France reiterates calls for EU to step up participation in Sahel-Sahara operations
The Sahel-Sahara region has
currently become France’s top priorities after an incident that took the life
of French soldiers chasing jihadists in northern Mali.
French President Emmanuel
Macron paid tribute to the death of 13 soldiers killed in a helicopter
collision while battling jihadists in Mali.
It was the biggest
single-day loss for the French military in nearly four decades.
The Sahel region faces a
number of pressing challenges such as violent extremism, poverty, frequent food
and nutrition crises, irregular migration and related crimes such as human
trafficking and migrant smuggling.
Macron has promised a
thorough review of the Barkhane operation in the wake of the helicopter
accident, vowing that "all options are on the table".
He also reiterated his call
last week for EU allies to step up their participation in the West Africa
operation after years of failing to secure significant support.
For her part, Defense
Minister Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer has said Germany should consider expanding
its troop mandate in Africa's Sahel region.
"We will need to
consider and decide whether we want to ensure stability on the ground out of
our own interests, and whether the Bundeswehr needs a more robust training
mandate alongside our allies," she told the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
newspaper.
Kramp-Karrenbauer noted that
the Sahel region has become a "major hub for terrorism, organized crime,
migration and human trafficking."
Germany cannot allow itself
to "duck away" from responsibility in the region, she said, warning
that doing so could have serious security consequences.
The Defense Ministry
recently revealed that it twice turned down requests from France to dispatch
special forces to Mali to tackle the dangerous security situation.
In the same report, the ministry
noted that "jihadist groups active in the region are enjoying largely
unfettered freedom of movement" and that despite the presence of
international troops, Mali's security forces are often overwhelmed.
After meeting with
presidents of the G5 Sahel states, Chancellor Angela Merkel has said Germany is
providing a large financial contribution to achieving security and stability in
the region.
Niger, Burkina Faso, Mali,
Mauritania and Chad together make up the G5 Sahel group. The Sahel is the name
given to a belt that spans the African continent south of the Sahara Desert.
Germany has realigned the
priorities of its development cooperation, explained Merkel. "Between 2017
and 2020 alone, we will be spending 1.7 billion euros on the Sahel states and
their development."
Merkel called for
international support, and declared that it is important to take a joined-up
approach to security and development policy.
The United Nations Nations
Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali (MINUSMA) is among
the UN’s largest military missions with 11,000 soldiers and more than 1,500
police officers and civilians stationed in Mali. Germany is participating with
around 950 soldiers. The aim is to support ceasefire agreements and
trust-building measures in the region.
The EU has been supporting a
military training mission, launched in 2013 in Mali. It advises the Malian
authorities on the restructuring of the armed forces, through the training of
battalions and support for defense reform. It also provides technical support
to the G5 Joint Force.
The desert of the Sahel
region is a safe passage that militants use to confront local and foreign
authorities and create security chaos in the region, which is of strategic
importance to US national security and other countries.
The Sahel and the African
Sahara region is facing a growing terrorist threat and organized crime, as
armed groups carry out bloody operations along the coast of these countries.
Daesh has been one of the
terrorist groups that seek to spread in the region, especially since its defeat
in Syria and Iraq, not to mention that its former leader, Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi,
in April 2019 announced the establishment of the Daesh West Africa branch.
Al-Qaeda also has strong
presence in the region, through its Saharan branch; it managed in 2017, along
with Ansar Dine, the Macina Liberation Front, and Al-Mourabitoun to found one
of its biggest alliances, namely Jama'at Nusrat al-Islam wal Muslimeen group.