Al Qaida 'Looking for Africa Terror Havens

Chat about anything and everything... (well almost anything) Whether it be the front porch or the pot belly stove or news of interest or a topic of your liking, this is the place to post it.

Moderator: S2k Moderators

Message
Author
User avatar
BEER980
Category 5
Category 5
Posts: 1727
Joined: Sat Jun 07, 2003 9:55 am
Location: Ocala, Fl
Contact:

Al Qaida 'Looking for Africa Terror Havens

#1 Postby BEER980 » Sat Mar 06, 2004 8:20 am

Al Qaida 'Looking for Africa Terror Havens'

"PA"

Squeezed out of sanctuaries elsewhere in the world, Osama bin Laden’s al Qaida terror group may be looking to the deserts and jungles of Africa as a haven to train recruits and plan new attacks, the deputy head of US forces in Europe says.

Key among US military proposals to fight back is deploying American units of about 200 soldiers to train armies throughout the continent, patrol alongside them, or hunt terrorists on short notice if necessary. “Some people compare it to draining a swamp,” US Air Force General Charles Wald told The Associated Press, eyeing a map of Africa in his office in Stuttgart, Germany. “We need to drain the swamp.”

Wald said some terrorists had been sent to Iraq from North Africa, and there were indications that al Qaida had established a presence and tried to recruit in North Africa over the past two years. Mauritania and Nigeria are among West African nations alleged by some Western think-tanks to have al Qaida cells – top al Qaida figures came from Mauritania. The country’s government has cracked down on Muslim extremism and tried to stop recruiting of fighters for Saddam Hussein’s cause in Iraq.

“They’re there for a purpose, whether it’s looking for real estate, or recruiting or looking for arms, whatever it is, we know there’s a presence,” Wald said. “It may be small but it’s a bad indicator.” Africa is an ideal location, with its remote deserts and jungles and centuries-old Arab-African Saharan trade route. Governments are weak and poorly paid authorities are easily bribed. Communications are slow and in some places do not exist.

African armies, relatively small and poorly equipped, have difficulty monitoring the vast territories they are supposed to control, Wald says. “It’s an area we think is becoming appealing potentially for terrorist organisations or individuals to operate with semi-impunity,” Wald said. “It has a lot of expanses of open area that are conducive to terrorist operations or sanctuary.”

The European Command covers 93 countries from Russia to Syria, and all of Africa except the north east. It is awaiting a decision from Washington on its proposals for a major reconfiguration of forces for the war on terror. Critics say the European Command, traditionally focused on Europe, is not well-equipped to pay closer attention to Africa. The Heritage Foundation, a conservative US think-tank, is pushing for the US-based Central Command to take over responsibility for the entire continent.

Central Command already oversees operations in the north-east Horn of Africa, where al Qaida is believed to be most active. Al Qaida was blamed for deadly attacks in East Africa – the bombing of US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998 and a Kenyan hotel in 2002. The European Command’s new plans pay more attention to Africa and its oil supplies. The Gulf of Guinea is seen as a possible alternative to the oil reserves in the volatile Middle East. The region already supplies the United States with 15% of its oil, a figure expected to rise to 25% by 2015.

The chief home-grown concern is the Algerian-based Salafist Group for Call and Combat, which was accused of kidnapping 32 European tourists in the Sahara last year. Wald said the group had issued a manifesto claiming allegiance to al Qaida. He and others have blamed the group for robberies in Niger and Mali, although some dismiss the culprits as simple bandits.

About 100 US special operations forces are training armies in Mali, Niger, Mauritania and Chad as part of a US State Department-funded programme called the Pan-Sahel Initiative, which aims to help those nations guard porous borders against terrorists, arms and other trafficking. The Sahel is a vast region straddling the southern edge of the Sahara desert.

The European Command has proposed expanding the Pan-Sahel Initiative to include Morocco, Tunisia and Algeria, where terror threats are believed to be growing. Beyond that, the European Command wants to establish a half-dozen low-maintenance bases at airports or remote camps in Africa. About 200 troops would be deployed to each base at a time.

“They’d be places that we could go into for a small period of time, either train locally with those governments or actually use those to maybe execute an operation from,” Wald said. The European Command now has about 120,000 troops. Wald said that number would probably drop after forces were moved around to account for changes in the world since the Cold War.

Agreements with various African governments to use other airports as fuel stops would help US troops move across the continent as needed. “The areas in Africa are large, you have to be able to respond fast as intelligence becomes actionable,” Wald said. “You have to be fast and get ahead of it, and that forces us to think of more mobile, smaller, lighter, nimble forces.”
Source
0 likes   

Return to “Off Topic”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 9 guests