It’s Not Just Niger — U.S.
Military Activity Is a “Recruiting Tool” for Terror
Groups Across West Africa
By Nick Turse
October 27,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- The mission never made the
front page of the New York Times or the Washington
Post. It wasn’t covered on CNN or Fox News. Neither
the White House chief of staff, the chair of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, nor the president ever
addressed it in a press briefing. But from
mid-January to late March 2013, Green Berets from
the 10th Special Forces Group deployed to the
impoverished West African nation of Niger. Working
alongside local forces, they trained in desert
mobility, the use of heavy weapons, and methods of
deliberate attack.
On May 15 of that year, another
contingent of Special Forces soldiers arrived in
Niger. For nearly two months, they also trained with
local troops, focusing on similar combat skills with
an emphasis on missions in remote areas. From the
beginning of August until mid-September, yet another
group of Green Berets traveled to the hot, arid
country for training, concentrating on desert
operations, heavy weapons employment, intelligence
analysis, and other martial matters, according to
Pentagon documents obtained by The Intercept via the
Freedom of Information Act.
One constant of all of these
counterterrorism missions, which were carried out by
small teams of elite U.S. troops operating alongside
Nigerien forces, was a concentration on
reconnaissance. Until recently, such missions were
conducted without notice or media scrutiny.
Americans were
involved in firefights, but the operations were
kept quiet. When special operators
died in Africa, it was due to an
accident or after a night of
partying. Americans were
rarely killed in combat.
Four years later, on October 3, 12
Green Berets undertook a “reconnaissance mission”
alongside 30 Nigerien soldiers near the village of
Tongo Tongo, about 85 kilometers north of the
capital city of Niamey, according to
the chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Joseph
Dunford. (Some reports indicate it had morphed into
a “kill-or-capture” mission aimed at a high-value
target with ties to both Al Qaeda and the Islamic
State.)
The next day, as the joint force was moving south “en
route to their operating base, the patrol came under
attack from approximately 50 enemy using small-arms
fire, rocket-propelled grenades, and technical
vehicles,” explained Dunford. Four
Green Berets were killed and two wounded in the
ambush, which also claimed the lives of five
Nigerien soldiers.
In truth, U.S. forces are already
deployed all across Africa by the thousands. Around
6,000 troops are on the continent, conducting 3,500 exercises,
programs, and engagements each year – almost 10
missions each day — from Cameroon to Somalia,
Djibouti to Libya. More than 800 of these forces,
Pentagon spokesperson Maj. Audricia Harris told The
Intercept, are deployed to Niger. This is up from
approximately 100 troops sent in
2013 to carry out drone reconnaissance missions,
making the hardscrabble country, wedged between
seven nations, including Mali, Libya, Nigeria, and
Chad, the largest concentration of U.S. military
forces in West Africa.
“The rapid, largely unrecognized
increase in U.S. troops in Niger is part of the
large expansion of the U.S. military footprint in
Africa,” says William Hartung, director of the Arms
and Security Project at the Center for International
Policy. “This expansion is long overdue for
congressional scrutiny and public discussion.” U.S.
efforts, primarily focused on training allies and
proxies, are flawed, often ineffective, and can have
destabilizing effects on countries that military
operations are meant to strengthen, according to
experts. Cast as benign training operations, they
can lead to unforeseen consequences and dangerous
blowback. “While the Pentagon likes to downplay the
military aspects of these missions, in a number of
instances, they have involved acts of war that risk
getting the U.S. involved in broader conflicts, even
as they have had little impact on the spread of
terrorism,” Hartung notes.
While 800-plus troops are in Niger
today, many more soldiers rotated through the
country as U.S. forces have been, according to
Dunford, carrying out intermittent missions for 20
years.
In 2002, the U.S. launched a
counterterrorism program — known as the Pan Sahel
Initiative, which later became the Trans-Sahara
Counterterrorism Partnership — to assist the
militaries of Chad, Mali, Mauritania, and Niger
before expanding to include six additional nations
nearby. Between 2009 and 2013 alone, the U.S. allocated $288
million in TSCTP funding, according to a 2014 report
by the Government Accountability Office. Niger
netted more than $30 million. Neighboring Mali held
the top spot at $40.6 million.
These programs saw U.S. troops deployed again
and again to carry out advisory and “train and equip
missions,” as well as mentorship programs designed
to increase local anti-terrorism capabilities,
encourage local populations to cooperate with
military forces, and build the military capacity of
those soldiers to enable them to “Find, Fix, and
Finish” militant groups, according to a 2014 State
Department analysis of the TSCTP obtained by The
Intercept, via the FOIA.
By 2011, U.S. Africa Command’s
efforts in Niger and Mali included a
host of training programs, such as the employment of
Civil-Military Support Elements, Joint Planning and
Assistance Teams, and Senior Leader Engagements, as
well as Mobile
Training Teams – a program in which U.S. troops
provide instruction on using and maintaining weapons
and other equipment.The
United States also employed a
host of other episodic training programs, including
the African Crisis Response Initiative, African
Contingency Operations Training and Assistance,
International Military Education and Training,
Counterterrorism Fellowship Program, Global Peace
Operations Initiative, and
Joint Combined Exchange Training. Most of the
military instruction was carried out by Green
Berets. In a Naval Postgraduate School thesis, Maj.
Simon Powelson, who was was involved in
10th Special Forces Group training operations, wrote, “These
efforts did not result in a measurable increase in
the overall effectiveness of the Malian army (or of
individual units for that matter). Training that was
episodically provided rarely diffused or even took
hold.”
Similar efforts were undertaken in
Niger, where, since 2006, the Defense Department has
provided approximately $165 million in
counterterrorism equipment and training, the
second-highest total in all of Africa, according to
the Congressional Research Service. But the results
have been similar to those in Mali, says Michael
Shurkin, a senior political scientist at the
RAND Corporation, who has written extensively on both
countries. “What U.S. troops were doing in Niger
is pretty much what we’ve been doing in the region
since 2003,” he said. “Everything we’ve been doing
certainly hasn’t amounted to much because everything
has gotten worse. None of it is really effective.”
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Rebecca Zimmerman, a national
security and foreign policy researcher at the RAND
Corporation, warns of grave consequences when poor,
fragile states are inundated with counterterrorism
training and equipment. Such efforts can, she says,
create a culture of dependency, increase corruption,
and create power imbalances between the armed forces
and often weak civilian governments. “In countries
where there is inadequate civilian control of the
military, this is a particular risk,” she said.
In fact, TSCTP member-state Chad
saw attempted coups in 2006 and 2013; members of
Mauritania’s military overthrew the government in
2005 and again in 2008; a military junta overthrew Niger’s
president in 2010; and a U.S.-trained military
officer, Amadou Sanogo, toppled the democratically
elected president of Mali in 2012. “The role of a
U.S.-trained officer in overthrowing the government
of Mali is yet another case of arms and training
programs backfiring and creating a more chaotic
environment in which terrorist organizations can
grow,” Hartung told The Intercept.
Schooled in
the U.S. through a
variety of military training initiatives, Sanogo
and his clique were upset at his government’s
inadequate response to an insurgency in Mali’s
north. As the U.S.-backed war in Libya was helping
to topple Moammar Gadhafi, nomadic Tuareg fighters
in the Libyan dictator’s service looted his regime’s
weapons caches, returned to their native Mali, and
began to carve out a homeland.
Soon, however, Islamist militants
pushed out the Tuaregs, took over much of the north,
instituted a harsh brand of Sharia law, and created
a humanitarian crisis that displaced hundreds of
thousands. But Sanogo’s junta proved no more
militarily effective than the government he
overthrew. “The coup made everything a lot worse.
The coup didn’t yield a strongman. The coup yielded
nothing, just vacancy,” said Shurkin. In 2013, with
Islamist militants besting Sanogo’s military, a
U.S.-backed French and multinational regional
force
intervened to prevent a takeover of the
country. Since then, Mali has been mired in an
intractable insurgency and militant groups have
thrived in the vacuum.
In fact, the entire region,
relatively free of transnational terror threats in
2001, is now beset by a host of militant groups.
They include, according to the Defense Department’s
Africa Center for Strategic Studies, the local
branch of Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, Al
Mourabitoun, Ansar Dine, and the Macina Liberation
Front, which now all operate under the mantle of
Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin, as well as
Boko Haram, the Movement for Unity and Jihad in West
Africa, Ansaroul Islam, and the Islamic State in
West Africa (or Wil?yat Gharb Ifr?q?yyah). And it
was reportedly members of a newer group operating
out of Mali’s restive regions, the Islamic State in
the Greater Sahara, that crossed the border into
Niger and carried out the attack that killed the
four Green Berets.
“While the roots of terrorism are
complex,” observed Hartung, “it is fair to say that
the larger U.S. military presence has, at a minimum,
served as a recruiting tool for the growing number
of terrorist groups operating in West Africa.”
With the French military trapped
in what appears to be an interminable
counterinsurgency campaign in Mali, the U.S. has
increasingly stepped up its presence in neighboring
Niger, even in the
wake of the recent ambush. “U.S. troops continue
carrying out a variety of operations in Niger,
including continued advise and assist missions,”
says Defense Department spokesperson Lt. Col.
Michelle Baldanza.
For its part, AFRICOM says its forces
are “supporting the U.S. Embassy” in the country’s
capital, Niamey. Troops are also stationed at Base
Aerienne 201 (Airbase 201), outside the city of
Agadez, a transit hub at the edge of the Sahara in
Central Niger, “supporting ISR,” or intelligence,
surveillance, and reconnaissance operations,
according to Baldanza. AFRICOM calls Base Aerienne
201 “a
temporary, expeditionary contingency support
location,” but The Intercept previously revealed it
is, in fact, a $100 million drone base in the
making.According to
declassified secret documents from 2015, obtained
via the Freedom of Information Act, Niger was the
“only country in NW [northwest] Africa willing to
allow basing of MQ-9s,” the larger, potentially more
lethal cousins of the Predator drone. The documents
went on to note that Niger’s president “expressed
willingness to support armed RPAs,” or remotely
piloted aircraft, the military euphemism for drones.
New reports indicate the United States is now
pressing Niger to allow the deployment of such
drones in order to carry out lethal strikes there.
“RPA
presence in NW Africa supports operations
against seven [Department of State]-designated
foreign terrorist organizations. Moving operations
to Agadez aligns persistent ISR to current and
emerging threats over Niger and Chad … and extends
range to cover Libya and Nigeria,” say the 2015
files, which also call Agadez the “top
MILCON [military construction] project for
USAFRICOM.” That construction continues to this day.
The Pentagon refused to comment on
the size of troop levels at Niger’s bases, citing
security concerns. Some indication can, however, be
gleaned from an Air Force contract awarded last
month for 80 Quonset hut-shaped prefab tent
structures at Air Base 201 — the type of structures
long ubiquitous at bases in Iraq and Afghanistan,
providing about 800 separate rooms.
AFRICOM cryptically adds that U.S.
personnel are also “stationed in the country for
other temporary duties and operations.”
Recent contracting documents from the Defense
Logistics Agency reference a Joint Special
Operations Air Component and indicate ongoing needs
for diesel and jet fuel at Niger’s Base Aérienne
101, a longtime U.S. drone outpost, attached to
Diori Hamani International Airport in the country’s
capital, Niamey; it is used for regional ISR
missions. The U.S. is also considering beefing up
Air Base 101 by adding defensive fighting positions
— towers to provide blast and ballistic protection
with gun ports that allow troops to return fire
— according to Air Force contracting documents
issued this past summer.
Contracting documents
also indicate future requirements for fuel at a
number of other Nigerien locales, including Tahoua
and Ouallam, as well as the need for 4,400 gallons
per month of gasoline, 1,100 gallons per month of
diesel fuel, and 6,000 gallons of aviation turbine
fuel every 90 days to be delivered to a “military
installation” in Dirkou. A DLA document from this
summer also shows potential interest in deliveries
of unleaded gasoline and diesel fuel to the village
of Tillia.
The expansion and hardening of
facilities at Agadez and Niamey, and the contracts
indicating a need for fuel at other remote
locations, suggests an expanding presence in Niger.
So, too, do comments reportedly
made by U.S. Secretary of Defense James Mattis to
two senior members of the Senate Armed Services
Committee last week. “You’re going to see more
actions in Africa, not less,” said Sen.
Lindsey Graham after his briefing from Mattis.
“You’re going to see more aggression by the United
States toward our enemies, not less.”
Shurkin finds Graham’s statements
troublesome. “When I hear Lindsey Graham I get very
worried because he’s a hawk, Shurkin said. “His
answer always is more. I’m worried because I think
that means dialing up everything that we’ve been
doing. More money, more troops, more training
programs, more Green Berets, more helicopter
support, a bigger footprint.”
“Simply throwing more money at the
existing programs and doing what we’ve been doing —
but just simply more of it — strikes me as a really
bad idea,” Shurkin added. “At the very least, we’re
going to waste a lot of money. And we can definitely
make things worse.”
This
article was originally published by
The Intercept
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