www.zerohedge.com
Authored by Alan Macleod via Mint Press News,
The US has roughly 6,000 military personnel scattered
throughout the continent with military attachés outnumbering diplomats
in many embassies across Africa.
A new report published in South African newspaper The Mail and Guardian has shed light on the opaque world of the American military presence in Africa. Last
year, elite U.S. Special Operations forces were active in 22 African
countries. This accounts for 14 percent of all American commandos
deployed overseas, the largest number for any region besides the Middle East. American troops had also seen combat in 13 African nations.
The U.S. is not formally at war with an African nation, and
the continent is barely discussed in reference to American exploits
around the globe. Therefore, when U.S. operatives die in Africa, as
happened in Niger, Mali, and Somalia in 2018, the response from the public, and even from the media is often “why are American soldiers there in the first place?”
The presence of the U.S. military, especially commandos, is rarely
publicly acknowledged, either by Washington or by African governments.
What they are doing remains even more opaque. U.S. Africa Command
(AFRICOM) generally claims that special forces go no further than
so-called “AAA” (advise, assist and accompany) missions. Yet in combat,
the role between observer and participant can become distinctly blurry.
The United States has roughly 6,000 military personnel scattered throughout the continent, with military attachés outnumbering diplomats in many embassies across Africa. Earlier this year, The Intercept reported that the military operates 29 bases on the continent. One of these is a huge drone hub in Niger, something The Hill called “the
largest U.S. Air Force-led construction project of all time.” The
construction cost alone was over $100 million, with total operating
costs expected to
top $280 billion by 2024. Equipped with Reaper drones, the U.S. can now
conduct cross border bombing raids all over the North and West of
Africa.
Washington claims that the military’s primary role in the region is to combat the rise of extremist forces.
In recent years, a number of Jihadist groups have arisen, including
Al-Shabaab, Boko Haram, and other al-Qaeda affiliated groups. However,
much of the reason for their rise can be traced back to previous
American actions, including the destabilization of Yemen, Somalia, and
the overthrow of Colonel Gaddafi in Libya.
It is also clear that the United States plays a key role in training many nations’ soldiers and security forces. For
example, the U.S. pays Bancroft International, a private military
contractor, to train elite Somali units who are at the forefront of the
fighting in the country’s internal conflicts. According to The Mail and Guardian, these Somali fighters are likely also funded by the U.S. taxpayer.
While training foreign armed forces in basic tactics might sound like a
bland, unremarkable activity, the U.S. government also spent decades
instructing tens of thousands of Latin American military and police in
what they called “internal security” at the notorious School of the
Americas at Fort Benning, GA (now rebranded as the Western Hemisphere
Institute for Security). Recruits in the twentieth century were instructed on
internal repression and told that a communist menace lied around every
corner, meting out brutal repression on their own populations once
returning. Likewise, with counter-terrorism training, the line between
“terrorist” “militant” and “protester” can often be debatable.
The U.S. military also occupies the island of Diego Garcia in the
Indian Ocean, claimed by the African island nation of Mauritius. In the
1960s and 1970s, the British government expelled the entire local
population, dumping them in slums in Mauritius, where most still live.
The United States uses the island as a military base and a nuclear
weapons station. The island was critical to American military activities
during both Iraq Wars and continues to be a major threat, casting a
nuclear shadow over the Middle East, East Africa, and South Asia.
While there is much talk,
(or more accurately, condemnation) in Western media of China’s
imperialist motives in Africa, there is less discussion of the U.S.’
continuing role. While China operates one base in the Horn of
Africa and has greatly increased its economic role on the continent, the
thousands of American troops operating in dozens of countries are
overlooked. The amazing thing about the American Empire is it is
invisible to so many who serve it.
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