|
AFRICOM and the USA's Hidden
Battle for Africa
What is the current meaning of War against Terror for Africa? The true
intention of American recent military interventions in the African
continent (both covert and open) is nothing other than the expansion and
consolidation of Western capital.
It all started in 2001 when George W. Bush declared his "War on Terror" in
the continent, but has developed in a manner that has gone beyond human
imagination in the body counts on the streets of Somalia, in the jungles
of Uganda and Congo, and deserts of Sudan.
The chief of the US African Command, General E. Ward, explained this in
language more clear than that of any US politician when he stated that an
Africa in which African populations are able to provide for themselves,
contribute to global economic development and are allowed access to
markets in free, fair, and competitive ways, is good for America and the
world.
AFRICOM (or USAFRICOM) is a Unified Combatant Command of the US Department
of Defense, responsible for US military operations and military relations
with 53 African nations (excepting Egypt). Africa Command was established
October 1, 2007, and formally activated October 1, 2008 at a public
ceremony at the Pentagon attended by representatives of African nations.
It has become clear that the idea was not primarily to fight against
Islamic terror, which was said to be growing in influence, but to protect
and help expand American military and economic (mainly energy) interests.

Pending legislation, The Lord's Resistance Army Disarmament and Northern
Uganda Recovery Act 2009," being pushed by Rep. Ed Royce (R-CA) would
empower AFRICOM not only to give technical support but to physically go to
war with the armed groups that both Uganda and the Democratic Republic of
Congo Forces have not been able to dislodge. Royce said:
Africas' emerging potential as a major oil producer and supplier to the
United States, has been of interest to the Sub-Committee on Africa that
I've chaired for some time. The sub-committee held a hearing to look at
this topic in 2000. It's clearly in our national interest to diversify our
energy supply, especially given the turbulent political climate in key
parts of the world today. The expansion of energy production in Africa
matches to that interest.
This is big money talk rather than humanitarian outrage. On January 2,
2002, a Washington DC symposium held to discuss African oil came up with a
document entitled African Oil: A Priority for US National Security and
African Development, which paved the way for the rest to happen. It was
attended by Washington's Africa heavyweights: people like Barry Schutz, a
Bush administration specialist on Africa; Lt-Col. Karen Kwiatkowski, a
high-ranking Air Force officer, and Water Kansteiner, Bush's
under-secretary of State for African Affairs. The Christian Science
Monitor reported on the Symposium thus:
In January last year [2002], the IASPS [Institute for Advanced Strategic
and Political Studies] hosted a symposium in Houston, Texas, which was
attended by government and oil industry representatives. An influential
working group called the African Oil Policy Initiative Group (AOPIG)
co-chaired by IASPS researchers Barry Schutz and Paul Michael Wihbey,
which has been largely responsible for driving American governmental
policy concerning west African oil, emerged from the symposium... The
document urges Congress and the Bush administration to encourage greater
extraction of oil across Africa, and to declare the Gulf of Guinea 'a area
of vital interest' to the US.
We have now definitely entered the aggressive birth of AFRICOM. The man
who is put in charge of this task, Gen. William E. Kip Ward, is not new to
the battlefields of Africa. He was in Somalia in 1993 when US forces were
serious bitten by small insurgent groups, forcing the US to withdraw from
that crisis.
AFRICOM in Action
AFRICOM justifies its presence in Africa on its website as follows:
"Africa is growing in military, strategic and economic importance in
global affairs. However, many nations on the African continent continue to
rely on the international community for assistance with security concerns.
From the US perspective, it makes strategic sense to help build the
capability for African partners, and organizations such as the African
Standby Force, to take the lead in establishing a security environment.
This security, will, in turn, set the groundwork for increased political
stability and economic growth."
This helps explain why the AFRICOM budget rose from $50 million in the
fiscal year of 2007 to $310 million in FY 2009 fiscal year 2010 in running
costs, not military aid to the member countries. It also shows the
significance of this program for the US government. The command gave the
US military the possibility of having a physical presence in numerous
African countries and assigning Defense Department personnel to US
embassies and diplomatic missions to coordinate Defense Department
programs. The US Africa Command is now spending billions in training and
arm supplies. It is expecting to spend nothing less than $20 billion in
2010, and this will benefit the armies of a very many repressive regimes.
Take the case of Sudan. Openly, Western governments, including the US,
have never been more critical of the regime in Khartoum, even accusing it
of committing genocide in Darfur. The fact that the head of Sudan's
intelligence agency, wanted by the International Criminal Court, was
secretly jetted to the US by the CIA to discuss military interests in the
Horn of Africa was one of the most disgusting acts of hypocrisy by the
Bush administration.
The right-wing Republican lobbyists for AFRICOM never made their
intentions secret. They have said time and again that America cannot rely
on the unconquered Middle East for its oil supply; for them, Africa is the
answer. But the aggressive nature of this thirst for African oil and other
resources has no doubt also been fueled by the presence of China in key
strategic areas.
Today, US Africa Command is involved in almost 38 African countries with
the presumed agenda of training anti-terrorist forces. These include Chad,
Kenya, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Tanzania, and Sierra Leone. The
expansion of the AFRICOM central command in Djibouti adds to the
significance that the US government puts into this project. According to
AFRICOM, "US Central Command maintains its traditional relationship with
Egypt, but AFRICOM coordinates with Egypt on issues relating to Africa
security." In Egypt, the US state is spending billions of American tax
payers' money in military equipment and training to arm one of the most
repressive military forces in the continent. All of this speaks for itself
rather than the simple and cheap rhetoric of bringing stability to the
continent in the name of the "war against terror."
The 2006 invasion of Somalia by the Ethiopian forces was clearly a proxy
war, with AFRICOM providing the logisticsallowing a criminal organization
like al-Shabab to claim a legitimate reason for its war and brutal terror
against the very people both sides claim to be freeing: the poor ordinary
Somalis. It is significant that as debate was held on where the
headquarters of AFRICOM should be located, the Ethiopian Prime Minister
Meles Zenawi declared that Ethiopia will be willing to work closely with
the Command. According to a UN situation report of February 5, 2010, an
estimated 3.2 million people in Somalia are in need of emergency food aid,
one in six children are seriously malnourished, and the internally
displaced population is in the millions and continues to rise.
The planned assault on Mogadishu has registered its first civilian
casualties this March, forcing more civilians to flee the capital. The aim
of this military operation is to retake control of the capital from the
al-Shabab militants. The Obama administration has been planning this
assault for a while now. Assistant secretary of state for Africa, Johnnie
Carlson is said to have been very instrumental in the preparation. He
nonetheless said: "This is not an American offensive... the US military is
not on the ground in Somalia. Full stop." In another press briefing
Carlson held with the Ertharin Cousin, US ambassador to the UN Mission in
Rome, he said: "We have provided limited military support to the
Transitional Federal Government... We do so in the firm belief that the
TFG seeks to end the violence in Somalia that is caused by al-Shabaab and
other extremist organizations..."
True, there might not be any US troops on the ground, but it is an
American war contracted to some Somalis, African Union forces, and
Ethiopians. The US has been training intelligence forces, providing
surveillance, logistic support and money to buy bullets and guns; and
there are even speculations that American forces might provide aerial
bombing of militant positions.
This is against the recent advice given to the Obama administration, which
warns of a need for a change of approach from US support to the
Transitional Federal Government headed by Sheik Ahmed Sharif. The Report,
"Somali: A New Approach," prepared by the Council on Foreign Relations,
advised the administration to engage in "Constructive Disengagement"
rather than spending so much on ineffective government that has very
little support among the Somali population. Critics might be right to say
that the Obama administration is playing into the hands of the Islamic
extremists.
This was the case too with Operation Lightning Thunder in 2008, involving
Uganda, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the liberated Southern
Sudan.
It was clear to all sincere analysts that the Lord's Resistance Army was
cornered and pacified, and that operation Lightning Thunder was no more
than the clearing of the oil fields. Dr. Jendayi Frazer, then an assistant
secretary of state in the Bush government, was said to have been the main
initiator of that operation. Riek Machar, vice president of Southern
Sudan, said as much in a documentary aired by the AlJazeera TV. Ugandan
military commanders have openly confirmed that they have received
logistics support from the Americans, including satellite phones, GPS
receivers, maps and US contributions to fuel costs of the military
vehicles involved in the operation. The results: over 1,000 civilians dead
and the internal displacement of an estimated half million people. All
this followed the 2006 failed operation by a UN team of US-trained
Guatemalan commando to assassinate Joseph Kone, leader of LRAin which all
members of the commando were killed by the LRA. Southern Sudan refused to
actively take part, only closing their borders to avoid crossing of arm
groups into their territory.
Conclusion
When the Chad-Cameroon pipeline project was put on the table in the
prelude to AFRICOM's unveiling, the oil companies made sure of IMF and
World Bank support. This was not because of lack of capital. These two
institutions are the most reliable and effective discipliners of the
African nations involved should they at any time violate the contract
against the interest of the big oil companies involved in the project. The
arrangement was never designed for transparency, and when the initial
funds of the project were embezzled in the member countries there was
never a call to halt the projecteven though the World Bank had put in a
code of conduct as condition for the funding.
There is nothing new in armies conquering territories before the looting
begins. For centuries states have been using their armies in foreign
adventures in the interest of capital. The modern world has just surpassed
the crude methods that were used in centuries past, and is now utilizing
sophisticated techniques consciously designed to confuse the human mind.
With the "moral high ground" of free market capitalism, the African
bourgeoisie are content with being sub-contractors; the whole mathematics
becomes easier, especially when it comes to the ethical sharing of the
wealth from the looting. To say that Africans are benefitting from the
project through employment and the creation of a middle class are fine
words that defy the lawlessness and suffering on the continent.
HOME |