This is a good question.Why does the US need a military presence in Niger?
To try and counteract the fallout of the failed regime change effort in Libya.Why does the US need a military presence in Niger?
It’s like the Wicked Witch of the East threatening that if you drop a house on her it will invite the Wicked Witch of the West.To try and counteract the fallout of the failed regime change effort in Libya.
Before he was overthrown and killed, Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi warned jihadists would conquer northern Africa
Now, with France locked in a battle with extremists in Mali, it seems Muammar Gaddafi may not have been so crazy after all
Author of the article:
Scott Barber
Published Jan 25, 2013
During the dying days of his four decade rule, Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi cast an ominous prophecy. If his regime fell, jihadists would subjugate northern Africa, inflicting widespread violence and terror.
“Al-Qaeda considers all the people to be infidels,” Mr. Gaddafi declared in a speech weeks before NATO began its military intervention in Libya. “They deem all people their enemies. They know nothing but killing.”
The Islamists would pour in from Afghanistan, Algeria, and Egypt, he warned, saying, “These are beasts with turbans.”
Now, with France locked in a battle with extremists in Mali; with al-Qaeda-linked groups carrying out a massive hostage taking in Algeria, and with Britain, Germany, and France telling their citizens to leave Libya because of an unspecified threat, the man many considered mad may not have been so crazy after all.
“The irony is, he was right,” said Christian Leuprecht, Royal Military College and Queen’s University political studies associate professor.
“Here we have a situation that’s out of control,” said Abdel Kerim Ousman, Royal Military College political science associate professor. “Gaddafi actually said, if you want to destroy [Libya], the result would be the taking over by the jihadists.”
It’s like the Wicked Witch of the East threatening that if you drop a house on her it will invite the Wicked Witch of the West.
Huge win for blinken and our vegetable in charge.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 resisted and one that will transform Washington’s counterterrorism posture in the region.
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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 earlier Friday between Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell and Niger’s prime minister, Ali Lamine Zeine.
“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 had 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, according to a recent whistleblower complaint.
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 U.S. officials who viewed the base as an important counterterrorism asset, the withdrawal agreement is a significant setback. “I think it’s undeniable that it was a platform in a unique part of African geography,” the State Department official said.
The US loves to keep arms dealers in business.The U.S. has roughly 1,000 military personneland civilian contractors deployed to Niger, most of them clustered near the town of Agadez, on the southern fringe of the Sahara desert, at Air Base 201. Known locally as “Base Americaine,” the outpost serves as the linchpin of the U.S. military’s archipelago of bases in North and West Africa and a key part of America’s wide-ranging surveillance and security efforts in the region. Since the 2010s, the U.S. has sunk roughly a quarter billion dollars into the outpost. This is in addition to more than $500 million in military assistance provided to Niger since 2012.
After a group of military officers deposed Niger’s democratically elected President Mohamed Bazoum last summer, the U.S. spent months avoiding the term “coup”before finally, as mandated by law, suspending approximately $200 million in aid. The U.S. did not, however, withdraw its forces from Niger and continued drone operations.
In the wake of Niger’s March 16 decree ending their status of forces agreement with the United States, both the State Department and Pentagon have done little more than acknowledge it. “[W]e’re seeking further clarification for … what that statement means,” said Defense Department Deputy Press Secretary Sabrina Singh on Monday.
Singh went on to say that the U.S. delegation had “expressed concern over Niger’s potential relationships with Russia and Iran.” Earlier this month, Langley, the AFRICOM chief, told the Senate Armed Services Committee that Russia was attempting to “take over” the Sahel. “During the past three years, national defense forces turned their guns against their own elected governments in Burkina Faso, Guinea, Mali, and Niger,” he said, complaining that due to U.S. aid limitations following coups, these governments “turn to partners who lack restrictions in dealing with coup governments … particularly Russia.”
Langley failed to mention that at least 15 officers who benefited from U.S. security assistance have been involved in 12 coups in West Africa and the greater Sahel during the war on terror, including Burkina Faso (2014, 2015, and twice in 2022); Guinea (2021); Mali(2012, 2020, and 2021); and Niger (2023). At least five leaders of the July 2023 coup in Niger received American assistance, according to a U.S. official. The coup leaders, in turn, appointed five U.S.-trained members of the Nigerien security forces to serve as that country’s governors.
While U.S. troop strength in Niger grew by more than 900 percent in the last decade, and U.S. commandos trained local counterparts and fought and even died there, terrorist violence in the African Sahel has been neither deterred nor reduced. During 2002 and 2003, according to the State Department, terrorists caused just 23 casualties in all of Africa. Last year, according to the Africa Center for Strategic Studies, a Defense Department research institution, attacks by Islamist militants in the Sahel alone resulted in 11,643 deaths — a more than 50,000 percent increase.
“This security cooperation did not live up to the expectations of Nigeriens – all the massacres committed by the jihadists were carried out while the Americans were here,” said a Nigerien security analyst who has worked with U.S. officials and spoke on the condition of anonymity due to his ties with the Nigerien military. He said that the U.S. needed to negotiate a new agreement with more favorable terms for Niger that was free of the trappings of “paternalism and neocolonialism.”
In the wake of last year’s coup, Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., introduced a joint resolutionrequiring President Joe Biden to “remove United States Armed Forces from hostilities in or affecting the Republic of Niger” within 30 days. The resolution failed in a lopsided 11-86 vote. Now Niger’s ruling junta has seemingly done what Congress failed to.
“The bipartisan minority of Senators who voted last year to bring these troops home had it right,” said Sperling. “The U.S. needs to accept reality that lasting partnerships require fostering genuine development, not just helping to gun down impoverished rural militants who posed no threat to Americans.”
This reporter was there filming a show about gold when the coup went down. USA wasn’t much help.
The most recent numbers suggest we are about to leave roughly 100 million in Arms and equipment at a base in Niger to be recovered by the russians....
Ok, let’s hear the Whiskey non-feckless plan to leave.The most recent numbers suggest we are about to leave roughly 100 million in Arms and equipment at a base in Niger to be recovered by the russians.... and we have told them we would have our shit moved out by September.
Feckless leadership.
Ok, let’s hear the Whiskey non-feckless plan to leave.
So you don’t have a plan… but already critical of a withdrawal that hasn’t even happened yet. Noted.
Jokes aside, I'm in consulting, I live in Iowa, if you would like me to come up with foreign policy I'd be happy to do so but would need the information, time, and resources our leaders having in making the decisions. I assure you, drop the shit and boogy, wouldn't be our plan, especially post Afghanistan, which this is going to be a direct repeat of.
I don't have to have all the logistics to know leaving 100million dollars worth of shit for Russia isn't a good idea.So you don’t have a plan… but already critical of a withdrawal that hasn’t even happened yet. Noted.
you know it isn't joe biden who personally draws up these plans, right?I don't have to have all the logistics to know leaving 100million dollars worth of shit for Russia isn't a good idea.
Give me a etch-a-sketch and I'll draw you a better plan than that.
And no, after Afghanistan, he doesn't get the benefit of the doubt.
I'm saying if I'm "Joe Biden" I don't give a shit what it takes and or cost I'm not having another Afghanistan.you know it isn't joe biden who personally draws up these plans, right?
its miltary guys...high ranking military guys who have been serving for years across multiple presidential admins
you're saying you could definitely come up with a better plan than them?
more withering non specific criticismI'm saying if I'm "Joe Biden" I don't give a shit what it takes and or cost I'm not having another Afghanistan.
If Niger doesn't like that, f.uck em. If Russia doesn't like that, fu.ck em.
Hey Bud, I'm not th president. You can sit and say "what would you do" until you edge yourself to the walls. Just like I could be stupid and say "show up with 10k marines and tell them we are nor going anywhere and they can **** themselves".more withering non specific criticism
Link to what arms they’re leaving there? Because the statement made by the military is that they’re leaving the airfield and barracks.The most recent numbers suggest we are about to leave roughly 100 million in Arms and equipment at a base in Niger to be recovered by the russians.... and we have told them we would have our shit moved out by September.
Feckless leadership.
Here is what I believe is the statement.Link to what arms they’re leaving there? Because the statement made by the military is that they’re leaving the airfield and barracks.
oh i agree that i don't have enough information to make an informed judgement on the situationHey Bud, I'm not th president. You can sit and say "what would you do" until you edge yourself to the walls. Just like I could be stupid and say "show up with 10k marines and tell them we are nor going anywhere and they can **** themselves".
But, the facts are, you, nor I have all the information. So it's speculation, thus, I have provided mine, which is, I don't care what it cost or takes, we are nor having another Afghanistan.
Here is what I know, we have enough time between now and September if it can come it should, and we don't need to be foreshadowing any plans to anyone.oh i agree that i don't have enough information to make an informed judgement on the situation
that's why i'm not calling out "feckless leadership" on a situation that i admittedly don't have all the information
because...you know...neither of us know what we're talking about
Man, you just keep showing how much of a moron you are.Hey Bud, I'm not th president. You can sit and say "what would you do" until you edge yourself to the walls. Just like I could be stupid and say "show up with 10k marines and tell them we are nor going anywhere and they can **** themselves".
But, the facts are, you, nor I have all the information. So it's speculation, thus, I have provided mine, which is, I don't care what it cost or takes, we are nor having another Afghanistan.
You feel like the Afghan withdrawal went well? You have confidence in this leaderships ability to navigate an issue do ya?Man, you just keep showing how much of a moron you are.