Arab-African fears of new states for terrorist groups
Terrorist groups in the African
Sahel pose a great danger to the countries of the region, as these groups are
working to re-establish new states after the killing of many of their leaders, especially
ISIS, in an attempt to reposition and establish their presence.
The Commander-in-Chief of the
Mauritanian Army Staff, Major General Mohamed Bamba OuldMeguet, warned of the
danger of armed groups operating in the African Sahel and Sahara region, and
said that they are still active and demonstrate their ability to adapt and harm
the local national armies. He called on the countries of the western
Mediterranean basin to Cover to follow the danger of these groups.
Meguetwas
speaking during the opening of the meeting of the leaders of the 5+5 defense
initiative, which includes Mauritania, Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia and Libya from
the southern bank of the western Mediterranean, and France, Spain, Portugal,
Italy and Malta from its northern bank, on Friday, October 29.
Addressing his counterparts, he said
that this initiative should follow up and enhance its vision in the short and
long term by constantly reviewing the security situation in the Sahel and
Sahara strip, the region that extends from Mauritania to Chad, in which
organizations affiliated with al-Qaeda in the Maghreb and ISIS are active.
The meeting aimed to enhance
security in the western Mediterranean region through the areas of intervention
of the initiative, which include maritime security and air safety, and the
participation of the armed forces in the countries of the group in combating
terrorism, crisis management, research and training in areas related to the
interventions of the competent initiative in security and defense.
Meguet explained that these groups
are constantly reorganizing themselves, conglomerating and creating new
emirates, whose activities are expanding throughout the Sahel region. He noted
that the greatest danger is the ability of these organizations to coordinate
with active extremist groups in other countries of the continent and benefit
from drug and smuggling networks and the fragility of border areas.
He presented the approach adopted by
his country to confront these terrorist organizations, noting that Mauritania,
due to its geo-strategic location that is important for security in the Sahel
and Sahara region, has adopted a comprehensive approach to combating terrorism
and various types of crime.
Although Mauritania joined the G5
Sahel with Niger, Chad, Mali and Burkina Faso, it is betting on the 5+5 defense
initiative to enhance its security and military capabilities. In recent months,
it has strengthened its cooperation with NATO, especially with regard to the
war on terrorism in the region.
ISIS
reorganizing activity
Many study centers specialized in
following the activity of terrorist groups consider that ISIS in the Sahara and
West Africa has entered the stage of reorganizing its activity in the region
after it took control of most parts of Borno State in northeastern Nigeria,
including areas in the Lake Chad Basin, and the arc was completed with its
strongholds in the Sahara Desert, seeking to reunite this vast region and
divide it into states.
A study by the Institute for
Security Studies in South Africa talked about plans to restructure ISIS in the
region by creating four states in Lake Chad, Timbuktu (Northern Mali), Tomboma
(Guinea) and Sambisa Forest, under central command in Borno.
ISIS in the Greater Sahara and West
Africa benefited from the joining of thousands of ISIS members in Iraq, Syria
and Libya, which strengthened it in the region and helped it defeat Boko Haram
in northeastern Nigeria.
ISIS in the Greater Sahara fought
limited confrontations with groups loyal to al-Qaeda in Mali, Niger and Burkina
Faso, but it failed to eliminate them or seize their strongholds.