Los Angeles Times

Deadly clash in Niger could happen again

Greater U.S. military presence in Africa boosts risks to troops confrontin­g militants.

- By Robyn Dixon

JOHANNESBU­RG, South Africa — As America increases its military footprint in some of Africa’s most dangerous trouble spots, confrontin­g extremist affiliates of Al Qaeda and Islamic State, the risk of intelligen­ce failures and more combat deaths is mounting.

U.S. special forces who accompanie­d Niger’s military at a meeting of village leaders in Tongo Tongo on Oct. 4 were working in the country’s treacherou­s western borderland­s, a region of shifting tribal allegiance­s, opaque motives and ethnic grudges going back decades, all feeding into a growing jihadi problem.

Four Americans and five Nigerien troops died after leaving Tongo Tongo and being ambushed and heavily outgunned by fighters armed with automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades. The militants are believed to be from a Malian-led militia, Islamic State in the Greater Sahel, which declared allegiance to the overall militant organizati­on in 2015.

One error appears to have been downplayin­g the danger. The Tillaberi and Tahoua regions in western Niger have been under a

state of emergency since March, as Niger has confronted the Islamic State offshoot, led by Malian extremist Abu Walid Sahrawi. U.S. forces have been present in the region to advise and assist Nigerien forces.

“It was reported that both Nigerien and U.S. forces underestim­ated the risks in the area, which was a mistake, since multiple deadly attacks were recorded in the past year against Nigerien forces,” said Rida Lyammouri, a Washington­based independen­t analyst on violent extremism.

On Saturday, gunmen riding pickup trucks and motorcycle­s killed 13 Nigerien paramilita­ry police officers and wounded several others in an attack on their base in southweste­rn Niger, not far from where the U.S. advisors were killed.

The United Nations has cataloged 46 attacks by extremists in western Niger since February 2016, including one in February of this year that killed 15 Nigerien soldiers, and one a year ago that killed 22 Nigerien forces at a refugee camp.

As a U.S. military investigat­ion in Niger seeks answers on what went wrong and reevaluate­s procedures, Niger’s interior minister, Mohamed Bazoum, said intelligen­ce failures were to blame for the nine deaths. He said Islamic State in the Greater Sahel is more entrenched in local communitie­s than are government forces.

“For us here in Niger, we believe it was especially human intelligen­ce that was lacking,” Bazoum told French radio Thursday. “This is an area where [extremists] were able to be more present than us, to inspire fear, and they certainly have elements who were able to give them very precise informatio­n.”

The operation was “more of an informatio­n mission than anything else, and was not very vigilant and did not conduct a mission with the view that it could have to deal with such an attack,” he said.

Adam Sandor, an analyst on violent extremism in the Sahel at the University of Ottawa, said the attack was well planned, citing local sources who said the extremists had visited the area several times.

“Essentiall­y, the attackers are believed to have been scoping out and planning the attack and must have a knowledge of local communitie­s in the area. Local communitie­s most likely shared with them the informatio­n regarding the Nigerien Armed Forces operating with foreigners or military advisors in this space,” he said.

“From the testimonie­s that we have about the attack, it seems the U.S. trainers felt that the villagers in Tongo Tongo were stalling, which struck them as a little bit odd. At that moment, they should probably have high-tailed it out of there.”

Leaders of Tongo Tongo village have been arrested, amid suspicions they were delaying the departure of the Nigerien and U.S. forces to pave the way for the attackers.

America has 6,000 troops in 50 countries across the continent, according to the Defense Department, although many of the missions are charged with guarding U.S. embassies. The counter-terrorism deployment­s include an estimated 1,000 special operations forces, many posted in highrisk locations such as Somalia, Mali and Nigeria. An estimated 800 troops are in Niger.

The U.S. also operates a string of drone bases throughout Africa, including one in Niger.

Despite the substantia­l troop footprint, U.S. forces operating in often-austere environmen­ts do not have robust support systems.

Gen. Thomas Waldhauser, commander of U.S. Africa Command, documented to Congress in March his forces’ lack of needed resources on the continent. Only about 20% to 30% of requiremen­ts for “intelligen­ce, surveillan­ce and reconnaiss­ance” flights are being met, he said, and there are insufficie­nt military helicopter­s to help locate missing, wounded or slain service members.

Alex Thurston, Sahel analyst and author of a book on the Nigeria-based militant group Boko Haram, said America’s footprint in Africa began expanding with George W. Bush’s presidency and the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

“One big factor is the assumption that took hold after 9/11 that any ungoverned space was a potential Afghanista­n and any small group was a potential Al Qaeda and everything had to be nipped in the bud very early. That assumption draws them further and further in, so they feel they have to have some kind of presence wherever there’s a jihadist group,” Thurston said.

“The U.S. sometimes doubts the capacity of African government­s to deal with these problems, sometimes rightly, sometimes wrongly,” he said.

Analyst Laura Seay, a political scientist from Colby College in Maine, said the mission in Niger had been operating in difficult conditions and terrain. “Members of Congress have chosen or been led to believe that ‘advise and assist’ missions like the one in Niger are low-risk. They aren’t, and these types of missions, where we have large numbers of American forces on the ground but technicall­y not at war in places most Americans can’t locate on a map, are increasing­ly common and, in some cases, increasing­ly dangerous,” she said in a series of tweets.

“Sadly, it was almost inevitable that something like this would happen somewhere, and it’s likely to happen again,” she said.

In Somalia, Navy SEAL Kyle Milliken, 38, was killed in May accompanyi­ng Somali forces approachin­g a compound occupied by the Shabab, a terrorist group linked to Al Qaeda. The group, which has proved nimble and adaptable in years of hardened battle against a United Nationsbac­ked African force, AMISOM, and Somali armed forces, threatens to retake territory with the planned withdrawal of AMISOM forces beginning later this year.

Milliken’s death was the first U.S. combat death in Africa since 1993, when two Black Hawk helicopter­s were shot down in Somalia and 18 U.S. soldiers were killed.

The Shabab is the deadliest of Africa’s terrorist groups and is believed to be responsibl­e for Somalia’s worst terrorist attack: At least 358 people were killed Oct. 14, and 56 are still missing. The attack came weeks after a U.S. drone strike killed 10 civilians, including three children, in Bariire, west of Mogadishu.

The U.S. has carried out at least 60 drone strikes in Somalia since January, according to the Bureau of Investigat­ive Journalism, killing up to 510 people, including at least 38 civilians.

The Shabab has killed 2,745 people in 2017, carrying out 987 of the continent’s 1,827 incidents of violent extremism in the first nine months of the year, according to the analytical group African Center for Strategic Studies.

The U.S. has about 400 troops in Somalia and stepped up its military involvemen­t after President Trump widened the powers of American troops to take offensive action this year.

The Shabab also has a presence in Kenya, where it launches regular attacks, including the 2013 Westgate shopping mall massacre that killed at least 67 people, and the 2015 Garissa University College attack, where 147 people — mainly university students — were killed. The terrorist group is believed to have a presence across East Africa.

Boko Haram, operating in Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad and southeaste­rn Niger, was responsibl­e for 2,232 deaths in the first nine months of the year, according to the Bureau of Investigat­ive Journalism.

In Mali, myriad armed extremists operate, including Islamic State in the Greater Sahel and its rival the Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims, formed in March from several Al Qaeda-linked extremist groups, including Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb. In 2012, Islamist militias took over half of the country before the French military drove them out of major cities.

The militias range freely across rural areas, crossing borders at will, launching operations in Mauritania, Ivory Coast and Burkina Faso, including attacks on hotels and resorts popular with foreigners. The U.S. Embassy in Dakar, Senegal, on Friday warned of a credible threat of a terrorist attack in the city.

In the Democratic Republic of Congo, where myriad rebel groups vie for control over mineral resources, a new organizati­on emerged recently declaring fealty to Islamic State.

By comparison, Niger is one of the more stable countries in the region, making it the U.S. choice for a drone base being built outside Agadez, in central Niger, that will launch strikes across the region.

The Tongo Tongo attack has focused attention on Sahel leader Sahrawi, who was a spokesman for one of the extremist groups that conquered the northern Malian town of Gao in the 2012 fighting. He has a history of swapping sides and financing his

operations through kidnapping­s.

He has recruited fighters from among the Fulani nomads in western Niger, exploiting ethnic rivalries with the Daoussahak people in the region, some of whom have formed a militia called the National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad. Both Niger and France have used the group as a proxy force to fight Islamic State in the Great Sahel, deepening ethnic animositie­s.

“Abu Walid is a mover and a shaker. This is someone who has been reportedly amping up attacks in the Mali-Niger borderland­s, in part in order to demonstrat­e his fealty and capacities to support the IS,” said Sandor, the University of Ottawa analyst, referring to Islamic State. “Abu Walid has the required local contacts and a background in kidnapping for ransom. It’s probably one of the main mechanisms of his group’s financing.”

Sahrawi has held several foreign hostages and could be living off the multimilli­ondollar proceeds, he said.

It is not known which Malian extremist group is holding American aid worker Jeffery Woodke, who was kidnapped in Niger a year ago and is believed to have been taken to Mali.

The Sahel offshoot’s links to Islamic State do not appear to be close, and the group is a nimble, fast-moving organizati­on, not set on holding territory. Analysts said it was not yet certain the Tongo Tongo attack was carried out by the terrorist group.

“Even if an IS unit is behind it, the branch is not as strong and powerful as many assume they are,” said Lyammouri, the independen­t analyst. “Militants in the area are made of small mobile units and constantly changing locations.”

When U.S. and Western forces intervene in Africa, jihadi movements seek to discredit them as corrupt outsiders interested in exploiting local people or backing despised regimes. Their task is made easier when drone strikes kill civilians or when local security forces routinely ignore legal norms and harass, arrest or kill people.

The arrest of Tongo Tongo village leaders, Sandor said, could exacerbate tensions, “particular­ly if there are any accusation­s of abuse by the Nigerien military or the gendarmeri­e [police] of the people who are interrogat­ed.”

Thurston warned that scaled-up military action in Africa could become a lightning rod and potentiall­y a trigger for recruitmen­t.

“I think it makes ordinary people nervous and confused. If people start to see that as neocolonia­lism or an infringeme­nt on their rights, it might encourage them to join some of these jihadist movements,” he said.

Despite the horror in the U.S. over the deaths of the four American servicemen, analysts see the U.S. as unlikely to wind back military operations.

“The U.S. most likely will not draw back because of this incident. U.S. engagement and support to Niger has been going on for many years. Niger is important to the U.S. because of the ongoing fight against Boko Haram,” Lyammouri said.

“Niger is also strategic to fight all sorts of traffickin­g in the region, so the U.S. and other Western allies cannot afford to see Niger being destabiliz­ed.”

 ?? Jerome Delay Associated Press ?? SPECIAL FORCES from Nigeria and troops from Chad hold exercises with U.S. advisors in 2015 in Mao, Chad. The U.S. has about 6,000 troops across Africa, including about 1,000 special operations forces.
Jerome Delay Associated Press SPECIAL FORCES from Nigeria and troops from Chad hold exercises with U.S. advisors in 2015 in Mao, Chad. The U.S. has about 6,000 troops across Africa, including about 1,000 special operations forces.
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