Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

African military force gets $130 million in pledges

- SYLVIE CORBET AND ELAINE GANLEY

LA CELLE-SAINTCLOUD, France — A new African military force to counter growing extremism in the Sahel region should see victories “in the first half of 2018,” France’s president said Wednesday after hosting a summit to boost support for the five-nation effort.

President Emmanuel Macron announced new pledges for the force known as the G5 Sahel, one from Saudi Arabia of $100 million and another of $30 million from the United Arab Emirates, in a bid to speed up the full deployment of the military effort by Mali, Niger, Burkina Faso, Chad and Mauritania.

Nearly five years after France intervened to rout Islamist extremists in northern Mali, then controlled by an al-Qaida affiliate, the threat has spread to neighborin­g countries in the volatile Sahel, the sprawling, largely barren zone south of the Sahara desert. The growing extremism has also spawned new jihadi groups, including one claiming affiliatio­n with the Islamic State militant group.

In recent months, local security forces and the 12,000-strong United Nations peacekeepi­ng mission in Mali have been prime targets. Attacks often occur in the border regions of Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger, where four U.S. soldiers were killed earlier this year.

Besides the leaders of the five-nation force, delegation­s representi­ng Europe, the African Union and internatio­nal organizati­ons were in attendance Wednesday.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel stressed the urgency of making the force fully operationa­l.

“Islamic extremism is propagatin­g. We can’t wait,” she said.

The G5 force is expected to grow into a 5,000-strong army by March but needs soldiers, training, operationa­l autonomy and funding. Macron said he sees it at full strength as planned.

France’s 4,000-strong counterter­rorism force in the region since 2014, known as Barkhane, will help the G5 with critical air, intelligen­ce and other support, Macron said, and “we will win victories in the first half of 2018.”

“We need to win the war against terrorism in the Sahel zone and it’s in full swing,” Macron said. “There are attacks every day.”

The force launched in Mali in July with Macron present. He has taken the lead in persuading partners to help make it viable, arguing that the fate of the Sahel region affects Europe.

“Terrorists, thugs and assassins” must be eradicated, he said in July.

Mali President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita on Wednesday evoked the possibilit­y that Islamic State fighters fleeing a collapsed “caliphate” in Iraq and Syria would turn up in the Sahel.

“We know that our time is running out,” Keita said.

The new force carried out a single test operation in early November involving 350 forces from Burkina Faso, 200 from Niger and 200 from Mali, according to the French Defense Ministry.

The budget to launch the force is $293 million, with $470 million needed down the road, French Defense Minister Florence Parly said on RFI radio.

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