In the shadow of the Sept. 11 assaults, the United States rushed troops and navy support to a swath of West Africa to assist French forces cease the unfold of Al Qaeda and different terrorist teams.
More than a decade later, and with tons of of tens of millions of {dollars} in safety help spent, that regional counterterrorism effort has largely failed.
Groups which have declared allegiance to Al Qaeda and the Islamic State are on the march. Military coups have toppled civilian-led governments in Mali, Guinea, Burkina Faso and Niger. The new leaders have ordered American and French troops out, and in some circumstances invited Russian mercenaries in to take their place.
As the United States withdraws 1,000 military personnel from Niger and shutters a $110 million air base there by September, American officers are scrambling to work with a brand new set of nations in coastal West Africa to battle a violent extremist insurgency that they understand is steadily seeping south.
“Of course, it’s frustrating,” Christopher P. Maier, the Pentagon’s prime official for particular operations coverage, stated in an interview. “Our general desire to promote democratic governments and having healthy governance there has not gone particularly well.”
The U.S. navy has had extra success coaching native counterterrorism troops, Mr. Maier stated, though some participated within the latest navy takeovers. But, he added, “it’s disappointing when we’ve invested in that relationship and then we’re asked to depart.”
U.S. officers say they’re retooling their method to fight an insurgency that’s rooted in native, not international, considerations. Competition for land, exclusion from politics and different native grievances have swelled the ranks of the militants, greater than any explicit dedication to extremist ideology.
Instead of counting on large bases and a everlasting navy presence, officers say that the technique will focus extra on well-financed initiatives that embrace safety, governance and growth — paying for soldier coaching in addition to for brand spanking new electrification or water initiatives.
This form of holistic method has been tried earlier than with restricted success, and U.S. officers and unbiased West Africa specialists say it faces steep hurdles now.
An American diplomat within the area stated that West African governments ought to share the blame, as a result of a few of these companions have been extra eager about staying in energy than in preventing terrorism. “It didn’t work, it’s obvious,” stated the diplomat, who spoke on the situation of anonymity to supply a candid evaluation of allies. “But this notion that we deployed, it didn’t work, therefore it’s our fault — I don’t buy that.”
Some say the foreigners by no means actually understood the battle. “To be able to help, you have to really know the root of the problem,” stated Demba Kanté, a company lawyer in Bamako, Mali’s capital. “They were positioned almost everywhere on Malian soil and collecting their salaries, and we were still facing problems.”
As they assess the setbacks and retool their technique, U.S. officers are additionally holding a cautious eye on two international rivals: China and Russia.
China overtook the United States as Africa’s largest bilateral commerce companion over a decade in the past, its investments largely centered on minerals key to the worldwide vitality transition. Russia has develop into the popular safety companion for quite a lot of African nations that previously welcomed American help, creating what many specialists see as a Cold War-style competitors.
“We’ve done a lot of things well on the tactical level, including the training of special forces, but they weren’t connected to a larger strategy,” stated J. Peter Pham, a former particular U.S. envoy to the Sahel, the huge, semiarid area south of the Sahara the place U.S. counterterrorism efforts have been centered.
Mr. Pham pointed to an bold $450 million U.S. electrification mission in Burkina Faso that was paused in 2022 after the nation’s navy staged a coup. “We need to have an integrated strategy, otherwise it’s building sand castles at the edge of the beach,” he stated.
Developing that technique will likely be troublesome. Washington policymakers are consumed with crises, notably in Gaza and Ukraine. Meantime, Al Qaeda and Islamic State associates are metastasizing all through the area, in keeping with U.N. and U.S. intelligence assessments.
“What keeps me up at night is the number of very capable foreign terrorist organizations that see this,” Senator Chris Coons, Democrat of Delaware and an Africa specialist, stated at a listening to final month.
Mali: A disaster spirals
Mali was the primary nation within the Sahel to be destabilized by jihadists and rebels.
It was within the wake of the 2011 civil struggle in Libya, to the northeast. Well-armed Malian rebels who had defended the Libyan chief Muammar el-Qaddafi returned residence when he was killed and began a revolt. Emboldened by the chaos, Islamist teams started seizing city facilities like the traditional desert metropolis of Timbuktu.
France intervened in 2013, pushing the jihadists out of northern cities. Many Malians seen the mission as a hit.
Then got here a a lot larger intervention led by the French that pulled in different European nations and the United States, and that expanded to neighboring nations in pursuit of jihadists.
The disaster spiraled, at the same time as France killed an increasing number of fighters. The armed teams ran rampage within the countryside, inflicting tens of millions to flee their houses. Thousands of overseas forces in air-conditioned automobiles trundled via the Sahelian steppe, attempting to take out terrorist leaders. But that steppe turned no safer.
France and the United States acknowledged that the governments they have been working with have been broadly seen domestically as corrupt and partly accountable for the insecurity, in keeping with Alexander Thurston, a scholar of Islam and African politics on the University of Cincinnati. But they labored intently with them anyway.
“That’s a weird kind of contradiction to get into, in my view — to be reliant upon the people that you’re implying are the problem,” Mr. Thurston stated.
And because the insurgency mushroomed, individuals started accountable the overseas forces.
When, one after the other, the governments within the area fell over the previous 4 years, the brand new juntas discovered criticism of their navy companions was straightforward to take advantage of for political achieve. Then, they threw out the overseas troops in addition to hundreds of U.N. peacekeepers.
The “flashy scenarios” that native troopers are skilled to cope with in the course of the annual Pentagon-sponsored Flintlock counterterrorism exercise illustrate the yawning hole between how American particular operations commanders see the battle and the fact that what they’re going through is “an insurgency driven by poor herders in some of the most remote parts of the world,” Mr. Thurston stated. Much of the coaching focuses on city terrorism, storming buildings, rescuing hostages.
The West has lengthy been seen as projecting its personal issues onto the Sahel, stated Ornella Moderan, a Geneva-based researcher and coverage adviser centered on politics and safety in West Africa. Initially it was obsessive about migration.
Now, she famous, there’s a Western “insistence on reading everything through the Russian lens.”
The United States ought to cease specializing in attempting to provide you with a “better offer” than the Russians, Ms. Moderan stated.
“What is a better offer from the perspective of military juntas in the current situation?” she requested. “It’s an offer that insists less on human rights than Russia does — which means not at all. It’s an offer that insists less on the rule of law, less on democracy, and it’s an offer that provides more in terms of weapons systems, in terms of remote warfare systems.”
The greatest method for the West, Ms. Moderan stated, is to disregard whether or not Russia is there or not, hold communication channels open and watch for a chance to re-engage with nations like Mali if and once they bitter on Moscow’s affect.
Niger: The highs and lows
It was in Niger, an impoverished nation of 25 million individuals that’s almost twice the scale of Texas, the place 4 American troopers, together with 4 Nigerien troops and an interpreter, have been killed in an ambush in 2017.
After that, American commandos stayed properly behind the entrance traces, working from command facilities to assist Nigerien officers grapple with intelligence, logistics, artillery and different elements of huge operations.
Those native counterterrorism forces skilled by the United States and France put a dent in terrorist exercise, utilizing intelligence gleaned from MQ-9 Reaper surveillance drones flying from the sprawling air base in Agadez, within the nation’s north.
Terrorist assaults towards civilians decreased by almost 50 % in 2023 from the earlier yr, analysts stated.
After the navy takeover in Niger final July, nevertheless, the United States suspended most safety help and knowledge sharing. Terrorist teams stepped up assaults on Nigerien troops. Last October, at the very least 29 Nigerien troopers have been killed in an assault carried out by jihadist militants within the nation’s west. Every week earlier, a dozen died within the southwest.
The junta leaders started to show towards Russia for safety and to Iran for a potential deal on its uranium reserves, U.S. officers stated. American diplomats and navy officers protested this spring and criticized the navy authorities for failing to map out a path to return to democracy. The junta accused the Americans of speaking all the way down to them.
The junta’s message has been: “‘We don’t want anyone from the West to come in here and tell us who we can do business with,’” Gen. Michael E. Langley, the top of the Pentagon’s Africa Command, stated in an interview. “I’m seeing this across the Sahel. Our narrative is still, Hey, we’re here to help.”
The navy takeover in Niger upended years of Western counterterrorism efforts in West Africa.
For civilians within the Sahel, safety has gotten markedly worse for the reason that juntas took energy. In latest months, illegal killings and grave violations towards kids have risen sharply, in keeping with the U.N.
“The challenges plaguing the Sahel are so overwhelming that it’s not exactly clear how much the U.S. can help,” stated Colin P. Clarke, a counterterrorism analyst on the Soufan Group, a safety consulting agency based mostly in New York.
“The Sahel sits at the nexus of some of the world’s most pressing challenges, from climate change to ‘youth bulges’ — significant swaths of young people who are unemployed,” Mr. Clarke stated. “These issues feed into the growth of violent extremist organizations.”
Ghana: A brand new focus
American and Ghanaian officers worry that Ghana might be subsequent.
Terrorist teams have been pushing south and staging assaults in Ghana’s coastal neighbors, Togo, Benin and Ivory Coast. A majority of Ghana’s 34 million inhabitants are Christian. Muslims make up a big share within the nation’s poorer north.
That Africa Command carried out three overlapping navy workout routines, together with Flintlock, in Ghana up to now few weeks underscores how a lot Washington is pinning its safety hopes on coastal West Africa.
Some 1,300 particular operations forces from almost 30 nations participated within the annual Flintlock counterterrorism train in May. In Daboya, Ghana, about 4 hours from the border with Burkina Faso, Spanish trainers helped Mauritanian troops hone their marksmanship abilities. Ghanaian police labored with Dutch trainers on securing terrorist suspects. In the Gulf of Guinea, Ghanaian, Libyan and Tunisian commandos roped down from assault helicopters to grab stand-in terrorist leaders aboard an Italian frigate in a mock maritime raid.
Brig. Gen. Kweku Dankwa Hagan, a senior Ghanaian Army officer, stated Ghana and its neighbors shared intelligence on militants’ actions and had agreed to conduct joint patrols in border areas.
“If they strike Ghana, it will shake our democracy,” General Hagan stated in an interview in Accra, Ghana’s capital. “We are poised to ensure that given the mandate given the armed forces, we protect our country from external aggressors.”
The Biden administration is providing assist in different methods below the Global Fragility Act, a 10-year plan to blunt the unfold of terrorism and violent extremism within the coastal West African nations and different nations.
The act funds a variety of initiatives, together with conflict-resolution applications to assist settle disputes amongst chiefs and area people service initiatives like new police stations or solar-powered safety lighting.
Unless protection, diplomacy and growth applications are built-in and sufficiently financed, it’s like “sprinkling fairy dust around,” stated Virginia E. Palmer, the U.S. ambassador to Ghana and a seasoned diplomat with earlier postings in Malawi, South Africa, Kenya and Zimbabwe, in addition to a stint within the State Department’s counterterrorism workplace in Washington.
As the United States reformulates its method, officers say one overriding goal comes via: Stay engaged. That could contain constructing relationships with new companions or — at a while sooner or later — rebuilding ties with former ones.
Capt. Scott P. Fentress, a member of the Navy SEALs who’s director of operations for U.S. Special Operations forces on the continent, summed it up this manner: “Trust is earned, and we’ve learned throughout Africa, particularly West Africa, that trust is hard to earn.”
Mamadou Tapily contributed reporting from Bamako, Mali.