U.S. Special
Operations Numbers Surge
in Africa’s Shadow Wars
By Nick Turse
January 02, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"The
Intercept"
- Africa has seen
the most dramatic growth
in the deployment of
America’s elite troops
of any region of the
globe over the past
decade, according to
newly released numbers.
In 2006, just 1% of
commandos sent overseas
were deployed in the
U.S. Africa Command area
of operations. In 2016,
17.26% of all U.S.
Special Operations
forces — Navy SEALs and
Green Berets among them
— deployed abroad were
sent to Africa,
according to data
supplied to The
Intercept by U.S.
Special Operations
Command. That total
ranks second only to the
Greater Middle East
where the U.S. is waging
war against enemies in
Afghanistan, Iraq,
Syria, and Yemen.
“In Africa, we are not
the kinetic solution,”
Brigadier General Donald
Bolduc, the chief of
U.S. Special Operations
Command Africa,
told African
Defense, a U.S. trade
publication, early this
fall. “We are not at war
in Africa — but our
African partners
certainly are.”
That statement stands in
stark contrast to this
year’s missions in
Somalia where, for
example, U.S. Special
Operations forces
assisted local
commandos in killing
several members of the
militant group, al-Shabab
and Libya, where they
supported local
fighters battling
members of the Islamic
State. These missions
also speak to the
exponential growth of
special operations on
the continent.
As recently as 2014,
there were reportedly
only about
700 U.S. commandos
deployed in Africa on
any given day. Today,
according to Bolduc,
“there are approximately
1,700 [Special
Operations forces] and
enablers deployed… at
any given time. This
team is active in 20
nations in support of
seven major named
operations.”
Using data provided by
Special Operations
Command and open source
information, The
Intercept found
that U.S. special
operators were actually
deployed in at least 33
African nations, more
than 60% of the 54
countries on the
continent, in 2016.
Special Operations
Forces deployments
in 33 African
countries in 2016.
Map: The Intercept
“We’re supporting
African military
professionalization and
capability-building
efforts,”
said Bolduc. “The
[Special Operations
forces] network helps
create specific tailored
training for partner
nations to empower
military and law
enforcement to conduct
operations against our
mutual threats.”
The majority of African
governments that hosted
deployments of U.S.
commandos in 2016 have
seen their own security
forces cited for human
rights abuses by the
U.S. State Department,
including
Algeria,
Botswana,
Burkina Faso,
Burundi,
Cameroon,
Democratic Republic of
Congo,
Djibouti,
Kenya,
Mali,
Mauritania,
Niger,
Nigeria, and
Tanzania, among
others.
According to data
provided to The
Intercept by
Special Operations
Command, elite U.S.
troops are also deployed
to Sudan, one of three
nations, along with Iran
and Syria, cited by the
U.S. as “state
sponsors of terrorism.”
“U.S. [Special
Operations forces] have
occasionally met with
U.S. State Dept. and
interagency partners in
Sudan to discuss the
overall security
situation in the
region,” Africa Command
spokesperson Chuck
Prichard wrote in an
email.
Special Operations
Command spokesman Ken
McGraw added, “Their
visit had nothing to do
with Sudan’s government
or military.”