The Jewish Chronicle

Algeria is jihadists’

-

IT IS not often that the head of a Western government and a leading al-Qaeda operative see eyeto-eye on developmen­ts in the Middle East. But that is what happened after last week’s unpreceden­ted take-over of In Amenas, a gas facility in Algeria.

British Prime Minister David Cameron warned that North Africa has now become a battlegrou­nd against Islamist radicals that will last for “at least a decade”. One of al-Qaeda’s leaders in northern Mali, Omar Ould Hamaha, quickly concurred. France “had opened the gates of hell” by intervenin­g military in Mali, he declared, falling “into a trap much more dangerous than Iraq, Afghanista­n or Somalia”.

Recent history shows that both are spot on, albeit for different reasons. A decade after the US-led invasion of Iraq, the country is still mired in a cycle of sectarian bloodshed, ranks as the most corrupt country on earth and is a Shia theocracy aligned with Iran. As Nato forces prepare to withdraw from Afghanista­n, the consensus is that the only solution to that country’s continuing inter-tribal, and Islamist-inspried, chaos is a peace deal with the Taliban — whose overthrow was the justificat­ion given for the initial invasion.

With the fall of Libya, Colonel Gaddafi, the centre of gravity for al-Qaeda’s myriad networks has clearly shifted from Iraq and Afghanista­n to North Africa. And that is a nightmare for recession-hit Europe. Algeria, North Africa’s economic powerhouse, is Europe’s third-biggest supplier of gas, and a major supplier, too, of high quality sweet crude oil. Last week, gas

 ??  ?? Members of militant group Ansar Dine outside Timbuktu, Mali. Islamists in the region
Members of militant group Ansar Dine outside Timbuktu, Mali. Islamists in the region
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom