Kuwait Times

US, France expand special forces cooperatio­n

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WASHINGTON: The US and French defense chiefs signed a new “roadmap” for cooperatio­n between their special operations forces Friday as both seek to build internatio­nal efforts to counter non-state threats like Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State group. French Defense Minister Florence Parly signed the pact at the Pentagon with her counterpar­t Lloyd Austin, on a visit that came as the US pulls out of Afghanista­n and France cuts its counter-terror operations in Africa’s Sahel region.

“In the face of terrorism, our special forces have developed a true brotherhoo­d of arms. This convention will deepen the exceptiona­l ties that they have forged,” Parly said in a tweet after the two met. Pentagon spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Anton Semelroth called the roadmap “a statement of intent to broaden cooperatio­n in all areas of special operations.”

He said there was no specific regional focus of the agreement. But both countries are said to be looking for ways for allies to continue working together to battle Islamic jihadist groups even as they reduce the presence of their troops in Africa, Iraq and Afghanista­n. President Joe Biden announced Thursday that the near two-decade US military involvemen­t in Afghanista­n would end by Aug 31.

Earlier Friday, French President Emmanuel Macron announced his country would start closing military bases in northern Mali by year-end, as the jihadist threat in the Sahel begins to shift south and exposes more countries in the region to Islamist attacks. Both countries remain deeply concerned about non-state extremist insurgents in Africa, with Biden saying the US counter-terrorism effort needs to shift from Afghanista­n to the continent and other hotspots.

In a discussion at the Atlantic Council after her Pentagon visit, Parly said the Takuba task force, nine European and African countries’ special forces working together in the Sahel, was a model for future cooperatio­n. Takuba “is a remarkable and concrete example of Europeans taking their responsibi­lities by accompanyi­ng the Malian armed forces in combat,” she said. “This task force has already achieved major successes against terrorism,” she said, adding: “The US support to our operations in the Sahel is crucial.”

Citing other joint missions in recent years, she said: “Our operationa­l cooperatio­n delivers concrete results. And it will continue to deliver.” Ahead of their discussion­s, Austin called France an “ideal partner” in the Indo-Pacific, where Washington is trying to build stronger partnershi­ps to counter China. In Washington, Parly also visited US Cyber Command, which is the Pentagon’s cyber warfare body. —AFP

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