(January 29, 2010) In his 11 July 2009
speech in Accra, Ghana, US President Barack Obama declared,
'America has a responsibility to advance this vision, not
just with words, but with support that strengthens African
capacity. When there is genocide in Darfur or terrorists in
Somalia, these are not simply African problems they are
global security challenges, and they demand a global
response. That is why we stand ready to partner through
diplomacy, technical assistance, and logistical support, and
will stand behind efforts to hold war criminals accountable.
Our Africa Command is focused not on establishing a foothold
in the continent, but on confronting these common challenges
to advance the security of America, Africa and the world.'
And yet all the available evidence demonstrates that he is
determined to continue the expansion of US military activity
on the continent initiated by President Bill Clinton in the
late 1990s and dramatically escalated by President George W.
Bush from 2001 to 2009. While many expected the Obama
administration to adopt a security policy toward Africa that
would be far less militaristic and unilateral than that
pursued by his predecessor, the facts show that he is in
fact essentially following the same policy that has guided
US military involvement in Africa for more than a decade.
The clearest indication of President Obamas intentions for
AFRICOM (United States African Command) and for Americas
military involvement in Africa is provided by the budget
requests for the 2010 financial year submitted by the
Departments of State and Defense to Congress in May 2009.
The State Department budget request which includes funding
for all US arms sales, military training, and other security
assistance programs proposes major increases in funding
for US arms sales to a number of African countries through
the Foreign Military Financing (FMF) program. The budget
proposes to increase FMF funding for sub-Saharan African
counties more than 300 per cent, from just over US$8.2
million to more than US$25.5 million, with additional
increases in funding for Maghrebi countries. Major
recipients slated for increases include Chad (US$500,000),
the Democratic Republic of Congo (US$2.5 million), Djibouti
(US$2.5 million), Ethiopia (US$3 million), Kenya (US$1
million), Liberia (US$9 million), Morocco (US$9 million),
Nigeria (US$1.4 million), South Africa (US$800,000) and the
Africa Regional Program (US$2.8 million).
The same trend is evident in the Obama administration's
request for funding for the International Military Education
and Training (IMET) program. The budget request for the IMET
program proposes to increase funding for African countries
by nearly 17 per cent, from just under US$14 million to more
than US$16 million, with additional increases for Maghrebi
countries. Major recipients slated for increases include
Algeria (US$950,000), Chad (US$400,000), the Democratic
Republic of Congo (US$500,000), Djibouti (US$350,000),
Ethiopia (US$775,000), Equatorial Guinea (US$40,000), Ghana
(US$850,000), Liberia (US$525,000), Libya (US$250,000), Mali
(US$350,000), Morocco (US$1.9 million), Niger (US$250,000),
Nigeria (US$1.1 million), Rwanda (US$500,000), Senegal
(US$1.1 million), South Africa (US$900,000) and Uganda
(US$550,000).
The Obama administration also proposes major new funding for
security assistance provided through the Peacekeeping
Operations program. The 2010 financial year budget proposes
to increase funding for the Trans-Sahara Counter-Terrorism
Partnership from US$15 million in the 2009 financial year
to US$20 million in 2010 and for the East Africa Regional
Strategic Initiative from US$5 million in the 2009 financial
year to US$10 million in the 2010 financial year.
It also includes US$42 million to continue operations in
support of the implementation of the Comprehensive Peace
Accords (CPAs) in southern Sudan, US$10 million to help
create a professional 2,000-member armed force in Liberia,
US$21 million to continue operations in the Democratic
Republic of Congo to reform the military (including the
creation of rapid reaction force for the eastern Congo and
the rehabilitation of the military base at Kisangani), and
US$3.6 million for the Africa Conflict Stabilization and
Border Security Program, which will be used to support
monitoring teams, advisory assistance, training,
infrastructure enhancements, and equipment in the Great
Lakes region, the Mano River region, the Horn of Africa,
Chad and the Central African Republic.
And it includes US$67 million to support the African Union
mission in Somalia, along with a request for US$96.8 million
for the Global Peace Operations Initiative (GPOI). The
request for the GPOI includes funding for the African
Contingency Operations and Training Assistance Program
(ACOTA) which provides training and equipment to a number
of African military forces to enhance their peacekeeping
capabilities and the Obama administration has requested
US$96.8 million for ACOTA activities in the 2010 financial
year.
Furthermore, the Obama administrations budget request for
International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement (INCLE)
programs contains US$24 million for Sudan to support the
implementation of the Comprehensive Peace Accords in
southern Sudan and to assist programs to stabilize Darfur by
providing technical assistance and training for southern
Sudans criminal justice sector and law enforcement
institutions as well as contributing to UN civilian police
and formed police units in southern Sudan and Darfur. It
also includes funds for police reforms in the Democratic
Republic of Congo (DRC); for training, infrastructure, and
equipment for police units in Liberia; to operate the
American-run International Law Academy in Gaborone,
Botswana; and to create a Regional Security Training Center
for West, Central and North Africa.
And the Obama administration is also asking for funding to
be provided through the INCLE programs for the first time to
provide security assistance to countries participating in
the Trans-Saharan Counter-Terrorism Partnership: Morocco,
Algeria, Tunisia, Mauritania, Senegal, Mali, Niger, Chad,
and Nigeria. Major recipients slated for increases include
Algeria (US$970,000), Cape Verde (US$2 million), the
Democratic Republic of Congo (US$1.7 million), Ethiopia
(US$500,000), Gambia (US$450,00), Ghana (US$500,000),
Guinea-Bissau (US$3 million), Liberia (US$8 million),
Morocco (US$2 million), Nigeria (US$2 million), Sierra Leone
(US$250,000), Sudan (US$24 million), Uganda (US$385,000),
and the Africa Regional Program (US$4.5 million).
The Obama administration also proposes to increase funding
for counterterrorism programs. These include the
Anti-Terrorism Assistance Program which provides training
to countries throughout the world the Terrorist
Interdiction Program/Personal Identification, Secure
Comparison, and Evaluation System Program which supports
identification and watch listing systems to 18 countries
(including Kenya) the Counterterrorism Financing Program,
which helps partner countries throughout the world stop the
flow of money to terrorists and the Counterterrorism
Engagement Program, which is intended to strengthen ties
with key political leaders throughout the world and 'build
political will at senior levels in partner nations for
shared counterterrorism challenges'. The Obama
administrations budget request requests increased funding
for Kenya (from US$5 million in the 2009 financial year to
US$8 million in the 2010 financial year), for South Africa
(a new program for US$1 million), and the Africa Regional
program (from almost US$15 million in the 2009 financial
year to more than US$20 million in the 2010 financial year).
The Obama administration proposed 2010 budget for the
Department of Defense requests US$278 million in operation
and maintenance funds to cover the cost of AFRICOM
operations and Operation Enduring Freedom-Trans-Sahara
Counter-Terrorism Partnership operations at the AFRICOM
headquarters in Stuttgart, Germany. The administration is
also requesting US$263 million to provide additional
manpower, airlift and communications support to AFRICOM. In
addition, the administration is requesting US$60 million to
fund CJTF-HOA operations in the 2010 financial year and
US$249 million to pay for the operation of the 500-acre base
at Camp Lemonier in Djibouti and for facilities
modifications, along with US$41.8 for major base improvement
construction projects.
The administration has requested some US$400 million for
Global Train and Equip (Section 1206) programs, some US$200
million for Security and Stabilization Assistance (Section
1207) programs, and some US$1 million for the Combatant
Commanders Initiative Fund. This money will be used
primarily in Iraq and Afghanistan to pay for emergency
training and equipment, the services of personnel from the
State Department and humanitarian assistance to the Iraqi
and Afghani armed forces, but it will be available for the
use of AFRICOM as well.
The administrations budget request also contains US$1.9
billion to buy three littoral combat ships and another
US$373 million to buy two joint high speed vessels, ships
that will play a crucial role in US Navy operations off the
coast of Africa. In addition, the administration has
requested US$10.5 million to pay for naval deployments in
west and central Africa in the 2010 financial year and
another US$10 million for naval operations in east Africa.
When Secretary of State Hillary Clinton travelled to Nigeria
during her tour of Africa in August 2009, she met with Ojo
Maduekwe, the foreign minister, and Godwin Abbe, the new
minister of defence. In her remarks after the meeting, she
was asked what the US government intended to do to help the
Nigerian government establish stability and security in the
Niger Delta. 'Well, the defense minister was present at the
second larger meeting that the foreign minister convened,'
she said, 'and he had some very specific suggestions as to
how the United States could assist the Nigerian government
in their efforts, which we think are very promising, to try
to bring peace and stability to the Niger Delta. We will be
following up on those. There is nothing that has been
decided. But we have a very good working relationship
between our two militaries. So I will be talking with my
counterpart, the secretary of defense, and we will, through
our joint efforts, through our bi-national commission
mechanism, determine what Nigeria would want from us for
help, because we know this is an internal matter, we know
this is up to the Nigerian people and their government to
resolve, and then look to see how we would offer that
assistance.' Thus, in addition to the security assistance
programs in the budget request for the 2010 financial year,
the Obama administration is now considering providing even
more military support to the Nigerian government for use in
the Niger Delta if the current amnesty program collapses, as
many analysts expect, and the government resumes military
operations against insurgent forces in this vital
oil-producing region (which produces 10 per cent of
Americas total oil imports).
Another indication of the Obama administrations intentions
are provided by its decision to expand US military
involvement in Somalia as well as its decision to continue
the Bush administrations policy of unilateral military
attacks against alleged al-Qaeda operatives in that country.
In June 2009, a senior State Department official (presumed
to have been Assistant Secretary of State Johnnie Carson)
revealed that the Obama administration had initiated a
program of indirect military support for the Transitional
Federal Government (TFG) of Somalia (the internationally
recognized government of the country, although it only
exercises control over a small part of the capital,
Mogadishu) and a few other towns in the southern part of the
country).
According to the official, the US government was providing
funding to the TFG to finance weapons purchases and had also
asked the governments of Uganda and Burundi, which have
deployed troops to Mogadishu under an African Union mandate
to protect the TFG, to transfer weaponry from their own
stockpiles to the armed forces of the TFG in exchange for
promises that the US government would reimburse them. In
addition, the US government made its base in Djibouti
available to other governments for them to provide military
training to the armed forces of the TFG.
During her visit to Kenya in August 2009, Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton announced that the US government would
'continue to provide equipment and training to the TFG',
stating 'very early in the administration, I made the
decision, which the president supported, to accelerate and
provide aid to the TFG'. She went on to declare that al-Shabaab,
the Islamist insurgent group fighting to overthrow the TFG,
was 'a terrorist group with links to al-Qaeda and other
foreign military networks' and that they 'see Somalia as a
future haven for global terrorism'. 'There is no doubt',
Secretary Clinton stated 'that al-Shabaab wants to obtain
control over Somalia to use it as a base from which to
influence and even infiltrate surrounding countries and
launch attacks against countries far and near.' Thus, 'if
al-Shabaab were to obtain a haven in Somalia, which would
then attract al-Qaeda and other terrorist actors, it would
be a threat to the United States.'
The US government arranged for the delivery of an initial
supply of approximately 40 tonnes of small arms and
ammunition worth approximately US$10 million to the TFG
between May and August of 2009 from the stockpiles of the
African Union peacekeeping force, along with between US$1
million and US$2 million in cash to the TFG to finance its
own arms purchase, and the delivery of another 40 tons of
small arms and ammunition over the following months. A
number of other governments including Kenya, Uganda,
Burundi and France are also reported to have sent military
personnel to the US base in Djibouti to provide military
training to TFG troops.
According to a report by the Associated Press, American
officials 'say the US military is not conducting the
training and will not put any forces in Somalia'. Other
countries were conducting the training, the Associated Press
reported, because 'the [Obama] administration is making a
concerted effort to avoid putting any American footprint in
Somalia, which would risk alienating allies and add to
charges by Islamic extremists of a Western takeover.'
However, it has since become clear that most of the arms and
training has been transferred to al-Shabaab, either by
Islamic militants who had infiltrated the TFG military
forces or as a result of the sale of the weapons and
ammunition on the black market.
Then, in August, US Special Forces troops attacked and
killed Saleh Ali Saleh Nabhan, an alleged al-Qaeda operative
who was accused of being involved in the bombing of the US
embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in August 1998 as well as
other al-Qaeda operations in east Africa. The US Special
Forces troops carried out the attack from onboard several
helicopters that had been launched from a US Navy warship
off the Somali coast, using machine guns and automatic
assault rifles to strafe a convoy of four-wheel drive
vehicles carrying Nabhan and his retinue. Following the
initial assault, the helicopters landed so that their troops
could seize Nabhans body for positive identification. It is
likely that the Obama administration will conduct further
military operations in Somalia since, in the words of Vice
Admiral Robert Moeller, the deputy commander of AFRICOM,
'the threat posed by al-Shabaab is something that we pay
very, very close attention to.'
And in October 2009, the Obama administration announced a
major new security assistance package for Mali that was
delivered on 20 October 2009. The package valued at US$4.5
to US$5 million (2.3 billion CFA) and which includes 37 Land
Cruiser pickup trucks, communication equipment, replacement
parts, clothing and other individual equipment is intended
to enhance Mali's ability to transport and communicate with
internal security (counter-insurgency) units throughout the
country and control its borders. The security assistance
package is officially known as the 'Counter Terrorism Train
and Equip' (CTTE) program. Although ostensibly intended to
help Mali deal with potential threats from AQIM (al-Qaeda in
the Islamic Maghreb), it is more likely to be used against
Tuareg insurgent forces.
In addition, between April and June of 2009, 300 US Special
Forces personnel were deployed to Mali to train Malian
military forces at three local bases and, according to Lt
Col Louis Sombora, deputy commander of Mali's 33rd Parachute
Regiment (which was the recipient of the new US military aid
package), more than 95 per cent of his soldiers have
received US military training. And in early November 2009,
US Air Force Brigadier General Michael W. Callan, vice
commander of the US Air Force Africa (the Air Force
contingent based in Europe and dedicated to AFRICOM),
visited Mali along with other US military personnel in order
to inspect local military forces (including the 33rd
Parachute Regiment) and tour local military facilities.
According to Lt Col Marshall Mantiply, defense attaché at
the US Embassy in Bamako, 'we are working with the Mali
ministry of defense on a ten-year plan' to enhance the
country's military capabilities.
The aid package to Mali is just the latest instance of
Americas growing military involvement in the Sahel region.
In his testimony before the Senate subcommittee on Africa
hearing on 'Counter-terrorism in the Sahel' on 17 November
2009, Secretary of State for Africa Johnnie Carson
identified Mali along with Algeria and Mauritania as one
of the 'key countries' in the region for the US
counterterrorism strategy. 'We believe that our work with
Mali to support more professional units capable of improving
the security environment in the country will have future
benefits if they are sustained', he stated.
It is clear, therefore, that President Barack Obama has
decided to follow the path marked out for AFRICOM by the
Clinton and Bush administrations, based on the use of
military force to ensure that America can satisfy its
continuing addiction to oil and to deal with the threat
posed by al-Qaeda and other Islamist extremist groups,
rather than to chart a new path passed on a partnership with
the people of Africa and other countries that have a stake
on the continent (including China) to promote sustainable
economic development, democracy and human rights in Africa
and a global energy order based on the use of clean, safe
and renewable resources.
This is the consequence of two factors. To begin with,
President Obama genuinely believes in the strategy of the
global 'War on Terror' and thinks that Africa must be a
central battlefield in Americas military campaign against
al-Qaeda and other Islamist extremist groups. Many analysts
believe that terrorism does not constitute a significant
threat to Americas national security interests and that it
would be far more effective to treat terrorism as a crime
and to reduce the threat of terrorism by employing
traditional law enforcement techniques. But, as demonstrated
by the presidents decision to escalate US military
operations in Afghanistan, Somalia and Mali, the Obama
administration is determined to use military force instead,
despite the fact that as US military analysts argue this
only helps to strengthen terrorist groups and jeopardises
other US security interests.
And with regard to Americas growing dependence on African
oil supplies, President Obama understands the danger of
relying upon the importation of a vital resource from
unstable countries ruled by repressive, undemocratic regimes
and the necessity of reducing Americas reliance on the use
of oil and other non-renewable sources of energy. But, for
understandable reasons, he has concluded that there is
simply very little that he can do to achieve this goal
during the limited time that he will be in office. He knows
that it will take at least several decades to make the
radical changes that will be necessary to develop
alternative sources of energy, particularly to fuel cars and
other means of transportation (if this is even technically
feasible). And he knows that in the meantime public
support for his presidency and for his party depends on the
continued supply of reliable and relatively inexpensive
supplies of gas and other petroleum-based energy to the
American people, more than any other single factor. In the
event of a substantial disruption in the supply of oil from
Nigeria or any other major African supplier, he realizes
that he will be under irresistible political pressure to
employ the only instrument that he has at his disposal US
military forces to try to keep Africas oil flowing.
Professional military officers also know that the
repressive, undemocratic regimes upon which the United
States relies to maintain oil production are likely to fail
and that they are almost certain to find themselves sent
into combat in Africa whether they like it or not if
this leads to a major disruption of oil exports, and are
already working on plans for direct military intervention in
Africa. Thus, in May 2008, the Army Training and Doctrine
Command, the Special Operations Command, and the Joint
Forces Command conducted a war game scenario for Nigeria
during war game exercise that it conducts each year at the
US Army War College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania.
The scenario set in the hypothetical year 2013 was
designed to test the ability of the United States to respond
to a crisis in Nigeria in which the Nigerian government
fragments and rival factions within the Nigerian military
begin fighting for control of the Niger Delta, creating so
much violence and chaos that it would be impossible to
continue oil production. The participants concluded that
there was little the United States could do to bring about a
peaceful resolution of the conflict and that, in the end,
they would probably be ordered to send up to 20,000 American
troops into the Niger Delta in what the participants clearly
recognized would be a futile attempt to get the oil flowing
again. The fact that the participants in the Nigerian war
games decided to go public with this information suggests
that they believe that this scenario is likely to become a
reality in the near future and that their only hope of
avoiding this is to tell the public in the hope that this
will prevent the order from being issued.
But the professional military officers who would actually
have to lead their troops into Africa are not the only
people who understand that Americas reliance on the
military to solve the energy dilemma and the threat of
terrorism is a dangerous mistake. Members of the US Congress
are also increasingly skeptical about this strategy and are
beginning to give AFRICOM the critical scrutiny it deserves.
Moreover, a number of concerned organizations and
individuals in the United States and in Africa came together
in August 2006 to create the
Resist AFRICOM
campaign in order to educate the American people about
AFRICOM and to mobilise public and congressional opposition
to the new command. The Resist AFRICOM campaign will
continue to press the Obama administration to abandon its
plan for AFRICOM and to pursue a policy toward Africa based
on a genuine partnership with the people of Africa,
international cooperation, democracy, human rights and
sustainable economic development.
Daniel
Volman is
the director of the
African Security Research Project
in Washington,
DC, and a member of the board of directors of the
Association of Concerned Africa Scholars.
He is a specialist on US military policy in Africa and
African security issues and has been conducting research and
writing on these issues for more than 30 years. This article
first appeared in Pambazuka News and may be viewed at
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/60921 .
Also see Congressional
Research Service Report "Africa Command: U.S. Strategic
Interests and the Role of the U.S. Military in Africa"
http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/natsec/RL34003.pdf