The Herald (Zimbabwe)

US exploiting Green Beret deaths to escalate Africa interventi­on

US imperialis­m is preparing to inflict upon the African continent the levels of carnage that it has already wrought upon the Middle East, where the dead and wounded number in the millions and those driven from their homes in the tens of millions, while en

- Bill Van Auken Correspond­ent

MORE than three weeks after four special operations troops died in a firefight in Niger, the Pentagon has yet to provide a coherent account of what led to this military debacle. Combined with President Donald Trump’s initial silence on the deaths, followed by his repugnant public debate with the widow of one of the slain soldiers, the incident has cast a spotlight on a rapidly expanding US military build-up in Africa that has been carried out behind the backs of the American people and with no public debate, much less authorisat­ion, by the US Congress.

The Trump administra­tion has made no real effort to sell this burgeoning American military operation — conducted under the badly frayed banner of the “war on terrorism” — to the American public.

Meanwhile, leading figures in the US Senate, including Democratic minority leader Chuck Schumer, have claimed, however implausibl­y, that they knew nothing about the approximat­ely 1 000 US special operations troops deployed in Niger and on its borders.

Trump himself provided an entirely credible claim of his own ignorance as to what is happening in Africa.

Asked by reporters on the White House lawn whether he had authorised the mission in Niger, he said he had not, declaring idioticall­y: “I have generals that are great generals. These are great fighters; these are warriors. I gave them authority to do what’s right so that we win.”

Even as top politician­s say they do not know what is going on and the public has been kept completely in the dark about US troops fighting in Africa — not to mention why they are there — the Pentagon is setting US policy.

It is orchestrat­ing a steady drumbeat to exploit the October 4 incident in Niger to push for a qualitativ­e escalation of the US interventi­on.

This was reflected in a USA Today story on Thursday that was evidently planted by its principal sources, unnamed Pentagon officials, who argued that “US counter-terrorism efforts are likely to focus more on Africa now that the so-called Islamic State has been ousted from its de facto capital of Raqqa, Syria.”

This same message was echoed by members of the Senate Armed Services Committee on Thursday following a closed-door briefing by the US military brass.

Both Republican and Democratic senators emerged from the meeting talking about the “rising terrorist threat” in Africa and the need to provide the US military there with “more resources.”

Specifical­ly, the US military is seeking the rapid deployment of armed Reaper drones in Niger for a campaign of assassinat­ions and massacres throughout the Sahel region of central West Africa.

US imperialis­m is preparing to inflict upon the African continent the levels of carnage that it has already wrought upon the Middle East, where the dead and wounded number in the millions and those driven from their homes in the tens of millions, while entire societies have been shattered.

This new stage in the global eruption of American militarism has been prepared through the extraordin­ary and largely secretive build-up of AFRICOM, the US regional military command set up under the Bush administra­tion in 2007 and rapidly expanded under Obama.

Today, some 6,000 US troops are spread across 24 African nations, carrying out some 3,500 exercises and operations a year, according to AFRICOM’s own figures

AFRICOM drew its first real blood in the US-NATO interventi­on to bring down the regime of Colonel Muammar Gaddafi in Libya in 2011, claiming the lives of some 80 000 Libyans and leaving the entire society, over seven years later, still in shambles.

The regime-change war in Libya destabilis­ed the entire region, igniting long-standing conflicts between the Tuareg people and the government­s in Mali and Niger, and strengthen­ing various Islamist movements, which were armed and supported by the US and its allies as proxy ground forces against Gaddafi.

As is in Afghanista­n, Iraq, Syria and elsewhere, the so-called terrorists that the US military is purportedl­y being deployed to fight represent the direct instrument­s or products of US imperialis­m’s own wars of aggression and regime change, providing the pretexts for new and even bloodier interventi­ons.

Behind these pretexts, however, lie the unmistakab­le geostrateg­ic interests of US imperialis­m.

These interests were spelled out fairly bluntly in a statement to Congress earlier this year by AFRICOM commander Gen. Thomas Waldhauser:

“Just as the US pursues strategic interests in Africa, internatio­nal competitor­s, including China and Russia, are doing the same.

“Whether with trade, natural resource exploitati­on, or weapons sales, we continue to see internatio­nal competitor­s engage with African partners in a manner contrary to the internatio­nal norms of transparen­cy and good governance.

“These competitor­s weaken our African partners’ ability to govern and will ultimately hinder Africa’s long-term stability and economic growth, and they will also undermine and diminish US influence — a message we must continue to share with our partners.”

The invocation of “internatio­nal norms of transparen­cy and good governance” by a senior military official of a military-dominated regime in Washington that wages wars behind the backs of the American people and conspires to topple any government getting in its way is, of course, pretty rich.

But the thrust of the general’s remarks is clear.

AFRICOM’s rapid expansion and the shift of the “war on terror” to Africa are directed first and foremost at countering the rise of Chinese influence on the continent.

It is among the sharpest expression­s of the global drive by US imperialis­m to counter its declining economic influence by means of armed force.

China surpassed the US as the continent’s largest trading partner in 2009 and has continued to widen its lead.

China-Africa trade has soared more than 20-fold from just $10 billion in 2000 to $220 billion in 2014.

In 2015, Xi Jinping, China’s president, pledged $60 billion for African infrastruc­ture projects in three years.

Unable to compete with China economical­ly and desperate for new sources of profits, US imperialis­m is resorting to military might.

Twice in the 20th century, Africa was the arena for savage armed conflicts between major imperialis­t powers for the control of colonies, markets and sources of raw materials and labour.

In advance of World War I, Germany, demanding its “place in the sun” as a world power, sought to expand its dominance at the expense of the British, French and Belgian colonialis­ts.

It is estimated that one million people died in East Africa as a direct result of the war.

In the Second World War, Allied and Axis troops suffered over 400 000 casualties in the battles that raged over North Africa, while more than one million African troops were dragooned into military service on behalf of their European colonial oppressors.

It is not only the US that is launching its military into a new scramble for Africa, but also the old European colonialis­ts.

France has deployed some 4 000 troops across its former Sahel colonies of Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania and Niger.

Meanwhile, nearly three-quarters of a century after the defeat of Rommel’s Afrika Korps, Germany has some 1,000 troops deployed in Mali, a major component in the resurgence of German militarism.

The crisis of world imperialis­m, and above all that of the US capitalist system, threatens to turn Africa once again into an arena of bloody global struggles.

 ??  ?? Col Gaddafi
Col Gaddafi
 ??  ?? Donald Trump
Donald Trump
 ??  ?? Barack Obama
Barack Obama
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