Summary
- As many as half of the US counter-terrorism troops based on the continent could be withdrawn over the next three years, the report states.
- A total of 6,000 American soldiers are currently assigned to several African countries, according to the US Africa Command (Africom).
- About 500 of those commandos, trainers and logistics specialists are based in Somalia, where they assist African Union and Somali national forces in carrying out attacks on Al-Shabaab.
The United States is considering a sharp reduction in its
special forces operations in Somalia and other African countries, the
‘‘New York Times’’ reported Monday.
As many as half of
the US counter-terrorism troops based on the continent could be
withdrawn over the next three years, the report states.
A
total of 6,000 American soldiers are currently assigned to several
African countries, according to the US Africa Command (Africom). About
500 of those commandos, trainers and logistics specialists are based in
Somalia, where they assist African Union and Somali national forces in
carrying out attacks on Al-Shabaab.
US military action
in Somalia mainly takes the form of drone strikes that are said to have
killed dozens of Shabaab militants in the past year. But some US troops
operate on the ground in an advisory capacity, and a steep reduction in
their numbers could have negative consequences for the 11-year-long war
against Al-Shabaab. The contemplated reduction in US troop levels in
Africa is mainly a product of two factors, the paper reports.
One is the political furore that erupted following the killing
of four US soldiers last October during a counter-insurgency operation
in Niger.
A Pentagon investigation into that attack
“exposed a risk-taking culture among commandos,” the Times reported on
Monday. And that the finding strengthened US Defence Secretary James
Mattis’ inclination to reduce counter-insurgency missions in Africa, the
newspaper said.
At the same time, the US is putting
greater emphasis on responding to perceived military threats posed by
Russia, China, North Korea and Iran.
A share of the
special forces currently based in Africa would be reassigned to missions
elsewhere in the world in accordance with that strategic reassessment,
the Times said.
Last year, President Donald Trump
loosened restrictions on US military operations in Somalia that the
Obama administration had put in place with the aim of avoiding civilian
casualties.
An escalation in drone strikes ensued, along with an increase in the number of US military personnel inside Somalia.
The
Defence Department maintains there is no evidence that US forces have
killed any Somali civilians since field commanders were given greater
leeway in ordering attacks on Shabaab targets.
That
assertion is included in a Defence Department report to Congress last
week that acknowledges “credible reports of approximately 499 civilians
killed” in US military operations in 2017 in Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan
and Yemen.
Reports of another 450 civilian casualties
remain under investigation, the Defence Department added. One of those
open inquiries pertains to an attack in Somalia.
Independent
monitors as well as local Somali officials have charged that civilians
have been killed as a result of some US air strikes as well as in the
course of ground battles in which US troops played an advisory role.
No comments :
Post a Comment