NARF: US forces to train Nigerien army to combat terrorism
The US
Command in Africa pays great attention to training forces in Niger, especially
following the terrorist operations carried out by armed groups in the country,
especially Boko Haram, which is affiliated with ISIS.
In this
context, the US Forces Command for North and West Africa announced on Friday,
August 13, that US soldiers conducted a “strategic training in Niger.”
Major
General Andrew M. Rohling, commander of the Southern European and African
Special Task Force that oversees the US Force for North and West Africa (NARF),
said in a statement, “This exercise, which took place from August 7-9, 2021,
allowed the force to test its operational performance in the region.”
The statement
added that the task of the force is to address crises, emergencies and
terrorism in North and West Africa, “including the protection of American
interests.”
The American
leadership said that the US military held an “informal” meeting with its French
counterparts “at the US Air Force Base 101 in Niamey.”
“The French
have long been important allies who share our commitment to addressing Africa's
complex security concerns,” it added.
Niger is
facing violence perpetrated by armed terrorist groups in its western part near
Mali and in the southeastern part of Nigeria.
In its war
against terrorists, Niger receives the support of many Western countries,
including France and the United States, which establish military bases there,
along with Germany, which has a logistics base.
In 2017, the
number of US military personnel in Niger was estimated at about 800, mainly
members of the Special Forces active against terrorist groups. In addition to
the Niamey base, the United States has a large base for drones in the northern
Agadez region near Libya.
In April
2018, the US Special Forces established a huge US military base in central
Niger to pursue and eliminate terrorists as part of its war on terrorism in the
African continent.
According to
a report by the New York Times, the cost of the military base amounted to more
than $110 million, as it will be used for military drones to target terrorists
in West and North Africa.
The US
Special Forces at that base are training the forces in Niger in ways and
tactics of combating terrorism, in addition to the ways in which they can break
any ambushes that the terrorists may prepare, such as the ambush prepared by
terrorists on the Mali border last fall that killed four American soldiers.
One of the
operations carried out by the US Special Forces succeeded in liquidating a
prominent leader of al-Qaeda in southern Libya, which indicates the expansion
of operations to monitor and liquidate terrorists in Africa.
The army of
the Republic of Niger in West Africa intends to establish an air base to
strengthen its fight against terrorist groups in the southeastern Diffa region
near Nigeria.
The PA501
base will be built on an area of 32 square kilometers in the Diffa region,
adjacent to Lake Chad, which has become a nest for terrorists, according to the
text, which does not specify the start date of its construction or its cost.
This is the
first base of its kind to be established in this landlocked, arid region, which
has been suffering for six years since bloody attacks by Boko Haram and ISIS in
West Africa.
This
announcement comes following a terrorist attack carried out by Boko Haram in
the Lake Chad region on Thursday, August 5, in which at least 26 Chadian
soldiers were killed and others wounded.
Boko Haram
has set its sights on Niger, and in late 2014, the group launched a terrorist
attack that killed three people. In February 2015, Boko Haram militants
attacked a city in southeastern Niger, killing one person and wounding 20
others.
The
terrorist group also launched an attack on Diffa prison in February 2015, after
which two women from Boko Haram carried out a suicide terrorist attack, and in
June 2018, six people were killed when three Boko Haram militants blew
themselves up in simultaneous attacks in the city.
On March 30,
2020, Chad launched a military operation called Boma's Wrath to counter
terrorist group violence.
Chadian
Defense Minister General Mahamat Abali Salah said that there are five sectors
working to clean up the entire islands area, and the army has an agreement with
two other countries, Niger and Nigeria, adding, “Currently we have men in all
these countries. The process is continuing, and you will get the details little
by little.”
Salah
stressed that Boko Haram elements will pay a heavy price for their boldness,
and the defense forces will strike them unforgettably and will be recorded in
the annals of history, because the Chadian National Army, more than ever
before, is determined to put an end to this band of terrorists.