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U.S. Military Builds Up Its Presence In Africa
Georgia Public Broadcasting ^ | December 26, 2012 | Tom Bowman

Posted on 12/29/2012 12:07:06 PM PST by neverdem

Gen. Carter Ham is head of the U.S. African command. An Army brigade from Fort Riley, Kan., will begin helping train African militaries beat back a growing terrorist threat posed by al-Qaida.
Gen. Carter Ham is head of the U.S. African command. An Army brigade from Fort Riley, Kan., will begin helping train African militaries beat back a growing terrorist threat posed by al-Qaida.

An Army brigade from Fort Riley, Kan., some 4,000, soldiers, will begin helping to train African militaries. The idea is to help African troops beat back a growing terrorist threat posed by al-Qaida.

The American troops will head over in small teams over the course of the next year. The Dagger Brigade returned to Kansas last year from a deployment to Iraq, where it trained and advised that country's security forces.

Now unit commander Col. Jeff Broadwater is preparing to do the same kind of mission but in a different place. So Broadwater is scouring his brigade for unique skills.

"We're fortunate enough to have some African speakers, Swahili," Broadwater says.

Swahili is spoken in much of East Africa. And the colonel says he's also happy to have a handful of soldiers with first-hand experience on the continent.

"We do have some soldiers who either came over from Africa and went to school here and then joined the military or came over with their families," Broadwater says.

The brigade is expected to deploy in small teams beginning next spring throughout Africa. The soldiers will take part in military exercises and train African troops on everything from logistics and marksmanship to medical care.

Meanwhile, the Defense Intelligence Agency is already placing more of its military spies in Africa.

The top American commander for Africa, Gen. Carter Ham, says this is all new. He spoke recently at an appearance in Washington: "Africa has not been a part of the world in which we have focused a lot of attention, certainly not during the majority of my career."

American Green Berets have trained African troops in the past. But Gen. Ham says this new effort is more comprehensive, and necessary given emerging security threats on the continent.

"There are a lot of issues in Africa that are causing concern for the United States," says Richard Downie, an Africa expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

He points in particular to the West African nation of Mali.

"Particularly the spread of terrorism you have al-Qaida's local franchise in Africa controlling two thirds of that country right now," he says.

Al-Qaida and its affiliates are operating in a wide arc from Nigeria through Mali, Libya and into Somalia. Gen. Ham says there are indications the groups are starting to work together.

"What I worry about more than anything is a growing linkage which I think poses the greatest threat to regional stability across Africa, certainly into Europe and to the United States as well," Ham says.

And to counter that terrorist threat, the Obama administration wants to rely on African forces. That means giving them proper equipment and training, and that's where the troops from Fort Riley come in.

"We've been really just basically trying to understand you know, a little bit more about Africa," Broadwater says. "The history of those areas, the culture so when we do deploy to those countries we have a little bit better idea of what's going on."

But what's going on in the continent, says Africa expert Richard Downie, cannot be addressed by just providing military training and equipment. There are underlying causes of unrest and extremism: poverty, lack of health care and education, and predatory governments. Downie says those are the challenges the U.S. and other countries must tackle.

"Terrorism is really a symptom of a lot of other problems that really the military is not the best organization to solve," he says.

Better organizations, says Downie, would be the State Department and the Agency for International Development.

But the military is the organization with the biggest budget. That is why the Dagger Brigade will be able to take part in nearly 100 separate training and military exercises next year, in nearly three dozen African countries. Some of those efforts by the Army teams will last a few days, others a month or more.

These soldiers will not be allowed to take part in combat missions with African forces. That would require high-level Pentagon approval.

But after ten years of war, the American military is not eager for any new combat operations.


Copyright 2012 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.



TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Politics/Elections; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: africa; africom; alqaeda; alqaida; benghazi; carterham; csis; daggerbrigade; eastafrica; fortriley; hornofafrica; iraq; islam; jeffbroadwater; libya; mali; nigeria; povertymeme; richarddownie; somalia; swahili; usaid; usarmy; westafrica
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To: SkyPilot

The entitlements are sickening. Not sure why SS is considered an entitlement, however.


21 posted on 12/29/2012 2:26:04 PM PST by Gene Eric (Demoralization is a weapon of the enemy. Don't get it, don't spread it!)
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To: donna

You keep posting that, but what is the significance of it, what are you trying to say?


22 posted on 12/29/2012 4:24:51 PM PST by ansel12
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To: neverdem

Create the problem, provide the solution.


23 posted on 12/29/2012 4:41:00 PM PST by SisterK (My kingdom is NOT of this world)
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To: wardaddy; Joe Brower; Cannoneer No. 4; Criminal Number 18F; Dan from Michigan; Eaker; Jeff Head; ...
LYONS: Draft of new U.S. Army handbook must be scrapped

Laws are for Little People [Steyn]

Modern Science Writers Leave Science Behind

Sam Colt and the Law of Self-Preservation

Some noteworthy articles about politics, foreign or military affairs, IMHO, FReepmail me if you want on or off my list.

24 posted on 12/29/2012 5:56:32 PM PST by neverdem ( Xin loi min oi)
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To: neverdem

This is possibly the worst idea I have ever heard of.


25 posted on 12/29/2012 6:21:48 PM PST by firebrand
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To: neverdem

Why do we have a U.S. African command?


26 posted on 12/29/2012 6:24:36 PM PST by philetus (Keep doing what you always do and you'll eventually get what you deserve)
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To: ansel12

Excuse me. It obviously meant nothing.


27 posted on 12/29/2012 6:27:38 PM PST by donna (Pray for revival.)
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To: SkyPilot

What did/does that graph look like in the Soviet Union/Russia?


28 posted on 12/30/2012 8:08:38 AM PST by TArcher
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To: bert

No contest.


29 posted on 12/30/2012 8:18:49 AM PST by Ax
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To: neverdem
The soldiers will take part in military exercises and train African troops on everything from logistics and marksmanship to medical care.
 
 
The appetite of Tyranny is never far removed from the Tyranny of the Appetite.
 
 

"These systems require no dirt. It is 3 to 9 times more productive and requires one third or less of the man hours than a traditional dirt farm. It uses less than 80% of water and can be set up in very arid climates...."

Aquaponics System Sketch

 
http://www.google.com/#hl=en&tbo=d&output=search&sclient=psy-ab&q=Arid+Aquaponics
 
 
 
Fix that, General Ham.
 

30 posted on 12/30/2012 8:18:56 AM PST by TArcher
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To: TArcher

The only people who will benefit from this are the Idi Amins and the real estate agents in Marbella or Geneva who will make a killing selling villas to African generals and their concubines.


31 posted on 12/30/2012 8:24:51 AM PST by Ax
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To: neverdem

The pre-election meme was that Obama killed OBL, and by implication defeated AQ. The reality is that the “Arab Spring” has empowered them and allowed them to spread their influence throughout the region. He’s made a huge mess out there that’s going to be very expensive to clean up in terms of both lives and dollars. Given the ROE he’s imposed on our troops in Pakistan and Afghanistan, I think we’ll be taking some heavy casualties before it’s over.


32 posted on 12/30/2012 8:36:26 AM PST by tacticalogic ("Oh, bother!" said Pooh, as he chambered his last round.)
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To: Ax

Au Contraire. Aquaponic requires no Villa.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WYFM7J_TpTU

Let the Idi Amins, their Rhodesian facilitators, and their Fascist/Corporatist-State Company stores go back to Hell where they belong.


33 posted on 12/30/2012 9:07:13 AM PST by TArcher
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To: Ax; Travis McGee

BTW, the climate of Florida makes it an ideal year-round locale for experimenting with Aquaponics.

Have you tried it?


34 posted on 12/30/2012 9:19:07 AM PST by TArcher
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To: TArcher

I don’t know much about aquaponics, but it’s pretty big in Cuban agriculture.


35 posted on 12/30/2012 9:41:52 AM PST by Ax
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To: Ax

[I don’t know much about aquaponics]

Evidently not.

Tobacco is also pretty big in Cuban agriculture.

But, the fact that even state-collectivist parasites can manage to turn tobacco, aquaponics (,and/or self-governance) into a cash-cow for non-productive, teat-sucking, collectivist swine in the farmhouse — is self-evidence of the viability of aquaponics, tobacco, and self-governance.


36 posted on 12/30/2012 10:15:26 AM PST by TArcher
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To: TArcher

You need to live there. You pretty well described everyday life in the Worker’s Caribbean Paradise. During my four year tour in Havana (1993-1997), we had access to food that normal Cubans sure didn’t, at the Diplomatic Store. They haven’t managed to screw up the Cuban cigar industry, and their Havana Club Rum is still the best on the planet. Life for Juan de la Cruz (Cuba’s John Doe) sucks on a daily base. Most of them barely get by on their meager govt rations. The Cubans who worked for us told us that their ration books only lasted two to three weeks of the month; if they didn’t have access to $$$, they did without.


37 posted on 12/30/2012 11:36:48 AM PST by Ax
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To: Ax

>>You need to live there.

I don’t need to live there to see the self-evident truth that Aquaponics works well enough that even collectivist teat-suckers and Cubans can make it work.

And if they can make it work - imagine what FRee citizens, having inalienable rights that are secured by a government whose purpose is reformed to do so, once again, could produce with it.

‘course, your Collective Milk Mileage may vary.


38 posted on 12/30/2012 12:48:15 PM PST by TArcher
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To: TArcher

Concur. The Cuban is very intelligent, but is seriously oppressed; any “get up and go” has been bred out of the average Cuban. The entrepreneurial spirit is not completely dead. The guy that used to come around our house and take our recyclables. He had a beat-up hand made pull cart. He took all my old Gatorade bottles, then sold them to neighborhood moms to take to the milk rationing point to get their ration for their six-and-under kids. Just before I left, he had traded up and got a metal cart with real wheels. My daughter got about three Victoria’s Secret catalogs per week. Julio pulled them out of the recyclables then traded them to the cops for their shirts. He carried out capitalism under the very nose of the State and thumbed his nose at them


39 posted on 12/30/2012 1:20:58 PM PST by Ax
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To: Ax

>>the milk rationing point to get their ration
>>for their six-and-under kids.

aka:

“COMMERCE BETWEEN MASTER AND SLAVE IS DESPOTISM”
—Thomas Jefferson

Milk Rationing, like the Soviet bread line, and the British control over Indian Salt, is the manipulation and enslavement of the Individual via the tyranny of their own appetite.

Let the Progressive Tribal Kleptocrats in control of the Company/State Store choke on the reality that Aquaponics has the humane potential to free Individuals from their tyrannical purview.

As Gandhi made Salt, let all FRee Individuals grow Fish and Kale.


40 posted on 12/30/2012 1:56:01 PM PST by TArcher
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