ISIS’ Terrorism in Niger…Implications, causes and results
Killing 71 soldiers after Islamist militants
attacked an army camp in Western Niger, was the deadliest assault on the
country's military in living memory.
ISIS has claimed responsibility for one of the
deadliest attacks on Niger's military, which left 71 soldiers dead and 12
wounded.
The attack expresses an evolution in the terrorist
organization’s tools while it reflects a disgraceful failure of the Nigerian
army. The organization practices guerrilla warfare through double ambushes in
which artillery and car bombs are used, and large numbers of trained members of
the organization participate in it.
Information indicates that they have reached a
hundred participated in this The horrific brutal attack, and they used,
according to the Nigerian Ministry of Defense, a rare violence that nobody
could stop or prevent
ISIS claimed on social media that it managed to
seize the military base for several hours, and that it stole weapons and
ammunition, including several tanks. The terrorist group did not provide any
evidence to support its claim.
The control strategy is led by French forces within
what is known as the "Barkhan" operation, which began in August 2014
in cooperation with five countries in the Sahel and Sahara region known as G5
Sahel.
Implications and effects:
President Mahamadou Issoufou who was in Egypt at the
time the "tragedy" took place had to cut off his trip to return home.
The G5 Sahel countries; Mauritania, Mali, Chad,
Niger and Burkina Faso, held an emergency meeting that was scheduled to be held
in Ouagadougou, but it was held in Niamey in solidarity with Niger.
The attack came just days ahead of a summit in
France between President Emmanuel Macron and leaders of five West African
leaders to discuss the deteriorating security in the region. Niger
is a member of the G5 Sahel force of troops from Mauritania, Mali, Burkina
Faso, and Chad set up in 2014 to tackle insecurity.
Following the attack, French President Emmanuel
Macron agreed to postpone a summit with the leaders of five countries in the
Sahel region, a band that stretches along the southern edge of the Sahara.
The meeting was scheduled for next week to discuss
France's military operations in the region. France has been in Mali since 2013,
when Islamist militants seized towns and implemented Sharia law. Macron is
expected to ask the African leaders whether they want French military presence,
as anti-France sentiment has been on the rise there.
1- It seems that ISIS is searching for an
alternative scope of its activities after losing its main position in the Arab
world in Iraq and Syria, and the Sahel and Sahara region is the most ideal
place to transfer its activity, as the organization appears to expand and prove
its presence through interaction with tribal and local powers and through its
ability to Presenting itself as the main force in the region, which is the size
of al-Qaeda's influence in that region, which was a traditional area of its
activity, and there are clearly large transfers from al-Qaeda to ISIS.
2 - The last operation indicates the danger of the
organization expanding to the neighboring countries of the Sahel states,
especially Nigeria, and may extend until it reaches Libya and the Middle East,
which the French Foreign Minister warned that terrorism is permanent in the
Sahel region and there are new terrorist groups that form an arc that may
extend to the Middle East Across Libya.
3-France believes that the participation in the
fight against terrorism in the Sahel should be expanded by the involvement of
European countries in it, including NATO itself, and there is a United Nations
force and an American force present, in addition to that the five Sahel
countries seek to form a local force of five thousand soldiers, but they are still
unable alone From facing an increasingly powerful force of organization.
4 - The organization wants to demonstrate that it is
still able to carry out major operations after the killing of its leader Abu
Bakr al-Baghdadi, and if the force of the operation in Niger can be explained
to the fact that the Sahel groups led by "Abu al-Walid al-Sahrawi"
express the effectiveness of their presence and prove themselves in the face of
what they considered An unknown pledge of allegiance to the new leader of the
organization, Abu Ibrahim al-Hashemi al-Qurashi. This does not mean its
separation from the organization, but rather proving its symbolic status with a
local character as a state that represents the main force in the Sahel and
Sahara region.
5- The statements of the French Foreign Minister,
Jean-Yves Le Drian, did not refer to the danger threatening Europe and France,
but he referred to the countries of Africa in which the organization is active,
and he referred to Libya, which means that the southern gate of Europe is under
the grip of the organization, and therefore the Daesh groups can Whose power
increases in the coast to extend and send fighters to Europe through what is
known in the organization's literature as sleeping cells and soft areas that
are still a target of the organization's terrorism.