The Pentagon’s New Africa Command

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The Pentagon’s New Africa Command


Author: Stephanie Hanson, Copy Editor
May 3, 2007

In February 2007, President Bush announced the creation of a unified military command for Africa. This puts the continent on par, in the Pentagon’s eyes and command structure, with the Pacific Rim, [1] Europe, [2] Latin America, [3] the Middle East, [4] and North America [5]. The Pentagon and many military analysts argue the continent’s growing strategic importance necessitates a dedicated regional command. But some experts suggest the command’s creation was motivated by more specific concerns: China and oil. With Soviet influence gone and France’s traditional presence much diminished, China has poured money into the continent in recent years as it jockeys for access to natural resources. And the United States is projected to import at least 25 percent of its oil from Africa by 2015, according to the National Intelligence Council

Three U.S. regional commands currently share responsibility for American security issues in Africa. The Europe Command is responsible for the largest swath of the continent: North Africa, West Africa (including the Gulf of Guinea), and central and southern Africa. The Central Command covers the Horn of Africa—including Somalia, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Kenya, Djibouti, and Sudan—as well as Egypt. The Pacific Command is responsible for Madagascar, the Seychelles, and the Indian Ocean area off the African coast. Because Africa has been subsumed under other regional commands, the continent has never been a priority for the U.S. military. “Africa has been divided up and been the poor stepchild [6] in each of these different commands and not gotten the full attention it deserves,” Susan Rice, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and the Clinton administration’s assistant secretary of state for African affairs, told NPR. The Pentagon has floated plans for a unified command for over ten years. Former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld convened a planning team for such a command in mid-2006, and in December, President Bush authorized its creation. The president announced the command in February 2007, stating that it “will enhance our efforts [7] to bring peace and security to the people of Africa and promote our common goals of development, health, education, democracy, and economic growth in Africa.” Ambassador Robert G. Loftis, senior adviser in the State Department’s Bureau of Political and Military Affairs and a member of the Africa Command transition team, says the command will promote “a greater unity of effort across the government.” He notes that aid to Africa under President Bush has tripled since 2001, but “if we don’t have security in Africa, a lot of that development assistance will not be helpful.”

Mixed Reactions to the Command’s Creation

The Pentagon has been careful to stress that Africom will partner with African countries to promote mutual interests. “This is not about a scramble for the continent" [8] said Theresa Whelan, deputy assistant secretary of defense for African affairs, in a February press briefing. Yet some Africans greeted news of the command’s creation with skepticism. “Looking at U.S. alliances with authoritarian governments in Africa, one can see that what plays best to the media is not always what works best in the world of realpolitik" [9] wrote Fred Mbugua in Kenya’s East African Standard. The Defense Department has started a series of trips to African countries to address misperceptions about the command and solicit input on Africom’s mission statement. Thus far, Africans have been “largely positive” about Africom, says Ambassador Loftis, and have stressed their interest in working with existing security structures on the continent such as the African Union and regional economic organizations. The South African reaction to the command’s creation has been “ambivalent,” [10] says Francis Kornegay, senior researcher at the Center for Policy Studies in Johannesburg. He says it raises questions about whether U.S. and African priorities are in sync.

Many of the experts who heralded the command’s creation seem to validate African concerns. Writing in World Defense Review, J. Peter Pham, director of the Nelson Institute for International and Public Affairs, calls Africom’s creation long overdue [11] in light of U.S. dependence on Africa’s oil, its concern over radical Islamist groups targeting the region, and the continent’s identity as “an arena for intense diplomatic competition with other states with global ambitions, like China.” Others note that Africom will help the United States secure vital sea lanes.


The Feasibility of an Interagency Command

The recent upsurge in violence in the Horn of Africa clearly has the Pentagon focused on the threat that Somalia, long a festering realm of warlordism, could become a new base for al-Qaeda. However, the Pentagon stresses that Africom’s primary mission will be preventing “problems from becoming crises, and crises from becoming conflicts.” [12] [13] Rear Admiral Robert T. Moelle, head of the transition team charged with standing up the Africa Command, says Africom will work to enhance security cooperation, extend humanitarian assistance, build partner capacity, and perform limited kinetic military assistance. But he adds that the command’s mission statement is still in draft form, and will not be finalized until a commander is selected (probably later this year). It resembles the mission statement of other regional commands, but “the difference is that building partnerships is first and foremost of the strategies which is not necessarily the case with other commands,” says Ambassador Loftis.

The Pentagon calls Africom a “unifed combatant command,” meaning a command that combines military and civil functions. Though Africom will be led by a top-ranking four-star military general, unlike other regional commands, its deputy commander will be a State Department official. The current transition team of about sixty people—which is largely military—will form the core of Africom’s headquarters staff, but Moeller anticipates there will eventually be several hundred personnel when the command becomes operational in September 2008. Africom aims to bring together intelligence, diplomatic, health and aid experts. Staff will be drawn from all branches of the military, as well as USAID and the departments of state, agriculture, treasury, and commerce. These nonmilitary staff may be funded with money from their own departments as well as the DOD.

The Pentagon has touted the new interagency structure of Africom, but experts question whether the command will be any different than other regional commands in execution. The small size of other government offices in comparison to the military means that it may be difficult to hire enough nonmilitary staff. Even if interagency personnel are brought into the command, it is not clear how instrumental they will be in the command’s decision-making process. Ambassador Loftis says having a State Department official as deputy commander is “uncharted territory” for the Department of Defense. Some defense officials say that Africom could function like the interagency task force within Southern Command; in that structure, interagency members have the authority to make decisions without consulting Washington. [14]

Yet the Pentagon has not even provided details on what percentage of the staff will be interagency, let alone how much authority those staff will have. This lack of information extends to other aspects of the command. [15] Chester A. Crocker, assistant secretary of state for African affairs under President Reagan, says the Pentagon “rolled it out before they were ready to roll it out.” Rear Admiral Moeller says “It’s like being the plank owner of a new construction ship—all the excitement of being the first crew member and all the work involved of figuring out if we have enough welding rods to do a particular day’s work.”


Headquarter or Headquarters?

By October 2007, Africom will begin operating as part of the European Command in Stuttgart, Germany. The permanent location for Africom’s headquarters, however, has yet to be determined. Several African countries have already offered to house Africom within their borders, and the Department of Defense has started a series of consultations with African countries that will continue into the summer. Moeller emphasizes that though Africom will have its headquarters on the continent, the United States is not planning to put additional military forces in Africa. He did not rule out the possibility that Africom would operate in a hub-and-spoke fashion, with a central headquarters coordinating a group of smaller locations around the continent. “We are still in the very early stages on this,” says Ambassador Loftis.

Speculation about a possible headquarters location abounds. <em>Defense and Foreign Affairs Strategic Policy</em> argues that Morocco is the only “geographically and politically viable” location for headquartering Africom because it is a neutral Muslim state that has proven willing to work with the United States to combat the growth of radical Islam in Africa. It adds that the command would need to have additional lesser basing in the Gulf of Guinea, East Africa, and southern Africa. Some have suggested that Addis Ababa, Ethiopia might be a viable location for the headquarters because it is the seat of the African Union and the United States has a close relationship with Ethiopia.


Current Military Initiatives in Africa

The United States already has a military presence on the continent, which is expected to continue under Africom. Since 2002, the Combined Joint Task Force-Horn of Africa (CJTF-HOA)</a> has based roughly 1,700 troops at Camp Lemonier in Djibouti. [16] The task force focuses on disrupting terrorist activities in the region, and was reportedly involved in tracking down two alleged leaders of Somalia’s Islamic Courts in December 2006. In January 2007, the military announced that Camp Lemonier will expand from its current ninety-seven acres to more than five hundred acres.

Another program in the region, the Trans-Sahara Counter-Terrorism Initiative (TSCTI), [17] also focuses on counterterrorism. The $500 million interagency program seeks to dampen Islamic extremism in the region and locate and eliminate terrorists by providing counterterrorist training programs and weapons to countries in North Africa. It emerged in 2005 from the Pan-Sahel Initiative, a U.S. State Department program to strengthen border controls in several North African countries.

The U.S. military has significantly expanded [18] its naval presence in the Gulf of Guinea in recent years. It now has almost continuous patrols in the region, up from almost no activity in 2004. It led two security conferences in the region in 2006, and has conducted security cooperation activities with several countries, including Angola, Ghana, and the Republic of the Congo.

In addition to these programs, the United States is the largest troop contributor to a peacekeeping force on the Egypt-Israel border. Roughly seven hundred U.S. soldiers participate in the Multinational Forces and Observers (MFO), which supervises the implementation of the 1973 Egyptian-Israeli Treaty of Peace. Central Command will likely retain control over these troops after Africom's stand-up (Egypt is the only country Africom is not slated to oversee on the continent).


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`
Footnotes:

[1] Pacific Command; www.pacom.mil/

[2] Europe Command; www.eucom.mil/english/index.asp

[3] Southern Command; www.southcom.mil/appssc/index.php

[4] Central Command; www.centcom.mil/sites/uscentcom2/default.aspx

[5] Northern Command; www.northcom.mil/


[7] www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2007/02/20070206-3.html

[8] http://fpc.state.gov/fpc/80454.htm

[9] http://allafrica.com/stories/200703261792.html[/url]

[10] http://www.cps.org.za/researchp.htm

[11] http://worlddefensereview.com/pham021507.shtml

[12] http://www.defenselink.mil/transcripts/transcript.aspx?transcriptid=3942

[13] http://www.navy.mil/navydata/bios/navybio.asp?bioID=217

[14] http://www.defenselink.mil/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=3244

[15] http://www4.georgetown.edu/explore/people/crockerc/?action=viewgeneral

[16] http://www.hoa.centcom.mil/

[17] www.globalsecurity.org/military/ops/tscti.htm

[18] www.news.navy.mil/search/display.asp?story_id=24521






http://www.cfr.org/publication/13255/pentagons_new_africa_command.html
 
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Nigeria Rejects Hosting AFRICOM

ABUJA, Nigeria - Nigeria formally announced Monday that it won't host the U.S. military's new Africa-wide military command, taking Africa's most-populous nation and a top source of American oil imports out of contention.

Nigerian leaders have been vocal critics of the new U.S. military command for Africa, which is seeking a home on the world's poorest continent. The government made its position official on Monday as President Umaru Yar'Adua met with state governors and federal lawmakers.

Nigeria is also against the U.S. command basing its headquarters elsewhere in West Africa, where the country of 140 million is a major military and diplomatic heavyweight, said Kwara State Governor Bukola Saraki, who announced the government's position after the meeting.

U.S. military officials couldn't immediately be reached for comment.

The U.S. has said it aims to better protect America's strategic interest in Africa and assist African countries with military training and conflict prevention. But a number of African countries - including Libya and South Africa - have expressed reservations about a move that could signal an expansion of U.S. influence on the continent and may focus primarily on protecting oil interests.

Africom currently operates out of existing U.S. bases on the continent with a headquarters in Stuttgart, Germany. War-wrecked Liberia, settled by freed American slaves in the 1800s, is the only African nation that has publicly offered to host a headquarters.

Nigeria, an OPEC member and one of the top suppliers of oil to America, has seen militant unrest in its southern petroleum region cut production by about one quarter in recent years.

http://www.military.com/NewsContent/0,13319,156704,00.html
 
Re: Nigeria Rejects Hosting AFRICOM

This is a major event that's taking place and need to keep a watch on that, good find
 
Re: Nigeria Rejects Hosting AFRICOM

Finally someone is coming out against American expansionism! I want to see what the state department tries to do about this.
 
Re: Nigeria Rejects Hosting AFRICOM

Finally someone is coming out against American expansionism! I want to see what the state department tries to do about this.

I feel what you are saying, but on the other hand I would like to see a country in Africa get some of that DOD (Department of Defense) money other countries get by hosting a U.S. base.
 
Re: Nigeria Rejects Hosting AFRICOM

CIA is about to get that Prez and return the country into civil unrest with dictatorship. damn
 
Re: Nigeria Rejects Hosting AFRICOM

I feel what you are saying, but on the other hand I would like to see a country in Africa get some of that DOD (Department of Defense) money other countries get by hosting a U.S. base.

If it were possible for them to get that DoD money WITHOUT compromising their sovereignty or rights, sure. But thats not how America plays the game. You give the military a foothold and they're never going to leave.

Nigeria needs to develop its oil producing capability. That would provide them all the money they need in the future.
 
Re: Nigeria Rejects Hosting AFRICOM

If it were possible for them to get that DoD money WITHOUT compromising their sovereignty or rights, sure. But thats not how America plays the game. You give the military a foothold and they're never going to leave.

Nigeria needs to develop its oil producing capability. That would provide them all the money they need in the future.

In order to do so they will have to nationalize the oil industry and break ties will heavy weights like Shell and BP. This is what will get a African president killed quick.
 
Re: Nigeria Rejects Hosting AFRICOM

In order to do so they will have to nationalize the oil industry and break ties will heavy weights like Shell and BP. This is what will get a African president killed quick.

Good point and I agree with it completely. Unfortunately, I don't see a solution to the problem...
 
Re: Nigeria Rejects Hosting AFRICOM

Africa leaders need to get off their asses, put Africa 1st n implement 'United States of Africa'..consolidate, cooperate, barter/trade amongst themselves n move the fuk on..been 2 damn long..or the public rape continues without the public rapists serving jail time.:angry:
 
Re: Nigeria Rejects Hosting AFRICOM

Finally someone is coming out against American expansionism! I want to see what the state department tries to do about this.

Probably nothing but watch the Chinese make a move to supply China with oil and to deny our pimped out rides, the same.

QueEx
 
Re: Nigeria Rejects Hosting AFRICOM

I DON'T BLAME THEM. THE U.S. HAS NEGLECTED AFRICA FOR SO LONG. NOW WE WANT SOMETHING!!!!! WE ARE SO FUCKING OURSELVES..:angry::angry:
 
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Re: Nigeria Rejects Hosting AFRICOM

Ghana's Kuffuor is willing and waiting to take that Base. I hope he does not
 
<font size="5"><center>
The Pentagon's new Africa command
raises suspicions about U.S. motives</font size></center>



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McClatchy Newspapers
By Shashank Bengali
Monday, September 29, 2008


NAIROBI, Kenya — The U.S. Africa Command, the Pentagon's first effort to unite its counterterrorism, training and humanitarian operations on the continent, launches Wednesday amid questions at home about its mission and deep suspicions in Africa about its intentions. U.S. officials have billed the new command, known as Africom, as a sign of Africa's strategic importance, but many in Africa see it as an unwelcome expansion of the U.S.-led war on terrorism and a bid to secure greater access to the continent's vast oil resources. Several countries have refused to host the command, and officials say Africom will be based in Stuttgart, Germany, for the foreseeable future.

U.S.-based aid groups and some in Congress have expressed worries that Africom will tilt U.S policy in Africa away from democracy-building and economic development and toward security objectives such as stemming the growth of militant Islamist groups in Somalia and North Africa, some of which have ties to al Qaida.

U.S. covert operations in Somalia and elsewhere have fueled the controversy. In late 2006, the U.S. military provided intelligence to help Ethiopia topple a fundamentalist Islamic regime in Somalia, an invasion that's fueled a violent Islamist insurgency.

U.S. forces have since launched several strikes on suspected terrorist targets in Somalia. While one of the strikes killed a top militant commander, Aden Hashi Ayro, in May, Somalis say the attacks also killed and badly wounded civilians.

Underlining the skepticism in Washington, the House of Representatives voted last week to provide $266 million to fund Africom's first year of operations — $123 million less than President Bush had requested. The House Appropriations Committee said the reduction was due partly to "the failure to establish an Africom presence on the continent."

The fledgling command's image problem, at home and abroad, is cause for concern because of Africa's growing importance to the United States.

The Department of Energy says that 17 percent of U.S. crude oil imports now come from Africa, more than the U.S. gets from Persian Gulf countries. But rising powers such as China have strengthened their ties with Africa and become a powerful counterweight to American influence.

Pentagon officials reject claims that Africom is about oil or China, but those perceptions remain strong in Africa.

"Obviously the U.S. is concerned about China's influence, security, oil, counterterrorism, hunting down al Qaida suspects," said Erin Weir of Refugees International, a Washington-based advocacy group that's opposed Africom. "Africans read the newspaper just the same as we do, and they know what drives U.S. interests now."

Witney Schneidman, who served as deputy assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs in the Clinton administration, said: "In many parts of Africa it is perceived as the U.S. bringing its war on terror to Africa. That is not what Africom is about, but that is how it has been seen."

While the public face of the U.S. military in Africa has been that of a benign partner, human rights activists say that the Bush administration's focus on terrorism has fueled suspicion of Africom.

"Anything to do with the U.S. military evokes some level of anxiety," said Hassan Omar, a member of the independent Kenya National Commission on Human Rights. "There is a strong feeling that America would overlook a crisis within a government or violations by certain governments if only they could secure more cooperation on matters of security."

After Bush announced the creation of Africom in February 2007, the Pentagon began issuing mixed messages about its mission, with some officials suggesting that the new command would help "coordinate" U.S. policy in the region. Experts immediately questioned whether U.S. troops would participate in humanitarian programs and other non-combat operations that have long been run by the State Department and U.S. embassies.

Pentagon officials have acknowledged mistakes in marketing Africom, and they no longer list humanitarian projects as part of its mission. Instead, they say that Africom will support other U.S. government agencies and focus on helping bolster African militaries.

"Africom will support, not shape, U.S. foreign policy on the continent," Teresa Whelan, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for African Affairs, told a congressional hearing in July.

About 1,300 people, divided roughly evenly between civilian and military positions, are expected to staff the Germany headquarters, but no additional soldiers will be deployed in Africa yet. Instead, Africom will take charge of small U.S. military teams that are already on the continent training national militaries and maritime agencies, providing immunizations, drilling wells, rebuilding schools and conducting other projects.

Africom will assume control over the largest U.S. military base in the region, the 1,500-strong Combined Joint Task Force-Horn of Africa, housed at a former French Foreign Legion facility in the tiny eastern nation of Djibouti.

Despite the questions about its mission, experts say that Africom will raise Africa's profile in the Pentagon. Currently, three separate regional "combatant commands," which manage overseas U.S. military operations, share responsibility for Africa. The U.S. Central Command oversees seven countries in East Africa, Pacific Command has three Indian Ocean island nations and European Command handles 42 other African countries from Morocco to South Africa.

Now all the countries — except Egypt, which will continue to be grouped with Middle Eastern nations under the Central Command — will fall under Africom's jurisdiction. As with the other regional commands, Africom's commander, four-star Army Gen. William E. "Kip" Ward, reports to Secretary of Defense Robert Gates.

"One of the basic problems of U.S. engagement with Africa historically is there's been a lack of a long-term, sustained and steady commitment," said Abiodun Williams, a Sierra Leonean who's vice president of the Center for Conflict Analysis and Prevention at the United States Institute of Peace in Washington. "One of the positive things about Africom is this might finally be changing."

http://www.mcclatchydc.com/117/story/53234.html
 
U.S. Sends Troops to Africa


U.S. sends troops to Uganda
to help fight Lord's Resistance Army




6a00d8341c630a53ef0154362086e9970c-600wi

Charles Okello, then 23, was cutting sugarcane outside the Patongo camp for displaced people
people in northern Uganda when he was attacked by LRA rebels who suspected him of being a
Ugandan soldier. Credit: Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times


Los Angeles Times
October 14, 2011


REPORTING FROM WASHINGTON AND JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA --
President Obama is deploying about 100 special operations troops to Africa
to help target the leadership of the Lord’s Resistance Army, a notorious rebe
l group that has been entrenched in a stalemate with the government of
Uganda for more than two decades.

In a letter notifying Congress on Friday, Obama said the first small team of
U.S. “combat-equipped” advisors arrived in Uganda on Wednesday.

Over the next month, the remaining U.S. troops will be sent to surrounding
countries, including South Sudan, the Central African Republic and Congo.


The goal of the U.S. mission is to assist regional African forces in removing
Lord’s Resistance Army leader Joseph Kony and other commanders of the
group “from the battlefield,” the letter says.

“Although the U.S. forces are combat-equipped, they will only be providing
information, advice and assistance to partner nation forces, and they will not
themselves engage LRA forces unless necessary for self-defense,” the letter
says.

A militia known for abducting children and forcing them to fight, often mutilating
them, the Lord’s Resistance Army has long been condemned by the U.S. and
human rights organizations for atrocities against civilians.

The militia keeps sex slaves, rapes women and has killed thousands of people.
For years, in Uganda and neighboring countries, it has resisted efforts by
African forces to curb its violence.

Inspired by a combination of mysticism and eccentric Christian rhetoric, Kony,
who is about 50, is on the U.S. terrorist list and is wanted by the International
Criminal Court on charges of crimes against humanity committed in a two-
decade war in northern Uganda between rebels and government soldiers. Kony
signed a peace deal in 2006, but continued to operate in neighboring countries.

The Lord’s Resistance Army has since cut a swath across Congo, the Central
African Republic and South Sudan.

The head of the U.S. Africa command, Gen. Carter Ham, said this month that he
believed Kony and other commanders were hiding in the Central African Republic.

Addressing the Center for Strategic and International Studies think-tank in
Washington, he said the rebel group was still committing atrocities, kidnapping
people and killing.

Over the last three years, the U.S. has provided more than $40 million in
equipment and training to armies in the region to combat the rebel group and
target Kony, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said in a
statement.







http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/world_now/2011/10/us-uganda-troops-lord-resistance-army.html

 
Re: U.S. Sends Troops to Africa


LRA leader Joseph Kony:
Why Obama sent US troops to Uganda to get him


The feared group LRA is responsible for the murder and rape
of thousands in Central Africa. Siding with interventionist
advisers, Obama sent the US troops to help remove Joseph
Kony from the battlefield.



1014-uganda-lra-joseph-kony_full_380.jpg

President Obama has sent 100 US troops to Uganda to track
down Joseph Kony, shown here at right in this 2008 photo,
the leader of the Lord's Resistance Army, a guerrilla army
that is accused of mass atrocities throughout central Africa.
Media/Reuters/File



By sending 100 US troops to Uganda to help in the battle against one of Central Africa’s most violent and feared armed groups, President Obama is once again siding with those in his administration who favor American intervention against the world’s worst violators of human rights.

On Friday Mr. Obama informed Congress that he has dispatched the “combat-equipped US forces” to assist regional forces in their fight against the Lord’s Resistance Army, a group that has murdered, kidnapped, and raped thousands of Central African civilians and which Obama says continues to commit “atrocities” across several African countries.

Obama said an initial team was dispatched to Uganda Wednesday, and that additional forces would deploy to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the Central African Republic, and South Sudan.

Specifically, the American troops are tasked with assisting in “the removal from the battlefield” of Joseph Kony and other senior leaders of the Lord’s Resistance Army, or LRA, Obama said in a letter to the leaders of the House and Senate.

Although the troops will be equipped for combat, officials specified that their principal role would be advisory. “These advisers will not engage LRA forces unless necessary for self-defense,” said State Department Spokesperson Victoria Nuland in a statement Friday.

In his letter, Obama noted that Congress has supported US efforts to “help mitigate and eliminate the threat posed by the LRA to civilians and regional stability” in legislation in 2009 and 2010.


Victory for the Liberal Hawks

But the president’s announcement Friday is also reminiscent of the decision he made in March to undertake a bombing campaign in Libya targeting the forces of Muammar Qaddafi. At that time Obama’s decision was seen as a victory for the administration’s “liberal hawks” – in particular Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, US Ambassador to the UN Susan Rice, and White House special adviser Samantha Power – who argued for US intervention on the side of Libya’s threatened civilian population.

That intervention was not favored by other administration officials more cautious about the deployment of US forces – most notably former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates.

But this new Africa deployment, though modest in scale, would appear to bear the imprint of Secretary Clinton and Ambassador Rice in particular. Both women have dedicated special attention to addressing the mass atrocities committed by “terror armies” across portions of Africa, from the Central African Republic and the Democratic Republic of the Congo to Uganda and South Sudan.

And both women have insisted since the early days of the Obama administration that the horror for Africa’s women of mass rapes must not be left unaddressed.

Early reactions to Obama’s decision suggest support from the “interventionist” wings of public opinion.

“By deploying these advisers, President Obama is showing decisive leadership to help regional governments finally bring an end to the LRA's mass atrocities,” said Paul Ronan, director of advocacy at Resolve, a public policy dispute resolution organization involved in Africa. “These advisers can make a positive difference on the ground by keeping civilians safe and improving military operations to apprehend the LRA's top commanders.”

Resolve’s statement was part of an announcement from a coalition of human rights and anti-genocide organizations applauding Obama’s deployment of troops.

But the decision also garnered support from the right, particularly among some evangelical Christians involved in African issues.

One of the first congressional responses to the announcement was from Sen. Jim Inhofe, (R) of Okla., who cited his own experience in Africa in applauding the military deployment.

“I have witnessed firsthand the devastation caused by the LRA, and this will help end Kony’s heinous acts that have created a human rights crisis in Africa,” Senator Inhofe said. “I have been fervently involved in trying to prevent further abductions and murders of Ugandan children, and today’s action offers hope that the end of the LRA is in sight.”

Inhofe noted that the steps Obama announced Friday were “outlined in our legislation” of 2009 that called for assisting in the “disarmament” of the LRA and in the “recovery” of northern Uganda in particular.







http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Foreig...-sent-US-troops-to-Uganda-to-get-him/(page)/2


 
Re: U.S. Sends Troops to Africa

I will say this in the most poignant, thoughtful, and considered manner possible...

















Obama is an evil, piece of s*it!
 
CNN BREAKING NEWS: Obama orders U.S. troops to help chase down African 'army' leader

CNN BREAKING NEWS: Obama orders U.S. troops to help chase down African 'army' leader
[FLASH]http://www.liveleak.com/e/5d0_1318640741[/FLASH]
 
Re: CNN BREAKING NEWS: Obama orders U.S. troops to help chase down African 'army' lea

al-jazeera%206.jpg



Profile: Joseph Kony




20111014184147383734_20.jpg


The Lord's Resistance Army leader believes he is a prophet and has led a brutal
insurgency for more than 20 years.



Elusive and motivated by a purported belief that he is a prophet, Joseph Kony
has waged a guerrilla insurgency against Uganda's government for more than
two decades as the head of the Lord's Resistance Army.

Utilising central Africa's dense bush for strategic advantage and occasionally
expanding his fight to neighbouring countries, Kony has become an
internationally wanted war criminal and the head of a dwindling band of
fighters.

Though the LRA and the government of Uganda, led since 1986 by President
Yoweri Museveni, signed a permanent ceasefire in 2008, Kony did not show
up to the final signing agreement, and military action against the LRA by the
governments of Uganda as well as the neighbouring Democratic Republic of
Congo and Southern Sudan have continued.

The United States maintained increasingly close relations with Museveni's
administration during the presidency of George W. Bush, and in November
2010, the Obama White House announced a policy entitled "Strategy to
Support the Disarmament of the Lord's Resistance Army," of which one of the
main objectives was to "apprehend and remove from the battlefield Joseph
Kony".

Kony was born in Odek, a village in a region of northern Uganda known as
Acholiland, sometime in the early 1960s. Not much is known about his early
years, though he reportedly served as an altar boy within the Catholic church
and was heavily influenced by both Christian and spiritualist teachings.

Kony joined the Uganda People's Democratic Army, a rebel alliance formed
after Museveni's nascent National Resistance Army came to power in 1986.
He became a key ally to Alice Lakwena, an Acholi spiritual healer whose
following, the Holy Spirit Movement, led the UPDA and who may have been
related to Kony.

After Lakwena suffered a devastating defeat against the Ugandan
government in a battle at Jinja, around 100km from the capital Kampala, she
fled to Kenya and Kony emerged as the leader of the forces who remained.
With Kony's assumption of power came a shift in the rebels' strategy and a
new name: the Lord's Resistance Army.

The LRA took to Uganda's north and began to operate almost exclusively
against civilian targets, rather than the Ugandan military. Under Kony's
control, the LRA has waged a durable insurgency utilising brutal tactics,
forcing 1.5 million people from their homes and abducting more than 20,000
boys and girls to become fighters or forced "wives" to LRA members.

Sponsored in part by the government of Sudan, the LRA conducted
operations in both the Democratic Republic of Congo and South Sudan,
though activity in the latter has almost ceased due to the forging of a
comprehensive peace between north and south and the creation of an
independent South Sudan.

Kony has long said that his movement is aimed at liberating Ugandans from
oppression and has made himself into a dogged enemy of Museveni, whose
career as Uganda's leader has run in parallel with Kony's as a infamous
warlord.

He has reportedly claimed to be a prophet, possessed by spirits and to
believe in the power of the Christian cross and holy oil to protect him and his
fighters from physical harm.

After Museveni consolidated power, Kony moved his fighters into Sudan, then
the Democratic Republic of Congo, then the Central African Republic, typically
seeking out spaces where weak governments were unable to reach.

In 2005, Kony was indicted by the International Criminal Court for leading the
LRA in a campaign of "murder, abduction, sexual enslavement, mutilation, as
well as mass burnings of houses and looting of camp settlements" since at
least 1987 and for personally issueing broad orders to target and kill civilian
populations.

The indictment was partly based on intercepted radio communications where
Kony could be heard praising LRA forces for attacking camps of displaced
persons and calling on them to find targets with "even more people".

Though not fully endorsed by international observers, Uganda's two recent
multi-party elections have both delivered Museveni back into power, and
Kony has become increasingly pursued, both by Ugandan troops - including
ex-LRA fighters - and now by a contingent of about 100 American "combat-
ready" special forces, apparently aimed at ending the fight once and for all.







http://english.aljazeera.net/news/africa/2011/10/2011101582435154748.html


 
Re: CNN BREAKING NEWS: Obama orders U.S. troops to help chase down African 'army' lea

Thanks for the information!!!
 
Re: CNN BREAKING NEWS: Obama orders U.S. troops to help chase down African 'army' lea


African villagers embrace U.S. role in
hunt for Lord's Resistance Army leader




v5fCO.WiPh.91.jpg

Emmanuel Daba was abducted by guerrillas from the Ugandan rebel group
Lord's Resistance Army on March 6, 2008 from the town of Obo, Central
African Republic. He says he was forced to kill many civilians until he
escaped a year later. | Alan Boswell/MCT



McClatchy Newspapers
By Alan Boswell |




OBO, Central African Republic — On the edge of this quiet town in the isolated forests of central Africa sits one of America's newest military outposts, a base made of grass surrounded by razor wire. Outside, a baby chimpanzee plays on a green rope, and three local policemen lounge in a pickup truck. Inside, up to 30 U.S. special forces plot the demise of one of the world's most elusive and sadistic rebels.

The U.S. troops arrived two months ago and by most accounts have yet to undertake any military actions. But their mere presence has transformed this tattered out-of-the-way enclave of Congolese refugees, Ugandan soldiers and traumatized local residents into an upbeat cluster of newfound hope.

At night, energized locals bang homemade 8-foot-long xylophones and straddle voluminous bass drums, crooning new tunes to celebrate their good luck. "The Americans are here/Our saviors are here/Let's dance" goes one such song.

"Americans are favored by God wherever they are in the world," said Bassiri Moke, a local chief. "We asked God to save us and the Americans came. We hope we won't have to die like before."

The American deployment here forms the core of a new plan constructed in Washington to end the violent cross-border marauding of Ugandan rebel Joseph Kony and his band of 200 hundred or so fighters known as the Lord's Resistance Army. Masters of survival, they slink through thick equatorial forests and brush-littered plains in Uganda, the Democratic Republic of Congo, South Sudan and the Central African Republic, preying on the civilian population for food and new conscripts, killing and abducting as they go. Thousands have died in their wake.

That the U.S. has joined the hunt for a group that horrifies millions of Americans but poses no direct threat to the United States is testament to the influence of human rights campaigners, who, together with evangelical Christians, lobbied Congress to pass a law requiring renewed U.S. efforts against the LRA. The Obama administration responded by dispatching 100 special operations troops to help find Kony.

Most of the U.S. troops are based near the Ugandan capital, Kampala. But this outpost in Obo — a town of 15,000 in the far-eastern obscurity of the Central African Republic, an impoverished former French colony of 4 million people — is the true heart of the effort. Kony and his core followers are believed to be living off the surrounding forests, always on the run.

Expectations among those who live in the rebels' vicious shadow are sky high.

"Kony will die now that the Americans have come," bellowed Longbango Jean-Claude, a 38-year-old Congolese refugee who had three family members killed and three more abducted by the LRA in 2009. "Don't put him in prison like a child. Just kill him."

The area where Kony operates gives new meaning to "middle of nowhere." A sequestered and ungoverned land with few roads, the area lies near the intersection of three of the world's most failed states and one of the remotest points on the continent.

There is little here of international economic interest, though the land itself is so fertile that even refugees have no problem growing their own food. There are vast mineral deposits in eastern Congo, and the U.S. government recently has changed sanctions laws to open South Sudan's oil industry to U.S. companies. But those are hardly factors in hunting down Kony.

The most direct U.S. interest may in fact be tighter cooperation with the Ugandan military, which also has become a channel for U.S. efforts in Somalia, where Uganda shoulders the fight against Islamist rebels with links to al Qaida.

A McClatchy correspondent, joined by a writer and a photographer from Time magazine, were the first journalists to visit the site of the new American deployment. The U.S. military's Africa command, known as Africom, was informed of the visit in advance but said the mission was not ready to accommodate journalists.

Twice in emails, a spokesman for the military said there was no U.S. base in Obo and that U.S. troops deployed here were staying at a Ugandan base. But the Ugandan base is at an abandoned church on one side of town, while the newly constructed outpost where the Americans stay is near a police station on the opposite side. Locals say the American compound has its own helicopter pad.

When reporters approached the American outpost, two close-cropped white heads poked briefly above the wall. One yelled, "You are not allowed in here." A white pickup truck carrying what appeared to be four Americans pulled up to the compound as the reporters were preparing to leave.

Not long ago, life here slogged away as it had for centuries. But in early 2008, as peace talks over South Sudan collapsed, Kony's men, who had been operating largely within the borders of the Democratic Republic of Congo, began venturing further north and west.

On March 6, 2008, they struck here.

Moke was the town mayor at the time. There was a huge funeral party. He warned everyone not to stay out late. He went to bed at 8 p.m.

"They didn't listen," he said. Around 2 a.m., the music suddenly stopped. The villagers realized they were surrounded. "They took them all," Moke recalled.

About half of the abductees were released after a few days, but 30 or so others remained. Boys and young men became LRA fighters; girls and young women, "wives."

Most have since escaped and found their way back, scarred with searing images of brutality and cruelty.

When asked how he is adjusting to life after a year in the hands of the LRA, the eyes of one abductee darkened.

"The images are always flashing in front of my eyes. It's like I'm projecting my own movies," said Emmanuel Daba, who was turned by the LRA into a soldier before he fled in South Sudan. "I doubt I can ever escape it."

Officials in Bangui, the capital of the Central African Republic, say that this country was the weakest link in the Uganda-led regional effort to finish off the guerrilla group. Kony and his men have not set foot in Uganda for years. Most of the attacks take place in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and South Sudan is also seriously affected, but each of those countries have United Nations peacekeeping operations and somewhat functional, if ill-disciplined, national armies.

The Central African Republic, however, has a weak army with a spare presence here. When small groups of Central African Republic troops started arriving in some of the more rural areas in 2008, some teenagers had never seen a soldier before.

Now, they see American special forces drive around in white Toyota Hilux pickups and jogging for fitness along the edge of town.


What exactly the Americans have in mind is unclear.


There are differing opinions among officials about whether killing or capturing Kony would be enough to end his movement, which originated in the marginalized Acholi tribe of northern Uganda and offers an ideology that is a cult-like mish-mash of Christianity and traditional mysticism, held together by the force of Kony's charismatic and cruel leadership. Kony and two of his top lieutenants have been charged with crimes against humanity by the International Criminal Court and would theoretically face trial if captured alive.

The U.S. says it is here to provide logistical support, bolster intelligence sharing and improve the coordination among the four nations' armies now fighting the LRA.

"Our intent is to supplement host nation military efforts with advice and assistance that maximizes the flow of information to, and synchronizes the activities of, host nation units in the field," said Maj. James Scott Rawlinson, a spokesman for U.S. special operations forces in Africa. "The end state for this mission is to enable local forces to be able to render the LRA ineffective."

Although local residents are impatiently expecting a major new military operation soon, they say they have seen little American activity, and the troops themselves keep a low profile. Obo's acting mayor said he hasn't met any of the U.S. troops. The one identifiable U.S. project is the construction of a bigger broadcast tower for the local radio station.

Rawlinson did not directly respond to a question about whether U.S. personnel would join the Ugandan military on patrols, but he said that it is the African militaries that "have the responsibility of specifically countering the threat."

Ledio Cakaj, a researcher who has interviewed 200 former LRA fighters, women, and abductees over the past several years, is openly skeptical that the U.S. involvement will make any difference in a battle that has gone on for decades.

"The so-called military solution has not worked for over 25 years," he said, noting that the LRA is far more organized and rational than it is often portrayed in Western media. "It is not practically possible to kill them all."

Locals in Obo have had their hopes raised before. When Ugandan troops arrived in 2009, they were warmly welcomed as protectors. But more than two years later, with Kony still at large and the Ugandan strategy for finding him opaque, that good will has evaporated. Locals say Ugandan soldiers sometimes rampage through town drunk, abusing civilians, and they accuse them of running business schemes instead of finding Kony.

For the time being, the U.S. presence seems to have straightened out their allies' behavior, and once again the people of Obo feel their liberation is near. How long the status quo can remain before that elation craters is impossible to know. Locals seem to anticipate Kony only has a few months, if not weeks, remaining.

Until then, life remains a daily struggle.

In mid-January, Mbolifue Dieudonne and his brother, Danambutigo James, carried peanuts and clothes toward South Sudan for sale. They crossed four rivers, climbed a mountain, and then they saw them: five reeking dreadlocked men, armed with AK-47s.

They dropped their goods and ran for it, but James was captured. He was marched a mile and a half and stripped of his clothes. "We will kill you," said a man on his right. But the commander, to his left, released him.

Just like that, he was free. Once again, the tormentors from another land had left him empty-handed. And once again, he had no explanation for the shadowy force that has turned his life upside down in a conflict he still doesn't understand.

"I don't know why they let me go," he said. "I'm still terrified."

(Boswell is a McClatchy special correspondent.)




http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2012/02/13/138737/african-villagers-embrace-us-role.html


 
Re: CNN BREAKING NEWS: Obama orders U.S. troops to help chase down African 'army' lea

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u.s. military sent drones in mali surrounding area to attack and prevent rebels from claiming more territory/ Many people donot approve of drone attacks for killing innocent lives in the mix but boots on the ground and conventional plane attacks causes more harm all around.Yes one should be always skeptical of US involvement
but if your a resident in Mali how would you currently feel about drones if rebels are invading the province you live in.
 
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