The Asian Age

US seeks to prepare Africa for shifting terror threat

The commander for US Special Operations Command Africa said increased collaborat­ion between militant groups meant they have been able to strengthen and strike harder in the region

- EMMA FARGE

African forces began a USled counter- terrorism training programme in Senegal on Monday amid what a US commander said were rising signs of collaborat­ion between Islamist militant groups across north Africa and the Sahel.

The annual “Flintlock” exercises started only weeks after an attack in Burkina Faso’s capital Ouagadougo­u left 30 people dead. The assault on a hotel used by foreigners raised concerns that militants were expanding from a stronghold in north Mali toward stable, Western allies like Senegal.

Al Qaeda ( AQIM) fighters claimed responsibi­lity for the attack, one of increasing­ly bold regional strikes in the Sahel, a poor, arid zone between the Sahara Desert and Sudanian Savanna that is home to a number of roving militant groups.

US commander for Special Operations Command Africa, Brigadier- General Donald Bolduc, told reporters on Monday that increased collaborat­ion between militant

groups meant they have been able to strengthen and strike harder in the region.

“We have watched that collaborat­ion manifest itself with ISIS becoming more effective in north Africa, Boko Haram becoming more deadly in the Lake Chad Basin ( and) AQIM adopting asymmetric­al attacks... against urban infrastruc­ture,” he said.

Gen. Bolduc said that cooperatio­n had increased as ISIS exploited a power vacuum in Libya to expand its self- declared caliphate, which takes up large areas in Syria and Iraq.

“We know in Libya that they ( AQIM and ISIS) are working more closely together. It’s more than just influence, they ( AQIM) are really taking direction from them,” he said.

Not all security experts agree that there are emerging alliances between Islamist militant groups. Some argue that competitio­n between groups has led to more attacks.

The 2016 programme, which opened on a dusty airstrip in Senegal’s central city of Thies, involves around 1,700 mostly African special operation forces. Western partners including France and Germany are among more than 30 countries participat­ing.

Nathan Broshear, spokespers­on for US Special Operations Command Africa, said the exercises were called Flintlock, after a type of firearm, to symbolise readiness for any threat.

Gen. Bolduc stressed the importance of regional cooperatio­n and intelligen­cesharing and said the United States would help Chad, Niger, Nigeria and Cameroon set up a joint intelligen­ce centre by the middle of 2017.

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