U.S. Africom Dealing With Strategic Competition, Terrorism by Jim Garamone, DOD News
August 11, 2022
While strategic competition with China and
Russia remains the main challenge for U.S. Africa Command, the
African continent is "the central focus of terrorism in the world,"
Army Gen. Stephen J. Townsend told the Defense Writers Group today.
He told the defense reporters that the emergence of China on
the continent is the first-and-foremost challenge for the command.
June 23, 2022 - U.S. Army Special Forces train with Royal Moroccan special operators in close-quarters drills at Tifnit Morocco, Africa, last month. The drill is part of African Lion 2022, U.S. Africa Command's largest, premier, joint, combined annual exercise hosted by Morocco, Ghana, Senegal and Tunisia. (U.S. Army photo Spc. Christopher Hall)
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"China is acting in a very
whole-of-government way, leading with development and economic
measures on the continent," he said. "They are proceeding … to
increase their access and influence on the continent, and they have
a desire … to establish more military bases on the continent."
China has
one base in Djibouti ... its first overseas base ... and seeks
another on Africa's Atlantic coast. Townsend said that would be a
bad development for U.S. interests on the continent.
Russia
is a different challenge, characterized by the band of mercenaries
... the Wagner Group ... representing the nation in Africa. Russia
is acting in "a self-interested, exploitative and extractive way,"
the general said.
Russia is not interested in sincerely
helping African nations, but in helping themselves to the natural
resources of the continent, he said.
The most immediate threat is that posed
by violent extremist organizations. "Some of the most lethal
terrorists on the planet are now in Africa," Townsend said. "They
were once in Iraq, and Syria and Afghanistan."
Al-Qaida and the
Islamic State are present on the continent, and groups like al-Shabab
in Somalia, for example, are financing terror groups in Africa and
other areas of the globe, Townsend said. And all of this is
exacerbated by climate change.
"The environment is definitely affecting lives
in Africa ... drought, famine, desertification ... all of these
things … will continue to be challenges," he said.
Africa
Command's most successful engagement strategy is its sponsorship of
exercises on the continent. African Lion and Flintlock are the
largest, but there are many more smaller exercises that draw
representatives from around the continent, Townsend said. African
troops see the value of these exercises as a way to learn new skills
and engage with service members from the United States and partner
nations.
"Every
time we have a big exercise, usually someone creates a patch for the
exercise," he said. "It's not unusual to see [African soldiers]
wearing the patches months later."
The exercises are also
important to the United States for building a spirit of cooperation
with allies fostered by rigorous training. The last administration
cut the command's exercise budget. Townsend was able to get much of
the money back. "Our exercise program is still pretty robust ...
it's adequate," he said. "I think, as so long as we don't see future
reductions to those resources, that I'm satisfied with the amount of
exercise engagement we can do in Africa."
The command's
objective is an economy-of-force mission ... meaning the judicious
employment and distribution of force. Africa Command personnel are
used to doing a lot with little resources. One program they depend
on is the National Guard's State Partnership Program. This program
pairs a nation with state National Guard organizations. For example,
the New York National Guard is paired with South Africa, and the
Massachusetts National Guard is paired with Kenya.
There are 15 African
nations paired with U.S. states under the program, Townsend said,
and this allows U.S. National Guardsmen to engage with the
militaries of their African partners year-round.
U.S. Army Gen. Stephen Townsend, commander, U.S. Africa Command, speaks to service members during an award ceremony, at an airfield in East Africa on January 15, 2021. Townsend traveled to East Africa to review future posturing of U.S. forces with key leaders in support of Operation Octave Quartz, in preparation for the next phase of operations in East Africa. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Brandon Julson)
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"What I
love about that program is it is at a low level; it's at a very
user-friendly level," he said. "It's not big exercises but constant
low-level touches."
A
strong example of the program's success is Ukraine's partnership
with the California National Guard, which allowed the nation to
train and develop a professional noncommissioned officer corps that
has been very successful against the Russian invasion, the general
said. That same effort is helping African nations professionalize
their militaries.
"We have a waiting list of African
partners who want to get on the state partnership list, and we
probably can absorb about one a year," he said. "And I'm you're
eagerly looking forward to our next state partnership, because I
think they're very valuable."
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