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Militarization of U.S. Africa Policy, 2000 to 2005
A Fact Sheet Prepared by William D. Hartung and Frida Berrigan
March 2005

Contact information:
212-229-5808, ext. 112
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

"This isn't target practice! This is about killing people!"
-- U.S. military trainer in Niger, quoted in
"America�s African Rifles," Atlantic Monthly, April 2005

Introduction: Guns, Oil and Terror

In the wake of September 11th, and in keeping with its interest in
securing access to oil and other key natural resources, the Bush
administration has been rapidly expanding U.S. military involvement in
Africa.

While most recent increases in U.S. arms sales, aid, and military training
in Africa have been justified as part of what the administration refers to
as the "Global War on Terrorism" (GWOT), oil has been a major factor in
the administration�s strategic calculations from the outset. In his first
few months in office, President Bush�s first Secretary of State, Colin
Powell, stressed the need to improve relations with oil producing nations
like Nigeria and Angola. Similarly, the report of Vice-President Cheney�s
Energy Task Force stressed the importance of gaining and maintaining
access to African oil resources, which U.S. intelligence assessments
expect to increase to as much as 25% of U.S. oil imports by the year 2020
(see Salih Booker and Ann-Louise Cogan, "Africa Policy Outlook 2004," at
http://www.africaaction.org).

A look at last year�s Congressional Budget Justification for FY05 Foreign
Operations (State Department, Feb. 2004) underscores the strong pull of
oil interests in Bush administration decision making. The entry on
Equatorial Guinea notes that "Over the course of the past five years, U.S.
companies have invested approximately $5 billion" in the country�s oil
sector. The entry for Sao Tome and Principe is more forward-looking,
noting that "In the coming decade, U.S. companies are expected to
participate in the development of petroleum resources in Sao Tome�s
territorial waters." Nigeria is cited for its "large oil and gas
reserves," while the entry on Angola stresses the need to "help ensure
U.S. private-sector oil access to a source of seven percent of U.S.
petroleum imports, a figure likely to rise in the coming years."

Beyond oil, U.S. military officials have cited "a growing terrorist
threat" in northern and sub-Saharan Africa to justify a program of stepped
up military engagement in the region. General James Jones, head of the
U.S. European command, has suggested the need to create a "family of
bases" across Africa that would range from forward operating locations
that would include an airfield and facilities to house 3,000 to 5,000 U.S.
military personnel to "bare-bones" bases that U.S. Special Forces or
Marines could "land at and build up as the mission required." (See Eric
Schmitt, "Threats and Response; Expanding U.S. Presence: Pentagon Seeks
New Access Pacts for African Bases," New York Times, July 5, 2003). These
new facilities would not be considered "formal" bases like the growing
U.S. base in the Horn of Africa in Djibouti, which has a regular
deployment of 1,800 to 2,000 troops stationed there. While new basing
arrangements are being worked out, a major increase in U.S. military
exercises and training missions throughout Africa will be used to sustain
a regular U.S. presence.


Military Aid, Training, and Sales on the Rise

While the millions of dollars being spent on U.S. military aid and sales
to Africa pale in comparison to the billions being expended in the Middle
East and South Asia, all of the major U.S. bilateral aid and sales
programs have increased sharply in recent years. Funding to sub-Saharan
Africa under the largest U.S. military aid program, Foreign Military
Financing, doubled from $12 million in fiscal year 2000 to a proposed $24
million in the FY 2006 budget proposal, and the number of recipient
nations has grown from one to nine. The Pentagon�s International Military
Education and Training (IMET) program has increased by 35% from 2000 to
the 2006 proposal, from $8.1 million to $11 million, and from 36
participating nations to 47. Foreign Military Sales, the largest U.S. arms
transfer program, more than quadrupled from fiscal year 2000 to fiscal
year 2003 (the most recent year for which full statistics are available),
from $9.8 million to $40.3 million. And Commercial Sales (CS) of arms
licensed by the State Department grew from .9 million to $3.8 million over
the 2000 to 2003 period. For additional details, see tables at
http://snipurl.com/dfks.

These bilateral programs are just the tip of the iceberg in terms of
overall U.S. military aid commitments going forward. The U.S. European
Command has requested $125 million over five years for the Pan-Sahel
Initiative, for training and exercises with Chad, Mali, Mauritania, Niger
and other nations in the region. U.S. engagement under the program has
gone far beyond traditional training to include involvement in combat
operations. Craig S. Smith of the New York Times ("U.S. Training African
Forces to Uproot Terrorists," May 11, 2004) offers the following
description of the role of U.S. forces in a 2004 operation against the
Salafist terrorist organization and its leader, Ammari Saifi:

"The United States European Command sent a Navy P-3C Orion surveillance
aircraft to sweep the area, relaying Mr. Saifi�s position to forces in the
region. Mali chased him out of the country to Niger, which in turn pushed
him into Chad, where, with United States Special Forces support of an
airlift of fuel and other supplies, 43 of his men were killed or
captured."

Other major U.S. military commitments include a proposed $100 million
program for military and anti-terrorist training in East Africa, and a
$200 million pledge to train and restructure Liberia�s military forces.
The first $35 million of this amount has been committed to a training
program run by Dyncorps, a private military company with a mixed record in
operations in the Balkans, Colombia, Afghanistan, and Iraq. In addition to
programs targeted to specific countries or regions, the ACOTA program
(African Contingency Operations Training and Assistance) has received $38
million in funding over the past three years, with the stated goal of
training "select African militaries to respond effectively to peace
support and humanitarian crises on their continent." Participants in the
program have included Ghana, Kenya, Ethiopia, Senegal, and Botswana. ACOTA
is the successor program to ACRI, the African Crisis Response Initiative.

Transparency and accountability are major missing components with respect
to current U.S. military operations in Africa. There is no single source
that summarizes U.S. exercises or Pentagon-run training missions like the
Joint Combined Exchange Training (JCET program) in any detail. To cite
just one example, the U.S. military is intent on planning 30 military
exercises with the South African military in 2005, including training on
"operating the C-130 Hercules transport aircraft, military police and
Special Forces skills, and peacekeeping operations." ("Pentagon Wants
Increased Cooperation with SA," Southscan (London), February 25, 2005).


The Bottom Line: Peacekeeping or Warmaking?

Increased U.S. military operations in Africa pose a crucial dilemma. While
most programs are justified in terms of anti-terror or peacekeeping
missions, some of the same skills and equipment supplied for these
purposes can also be applied to internal repression or conflicts with
neighboring countries. There are also political and moral issues tied to
the increasing the role of the U.S. military to the point where it may
become the main " face" of American involvement in Africa. Arms supplied
to Nigeria, for example, may be applied to regional peacekeeping, but they
could also be used in support of efforts (some directly supported by
Western oil companies), to suppress dissent in the oil-rich Niger Delta.
Similarly, in the late 1990s, U.S. training for Rwandan armed forces in
the late 1990s for one purpose � to stabilize and professionalize the
country�s armed forces in the wake of the genocide there � was put to use
in Rwanda�s intervention in Zaire, which led to the demise of the Mobutu
regime and set the stage for a multi-year civil war there (in which
Rwandan forces were also directly involved).

With periodic calls for U.S. intervention to stop mass murder from Rwanda
in the 1990s, to Liberia in recent years, to the Sudan currently, the
issue of what role the U.S. military should play in Africa going forward
needs to be subject to serious debate. Does the existing mix of military
sales, training, joint exercises, and the search for informal basing
arrangements better position the United States to play a leadership role
in fostering effective peacekeeping, peace enforcement, and stability
operations on the continent? Or is it strengthening African military
forces at the expense of civil society, to the detriment of democracy and
accountability? The answers to these questions may be complex, but there
is no way to answer them without greater transparency and greater public
discussion about U.S. military programs and goals in Africa.


The Arms Trade Resource Center (http://www.worldpolicy.org/projects/arms)
was established in 1993 to engage in public education and policy advocacy
aimed at promoting restraint in the international arms trade.

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