American Forces Press Service
STUTTGART, Germany, June 21, 2012 –
Eliminating terrorist safe havens and support for terrorist groups in Africa is
a top U.S. Africa Command priority, Africom’s top military officer said.
Army Gen. Carter F. Ham told American
Forces Press Service he’s committed to working with African partners to
confront violent extremists “that have very clearly articulated an intent to
attack the United States, its allies, its citizens and its interests both
within Africa and also more broadly, in Europe.”
All, he said, want to take advantage of
ungoverned or under-governed regions where they can operate without restraint.
Countering this threat is the common
denominator that drives Ham’s theater engagement strategy and its broad array
of operations, exercises and security cooperation programs. This includes
teaching partner nations how to improve their border security, intelligence and
tactical capabilities and equipping African nations so they can operate more
effectively.
“Ultimately, what we want to do through
our activities – not just through Africom, but as a larger whole-of-government
and international effort – is to ‘turn the lights on,’” said James Robertson,
an Africom strategist. “And when the lights are on, we will find increased
security and stability.”
Africa has struggled for decades with
civil wars and conflicts, underdevelopment and poverty that make it inviting to
terrorists from the Middle East, Robertson said.
“They want what Africa has to offer,” he
added. “They want this ungoverned space so they can operate freely, and so our
aim is to deter and disrupt them and, ideally, ensure that they don’t gain
access.”
Recognizing the extent of the threat,
Ham has set East Africa as the No. 1 focus of his commandwide counterterrorism
strategy.
“Why East Africa?” said Army Maj. Gen.
Charles Hooper, the command’s director of strategy, plans and programs. “It’s
because East Africa faces the challenges that we face in Arabia, particularly
Yemen, and the al-Qaida elements emanating from Yemen and other areas in the
Middle East.” It’s also home to the al-Shabab terror organization in Somalia
that formally announced its affiliation with al-Qaida in February.
Hooper also cited other terrorist
threats in Africa. In the North African desert, the al-Qaida in the Lands of
the Islamic Maghreb organization is committed to destabilizing the trans-Sahara
region and Northwest Africa. But its pursuits, he said, also threaten European
allies across the Mediterranean Sea, as well as the United States.
He also noted concerns in the Gulf of
Guinea, a major transit point for illicit trafficking in drugs, weapons and
humans bound predominantly for Europe. In addition, a violent group known as
Boko Haram has extended its influence to challenge the central government in Nigeria
– a major economic power in Africa and a contributor to United Nations
peacekeeping missions.
Africa’s vast natural resources compound
the region’s strategic importance, Hooper said, particularly oil that’s
exported to the United States.
“Access to the global commons, and
stability in Western Africa and in those important sea lines of communication
that run through the Gulf of Guinea and through Western Africa, remain
important,” he said.
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