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USA/Africa: Questioning AFRICOM, 2
AfricaFocus Bulletin
Aug 1, 2007 (070801)
(Reposted from sources cited below)
Editor's Note
"Like its predecessor, anti-communism, the GWOT (Global War on
Terrorism) is a timeless, borderless geopolitical strategy whose
presumptions lead to defining all conflicts, insurrections and
civil wars as terrorist threats, regardless of the facts on the
ground." Lubeck, Watts, and Lipschutz in report from Center for
International Policy
This AfricaFocus Bulletin contains excerpts from an extensive
critique of AFRICOM from the Center for International Policy, with
particular emphasis on U.S.-Nigerian relations. The analysis, by
Nigeria specialists Paul Lubeck and Michael Watts, and security
specialist Ronnie Lipschutz, analyzes the background of the AFRICOM
initiative, in terms of shifts in both energy and military strategies.
Another AfricaFocus Bulletin sent out today contains critique of
AFRICOM by Emira Woods and Ezekiel Pajibo for Foreign Policy in
Focus, countering earlier positive comments by Liberian President
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf. It also contains a press release on General
Ward's nomination and excerpts from an analysis written for the
Brenthurst Foundation in South Africa.
For previous AfricaFocus Bulletins on African security and U.S.
involvement, see http://www.africafocus.org/peaceexp.php
For previous AfricaFocus Bulletins on Nigeria, see
http://www.africafocus.org/country/nigeria.php
++++++++++++++++++++++end editor's note+++++++++++++++++++++++
Convergent Interests: U.S. Energy Security and the "Securing" of
Nigerian Democracy
By Paul M. Lubeck, Michael J. Watts and Ronnie Lipschutz
A Publication of the Center for International Policy
February 2007
http://www.ciponline.org
[excerpts only. For full report visit http://www.ciponline.org]
Over the past 15 years, amidst a deepening crisis in the Middle
East and tightening petroleum markets, the U.S. has quietly
institutionalized a West African-based oil supply strategy.
Nigeria, currently providing 10-12 percent of U.S. imports, serves
as the cornerstone of this Gulf of Guinea strategy. But since the
end of 2005, the on- and off-shore oilfields of the Niger Delta
the major source of Nigerian oil and gas have essentially become
ungovernable. Political instability and violent conflict have
deepened to the point that some of the oil and oil-service
companies working there, including Chevron, Royal Dutch Shell,
Exxon-Mobil, and Julius Berger, feel that their "social license to
operate" is rapidly eroding. In 2003 and 2004, armed insurgencies
and attacks on oil installations cut national oil output by forty
percent.
More recently, the emergence of a shadowy group of insurgents in
the western Delta in late 2005 the Movement for the Emancipation of
the Niger Delta (MEND) marked a major escalation of insurgent
activity. In the first three months of 2006, $1 billion in oil
revenues were lost and national output was cut by one third. The
escalating political crisis in the Delta threatens American energy
security, the security of Nigeria's fledgling democracy and,
indeed, the entire West African region as a source of reliable
energy.
...
Not long after the attacks of September 11, 2001, citing energy
security and terrorist concerns, the U.S. military radically
revised its strategic vision for the West African region; strategy
shifted primarily from training for peacekeeping missions in Africa
to training for counter terrorism and energy security. Nigeria has
been a particular target of this shift in energy security policy,
not only as a strategic ally in the region but also as a "front
line" state in the Global War on Terrorism (GWOT). Like its
predecessor, anti-communism, the GWOT is a timeless, borderless
geopolitical strategy whose presumptions lead to defining all
conflicts, insurrections and civil wars as terrorist threats,
regardless of the facts on the ground.
Today, American energy security concerns and the GWOT have
spearheaded a Department of Defense campaign to create a unified
and separate African Command AFRICOM a long time objective of
neoconservative lobbyists. In August 2006, Time magazine published
an exclusive story saying then-Defense Secretary Rumsfeld was close
to announcing the formation of AFRICOM and that a four star
general, William "Kip" Ward, currently second in command at EUCOM
and the highest ranking African-American officer, was to be
appointed head of AFRICOM. By 2 December, Secretary Rumsfeld
announced that AFRICOM "should happen in a matter of a month or two
but it's important that we do that, and that this department
recognizes the importance of Africa."3 In a Reuters interview Ward
"acknowledged a U.S. interest in safeguarding oil supplies" and
stated, "The protection of critical infrastructure and energy
infrastructure is a concern all sovereign nations have. We clearly
have a concern about that."
In this policy brief, we lay out the developing situation in the
"African Oil Triangle" centered on the Gulf of Guinea ... We begin
with an overview of the United States' "petroleum problem" and its
relentless search for new sources of oil. We then address oil and
turmoil, as the two have intertwined in Nigeria to generate both
corruption and political instability. In the third section, we
discuss U.S. security strategy in the West African region and why
it is misguided in the northern states and severely constrained in
the Niger Delta.
...
U.S. Energy Security and the Petroleum Problem
[not included here: see full report]
The Niger Delta: Oil and Turmoil in Nigeria
[not included here: see full report]
U.S.-Nigerian Security Interests: Searching for Solutions
The growing insecurity of U.S. oil supplies reflects what Michael
Klare has called the "economization of security," an important
strand of U.S. foreign policy since the 1930s, which has focused on
global oil acquisition policy.51 After 9/11, American energy
security was overtaken by and slowly merged with the amorphous,
borderless GWOT. Active counter terrorism displaced earlier
emphasis on training for peacekeeping and human rights. Fears that
China is gaining control over African energy resources, e.g.
Angola, are important to the new emphasis on securitization of
energy policy, as well as bureaucratic competition for control over
resources among the regional commands of the U.S. military.52
Former Defense Secretary Rumsfeld's strategic doctrine Force
Transformation which emphasized mobile, lean, flexible forces
rotating through a network of "lillypads" located close to conflict
centers (e.g. Sao Tome and Principe), rather than the large, static
bases like Stuttgart (Germany) so typical of Cold War strategy,
also reinforced the strategic shift to counter-terrorism in Africa.
With the end of the Cold War, the European Command's (EUCOM)
strategic worth withered dramatically and troop strengths declined
by roughly two-thirds. Because promotions depend overwhelmingly on
combat experience, it is not surprising that ambitious EUCOM
officers searched for a new mission. The GWOT offered EUCOM
strategists an attractive opportunity to reclaim lost relevance and
resources by looking southward to North and West Africa, where they
repositioned some of their forces to the Sahel and the Gulf of
Guinea.53 To fund this shift, the Pentagon has marketed several
West African initiatives to Congress: the Gulf of Guinea Guard, the
Pan- Sahel Initiative, the Trans-Sahara Counter Terrorism
Initiative (TSCTI) and the Gulf of Guinea Energy Security Strategy
(GGESS). Finally, as documented in the "tool kit" box (text box 3
[in full report]), the strategic shift was nurtured by an unlikely
coalition of neoconservative "fixers," energy lobbyists,
politicians, former diplomats and Africanist humanitarians
committed to raising the strategic profile of West Africa in
American foreign policy, all embracing the GWOT discourse of
counter-terrorism as they and climbed on the energy security
bandwagon.
...
Building on the foundation laid by neoconservative promoters and
opportunistic Washington players like Wihbey and Congressman
Jefferson, strategists at the Pentagon have invented a new security
threat to increase funding for EUCOM's footprint in West Africa.
Recently, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for African Affairs
Theresa Whelan announced the discovery of a "new threat paradigm"
the threat of "ungoverned spaces" in Northwest and West Africa
(figure 7). ...
...
Testifying before the Senate Armed Services Committee in 2005,
EUCOM's then-commander, General James Jones, emphasized that his
command's "objective in Africa should be to eliminate ungoverned
areas, to counter extremism, and to end conflict and reduce the
chronic instability" because of Africa's "potential to become the
next front in the Global War on Terrorism." Viewed more
realistically, however, the fact is that decades of multilateral
neglect, devastating poverty, endemic famine and institutional
decay in the Sahelian states render EUCOM's mission to eliminate
ungoverned spaces a very tall order indeed, if not a dangerous
delusion.
...
Despite these doubts and debates, U.S. military involvement in
West Africa has only mushroomed since 2001, focusing on three broad
goals: (i) getting U.S. forces on the ground in order to advise and
upgrade the region's militaries in support of the GWOT; (ii)
establishing maritime dominance in the Gulf in order to secure
offshore oil installations and, if necessary, unilaterally
defending American energy assets; and (iii) building or
subcontracting access to new air and naval bases, to provide both
forward supplies, surveillance and air cover capacities. As EUCOM's
General Jones recently told the Wall Street Journal, "Africa plays
an increased strategic role militarily, economically and
politically " for his command, which now spends "70 percent of its
time and energy on Africa up from nearly none when he took it over
three-plus years ago."
Despite the ambitions of EUCOM, it is only fair to say that
countervailing forces among American policy makers are limiting the
aggressive plans of strong advocates like General Wald. Scarce
funding has limited ground American troops in the region to fewer
than 10,000 at any one time. Overstretched and burned out by the
deployments in Iraq and Afghanistan, many professional officers
resist deeper American involvement. And local hostility to U.S.
bases in countries like Nigeria has, thus far, prevented EUCOM from
establishing a "Forward Operating Base" in West Africa as 16 they
have established in Djibouti. Given these constraints, EUCOM has
pursued intervention through training, equipping and actively
advising West African militaries, all in the name of the GWOT. This
also allows the command to put private contractors, Special Forces
operatives, intelligence agents and support troops on the ground,
ostensibly for training, but also for gathering human intelligence,
building "interoperability" with local army units as well as for
providing cover for clandestine missions.
...
How does EUCOM's support of the GWOT in the Sahel relate to
democratizing Nigeria's internal security regime, and sustaining
American energy security? General Jones's appeal to Congress for
funding of EUCOM's initiatives in West Africa constantly invokes
the security and stability of Nigeria. He presents Nigeria as
threatened from the north by jihadists hiding in the "ungoverned
spaces" of the Sahel, allegedly supported by transnational Islamist
networks extending into Nigeria. Overall, while recent oil
discoveries in the Sahelian states matter, (e.g. one off-shore
field in Mauritania produces 225,000 bbl per day), EUCOM's main
strategic objective focuses on securing Nigerian and Gulf energy
supplies.
To achieve this strategic goal, American military planners have
launched a two pronged pincer movement (figure 11) whose main
objective is "Ring-Fencing Nigeria," from the north and south. To
the south, the Navy is rapidly increasing their patrols in the oil
fields of the Gulf of Guinea, bolstered by U.S. funding of an
$800,000 port and airfield feasibility study of STP. To the north,
American troops funded by the TSCTI are being deployed in training
and advising missions designed to monitor and, if necessary, seal
Nigeria's northern border. An intensive search is on for any
evidence linking northern Nigerians with international Islamist
terrorism. A Reuters story describing the TSCTI as a "ring fencing"
strategy reports that "privately, some (American) officials
acknowledge that the main concern in the region is protecting
Nigeria, the continent's biggest oil producer "
This pincer strategy is, of course, extremely troubling to many
Nigerians. Most offended are the 50 to 60 million northern Muslims
who, as nationalists, view the GWOT as a provocative threat to
their country's sovereignty, a misguided perception of the rule of
law in Muslim political life and, even worse, a pretext for
American military intervention in the event of domestic
instability. Unfortunately for American energy security interests
in Nigeria, the fears of northern Muslims that they are being
inaccurately represented by the planners of the GWOT are validated
by maps published by EUCOM on the Internet. Examine figure 12, a
map published on the Internet as part of a 2005 Powerpoint authored
by a EUCOM Special Forces intelligence officer. Not only does this
map display an appalling ignorance of the political and security
situation in Muslim northern Nigeria, it confirms the worst
suspicions of northern Muslims that, in practice, the GWOT is
really a "War Against Islam."
This map raises serious doubts whether EUCOM has the competence to
assess energy security issues in northern Nigeria. First, it
represents most of the Sahelian states as an ungoverned, terrorist
region; second, it tarbrushes a broad swath of Muslim northern
Nigeria as a "Terrorist Area," including Nigeria's federal capital
territory of Abuja ; and most importantly for future American
relations with Nigerian leaders, by including Katsina State within
this alleged "Terrorist Area," it suggests that Umaru Yar 'Adua,
the presiding governor, who has just been nominated by the ruling
Peoples Party of Nigeria to succeed President Obasanjo in the 2007
election, has been administering a "Terrorist Area" for the past
eight years. Intelligence representations like this map not only
misinform American security officials, but they undermine Nigerian
confidence in American intentions and intelligence capacity. This
representation is incorrect since, as any international visitor or
State Department security officer knows, the Muslim north is one of
the best governed and most secure areas of Nigeria.
...
To be fair, one or two maps in a EUCOM intelligence presentation
published on the Internet by an uninformed intelligence officer do
not define American foreign policy toward Nigeria. Yet, a blunder
of this magnitude does confirm the danger posed by misinformed
interventionists at EUCOM and the potential negative impact their
misguided perceptions of Muslim northern Nigeria will have on
American energy security. In terms of policy, representations like
figure 12 underscore the need for Congress to conduct
investigations in order to correct intelligence errors and contain
military adventurism while, at the same time, vigorously supporting
State Department programs that defend democratic institutions and
civil society groups in northern Nigeria. It is important to
recognize that when the American ambassador to Nigeria and other
State Department officials publicly affirmed America's democratic
principles by rejecting Obasanjo's scheme for a third term in 2006,
the U.S. gained far more in terms of "soft" security and goodwill
than a score of EUCOM-sponsored "Operation Flintlocks" will ever
achieve in the region. Given the appalling poverty in this region,
and the dearth of development funding, spending $500 million on the
TSCTI constitutes a misappropriation of funds that will only reduce
American energy security in the long run. To be sure, northern
Nigeria has its fair share of crime, extremists and insurrections
but, when its large population size is taken into account, the
proportional incidence of radical Islamist violence in northern
Nigeria is very low. With the exception of a youthful, 2004
jihadist rebellion in Yobe and Borno states, modeled rhetorically
on the Taliban, northern Muslims have not posed any threat to
securing American energy supplies, which are mostly in the south.
Ironically, as most State Department professionals acknowledge, the
implementation of Shari'a criminal law in the twelve northern
states has made the north safer and more secure, especially when
compared to southern Nigeria. Most of the northern bloodshed has
involved violence between Christians and Muslims, between rival
Muslim sects or between ethnic groups struggling over indigenous
land rights. None of this has anything to do with terrorism or
Islamic extremism. Accordingly, American and Nigerian security
interests do converge, not through the implementation of the TSCTI
in the northern states, but in the need to institutionalize
democracy in the Niger Delta by working cooperatively to eliminate
ethnic conflict, local insurrections, criminal syndicates,
kidnapping, environmental pollution, and oil piracy.
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