The Day

U.S. agrees to withdraw 1,000 American troops from West African nation Niger

- By JOHN HUDSON

— The United States informed the government of Niger on Friday that it agreed to its request to withdraw U.S. troops from the West African country, said three U.S. officials, a move the Biden administra­tion had long resisted and one that will transform Washington’s counterter­rorism posture in the region.

The agreement will spell the end of a U.S. troop presence that totaled more than 1,000 and throw into question the status of a $110 million U.S. air base that is only six years old. It is the culminatio­n of a military coup last year that ousted the country’s democratic­ally elected government and installed a junta that declared America’s military presence there “illegal.”

“The Prime Minister has asked us to withdraw U.S. troops, and we have agreed to do that,” a senior State Department official told The Washington Post in an interview. This official, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive situation.

The decision was sealed in a meeting between Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell and Niger’s prime minister, Ali Lamine Zeine, during a meeting earlier Friday.

“We’ve agreed to begin conversati­ons within days about how to develop a plan” to withdraw troops, said the senior State Department official. “They’ve agreed that we do it in an orderly and responsibl­e way. And we will need to probably dispatch folks to Niamey to sit down and hash it out. And that of course will be a Defense Department project.”

A Pentagon spokesman did not immediatel­y offer comment.

The United States has paused its security cooperatio­n with Niger, limiting U.S. activities — including unarmed drone flights. But U.S. service members have remained in the country, unable to fulfill their responsibi­lities and feeling left in the dark by leadership at the U.S. Embassy as negotiatio­ns continued.

The Sahel region, including neighborin­g Mali and Burkina Faso, has become a global hot spot for Islamist extremism in recent years, and Niger saw such attacks spike dramatical­ly following the coup.

For years, the Pentagon has deployed a mix of mostly Air Force and Army personnel to Niger to support a mission scrutinizi­ng militant groups in the region. Until the coup last year, the arrangemen­t included counterter­rorism drones flights and U.S. and Nigerien troops partnering on some patrols.

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