Signal, No Noise

May 23, 2010

4 Saharan countries set up joint military base

source

Updated April 21, 2010
4 Saharan countries set up joint military base
Associated Press
ALGIERS, Algeria

ALGIERS, Algeria (AP) — Four countries in the Sahara desert opened a joint military headquarters Wednesday in an unusual, united effort to combat al-Qaida-linked terrorism and trafficking in northwest Africa.

The new command and control center is in the Algerian city of Tamanrasset, about 2,800 kilometers (1,740 miles) south of the nation’s capital deep in the desert, the Algerian army chief of staff said in a statement.

The four countries directing the operation are Algeria, Mauritania, Mali and Niger, which share porous borders across the Sahara, the world’s largest desert.

The countries are hoping to establish a collective security response to threats from traffickers and Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, or AQIM, which operates across northern Africa.

Experts and intelligence officials say the threat is on the rise because terrorist groups are linking up with organized crime, especially South American drug cartels that are increasingly using the Sahara as a cocaine trafficking route. Islamist militants can get new funding and resources by working for these traffickers, experts say.

Countries in the region, many of them poor and grappling with conflicts at home, have a history of not working much across borders, and security officials say terror groups have used this to avoid capture.

Algeria’s military did not specify when Tamanrasset’s new combined headquarters would be operational, or how many officers would staff it.

A western security official who follows the region closely said enhanced cooperation had been made urgent by several recent cross-border incidents.

In March, army patrols from Algeria and Mali clashed by mistake for several hours near their common border before realizing neither were terror groups, the official said. Speaking on condition of anonymity because he works on intelligence matters, the official said army units in the Sahara sometimes have difficulties knowing which country they are in because there are often no landmarks along the border and they lack radio equipment to link with each other.

An Algerian security official confirmed the incident, which caused several injuries but no casualty. The official, who also spoke anonymously because Algerian law forbids discussing security matters with the media, said the new command center would ensure that patrols on the border combine efforts better.

The new command center aims at much more than just securing the borders, said M’hand Berkouk, a Sahara expert who teaches international relations at Algiers university.

“It’s really the first time in Africa that a sub-region decides to integrate its security operations,” Berkouk said.

The goal will be to launch joint simultaneous operations in partner states and create a common database of terror suspects and traffickers.

Algeria has a large and well-equipped military funded by the country’s oil and gas revenues. Berkouk said the new partnership likely means that less-equipped armies in the poorer countries to its south will receive more training and support.

Born in northern Algeria, AQIM is now viewed as more potent in the country’s far south, where it can rely on fall-back bases and recruits in neighboring Mali, Mauritania and Niger.

The United States and other Western nations have pressed for years for Saharan countries to better cooperate at controlling the desert. AQIM claimed several kidnappings of tourists in the region in recent years, including British hostage Edwin Dyer, who was killed last year when Britain refused to pay a ransom. The group is also blamed for killing a U.S. aid worker in neighboring Mauritania last June.

The U.S. army says it will conduct large-scale training exercises with the military in Mali, Mauritania and other countries next month in the desert.

March 18, 2010

Sahara states say agree joint action against Qaeda

source

Tue Mar 16, 2010 10:06pm GMT

By Lamine Chikhi

ALGIERS (Reuters) – Sahara desert states struggling to contain a growing threat from al Qaeda agreed on Tuesday to put aside their differences and hammer out practical ways to fight the insurgents, an Algerian official said.

Western countries say that unless the region’s fractious governments join forces to fight the insurgents, al Qaeda could turn the Sahara desert into a safe haven along the lines of Yemen and Somalia and use it to launch large-scale attacks.

In a move praised in a U.S. State Department statement as a step towards collectively confronting al Qaeda, Algeria hosted foreign and defence ministers from Burkina Faso, Chad, Libya, Mali, Mauritania and Niger for the first conference of its kind.

“We have reached a full consensus to tackle terrorism in the region,” Abdelkader Messahel, Algeria’s Minister Delegate for African and Maghreb Affairs, told reporters after a day of talks behind closed doors in a hotel on the outskirts of Algiers.

“A strategy of action is our choice,” he said. “We will go for action and one step is a meeting between military and anti-terror specialists of the region in Algiers in April.”

That meeting, which Messahel said would be at the level of military chiefs of staff, held out the prospect that Sahara region states would start sharing operational information and cooperating their actions on the ground.

That is a step Western governments say is essential to containing al Qaeda in the Sahara, which has attracted the insurgents with its vast expanses and porous borders. But disagreements have hindered cooperation between states.

Algeria, the region’s dominant economic and military power, is fiercely opposed to Western security forces establishing a presence in the region to counter the militants, but Messahel said the West did have a role.

“We are expecting three things from our international partners: training, equipment and intelligence,” he said.

The State Department statement said it welcomed the decision of Saharan states to meet in the Algerian capital and “collectively confront the threat of terrorism”.

“We hope the meeting will build upon ongoing efforts to strengthen regional cooperation and further consolidate collective action against groups that seek to exploit territories of these countries and launch attacks against innocent civilians,” it said.

Relations between the region’s governments reached a low last month after Mali freed four suspected Islamist militants whose release was demanded by al Qaeda in return for sparing the life of French hostage Pierre Camatte.

Algeria and Mauritania withdrew their ambassadors in Mali in protest and the Algerian government said Mali’s actions were playing into the hands of al Qaeda.

The insurgents last year killed a British hostage, Edwin Dyer. They also shot dead a U.S. aid worker in Mauritania’s capital in June last year, and carried out a suicide bombing on the French embassy there in August that injured three people.

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