-Caveat Lector-

Pentagon Role in Africa May End

Training Program Put Under Review

  By Douglas Farah
  Washington Post Foreign Service
  Tuesday, July 3, 2001; Page A16

  BUNDASE TRAINING CAMP, Ghana -- U.S. Special Forces
  trainers strode up and down the firing line here one
  recent morning, barking instructions and encouragement
  as Ghanaian troops struggled to get a feel for the new
  American-supplied M-60 machine guns they will take
  with them to nearby Sierra Leone on a U.N.
  peacekeeping mission.

  Earlier in the morning, some of the 100 Americans from
  the 3rd Special Forces Group trained the Ghanaians on
  M-16 rifles. During the 10-week training program, the
  troops also will learn to use mortars and
  sophisticated communications equipment.

  "We are trying to make sure these people will operate
  under live fire," Lt. Col. Jay Glover said as he sat
  in the camp's U.S.-style mess tent built for the
  training. "If they can't, people will get killed when
  they turn around and go into combat."

  Glover and his team are part of Operation Focus
  Relief, the most visible and costly of the myriad
  programs the Pentagon has been conducting in 22
  countries of sub-Saharan Africa. They include training
  elite battalions like this one for peacekeeping
  duties, readying other soldiers for disaster relief,
  AIDS prevention, and other smaller programs.

  But many of the programs, which together cost $130
  million a year, may be short-lived. Most were
  initiated by former president Bill Clinton as a
  compromise between sending U.S. troops into war-torn
  African countries and doing nothing. They are now
  under review by the Bush administration, which is
  divided over what military commitments to make on this
  continent.

  The White House must assess whether the programs are
  "misguided, inadequately resourced or simply need more
  time to bear fruition," according to a working paper
  published last month co-written by Jendayi E. Frazer,
  director of African affairs at the National Security
  Council. Despite the programs, the paper said, "there
  was no noticeable change in any of Africa's wars."

  During a visit to Africa last month, Secretary of
  State Colin L. Powell acknowledged that he disagrees
  with Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld over funding
  military missions here.

  The United States, Powell said, should remain
  committed to equipping and training African
  peacekeepers, but Rumsfeld "is always looking for
  opportunities to back off on some of the overseas
  commitments we have. It is just trying to find the
  right balance between getting too committed and not
  getting committed enough."

  So far, two 800-man Nigerian battalions have been
  trained, equipped and deployed to Sierra Leone under
  the $90 million Focus Relief program. The Ghanaian
  battalion, along with one from Senegal and three from
  Nigeria, are to be deployed by the end of the year.

  The program was rushed into existence last year after
  the rebel Revolutionary United Front in Sierra Leone
  took 500 U.N. peacekeepers hostage. With the U.N.
  operation in disarray and Britain, the former colonial
  power there, rushing in troops, Clinton was under
  pressure to do something to help fight a rebel force
  renowned for hacking off the arms and legs of women
  and children.

  He was unwilling to commit troops and opted instead to
  provide training and equipment for seven West African
  battalions to step into the breach. "Certainly the
  motivation was to get troops on the ground that were
  not U.S. troops," said a senior Pentagon official.

  According to U.N. sources and observers in Sierra
  Leone, the two Nigerian battalions are a marked
  improvement over other African forces deployed there,
  but have not yet faced any serious challenges in
  combat.

  A broader U.S. program is the $20 million-a-year
  African Crisis Response Initiative, started in 1996 to
  create a pan-African force for peacekeeping and
  disaster relief. U.S. Special Forces provide training,
  uniforms and communications equipment but no weapons.

  With State Department funding, the ACRI program has
  trained 8,000 troops since 1997, and plans to train a
  total of 12,000, U.S. officials said.

  It began when the Clinton administration feared
  Burundi would implode on the heels of the 1994 Rwanda
  genocide crisis. A U.S. official familiar with the
  program said it was initially "ill thought-out and
  rushed" through the policy-approval process.

  None of Africa's major armies took part, either
  because they declined or could not qualify because of
  rules that limited participation to countries with
  democratic governments. Nigeria was initially
  ineligible and later chose, along with South Africa,
  not to participate. Uganda, Ethiopia and Ivory Coast
  all joined but were suspended because of military
  coups, political unrest or involvement in wars. Only
  smaller countries such as Benin, Malawi, Mali and
  Ghana signed up.

  The NSC paper said that after spending more than $100
  million on ACRI, "it is unclear what the United States
  has to show for its efforts."

  Other programs include a $10 million U.S. Navy program
  to combat the spread of AIDS in African armed forces,
  and the Africa Center for Strategic Studies, which
  brings regional military and civilian leaders
  together.

  In Guinea, the United States has supplied more than $1
  million of communications equipment, spare parts and
  meals to its army. A multimillion-dollar aid package
  is under consideration, Pentagon officials said.

  Many African armed forces, faced with sharp budget
  cutbacks and the end of Cold War largess, welcome the
  U.S. training and the equipment that often goes with
  it.

  Ghana, participating in both Focus Relief and ACRI, is
  one of the most enthusiastic countries about the new
  military ties. In an interview, Defense Minister Kwame
  Addo-Kufuor said his troops received advanced
  equipment and "orientation toward democratic
  traditions and a better appreciation of the democratic
  way of life."

  About 300 of the 800 soldiers being trained here come
  from the 64th Battalion, known for its loyalty to
  former president Jerry Rawlings, who led two coups,
  governed the country for 20 years and is widely
  accused of using the unit to suppress dissent and
  violate human rights. Rawlings left office in January.

  None of the units trained in either Focus Relief or
  ACRI has been accused of human rights abuses. But
  human rights groups argue that training armies that
  have histories of brutality must include effective
  vetting of participants and have a strong focus on
  human rights and humanitarian law.

  Janet Fleischman, Africa director of Human Rights
  Watch, said human rights training and vetting are the
  "weakest link" in the Focus Relief program. "If done
  right, with strong human rights vetting, humanitarian
  law instruction and a clear mechanism for monitoring
  and accountability, this could be a new model," she
  said. "But we haven't seen if they are going to give
  sufficient emphasis to these fields to make it work."

  Lt. Col. Glover said troops he trains receive seven
  hours of human rights instruction, with additional
  training incorporated into other exercises.

  A senior Pentagon official said "all participating
  individuals are vetted for human rights violations."
  But in the cases of Nigeria and Ghana, where until
  recently the United States has had scant military
  contact, vetting is limited to checking the names of
  training candidates against lists of suspected rights
  abusers kept by the State Department, Defense
  Department or intelligence agencies.

  "We don't really know who these guys are or where they
  come from," acknowledged a U.S. official in the
  region. "We have very little to match the names
  against because we haven't worked with this army for
  decades."

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