“Africom will be a very good idea to enhance stability and fight terrorism on
the continent,” Uganda’s minister of state for defence, Ruth Nankabirwa, told
Reuters.
Liberia, founded by freed African slaves from America in 1847, is offering to
host Africom. “The command coming here will mean a lot for both countries,”
Information Minister Lawrence Bropleh told Reuters.
US officials say Africom staff would be distributed across several African
states instead of concentrated in one site.—Reuters
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