U.S. Begins Military Training in Africa
 
 June 8, 2005
 

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050608/ap_on_re_af/africa_terrorism
 
 By TODD PITMAN, Associated Press Writer 
 
 DAKAR, Senegal - A weekend raid into Mauritania by
 Algerian Islamic militants illustrates why north
 Africa needs the U.S.-led joint counterterror
 exercises launched this week, a U.S. military
 spokeswoman said Wednesday.
 
 
 The training exercise began Monday in Chad,
 Mauritania, Mali, Niger and, for the first time,
 Algeria, from where Islamic insurgents linked to the
 al-Qaida network began a raid into Mauritania that
 left two dozen dead. Five other countries will take
 part by the time the program finishes in two weeks.
 
 The Mauritania raid is an example of why nations in
 the region "have to work together now," said Maj.
 Holly Silkman, a spokeswoman for the Germany-based
 U.S. European Command, or EUCOM, which is
 responsible
 for operations in most of Africa.
 
 "They're a threat to stability and security in this
 region," Silkman said of Algeria's Salafist Group
 for
 Call and Combat, which is listed by the Washington
 as
 a terrorist organization. "And the Africans are well
 aware of that."
 
 On Tuesday, the Algerian group purportedly claimed
 responsibility for Saturday's surprise attack on a
 remote Mauritanian army outpost that left 15
 Mauritanian troops and nine insurgents dead. The
 claim, posted on a Web site in Arabic, said the
 assault was a "hit against the Flintlock plan put in
 place by the enemy of God, America, and its agents
 in
 the region."
 
 Flintlock is the name of U.S.-led, joint military
 exercises conducted by EUCOM every two years - this
 time in northern Africa with about 1,000 U.S.
 troops,
 mostly special operations forces, training about
 3,000
 African soldiers.
 
 "Wherever there's an area we need to pay attention
 to,
 that's where Flintlock evolves and in this case,
 Africa is of growing strategic importance," Silkman
 said.
 
 U.S. commanders are concerned terrorists could take
 advantage of Africa's little-policed deserts and
 jungles to set up shop. The regions are so remote
 and
 vast that Africa's relatively small, under-equipped
 and underpaid security forces have difficulty
 controlling them.
 
 U.S. authorities also want to ensure that terrorists
 don't ply the same paths criminals and smugglers
 still
 use - centuries-old trade routes that crisscross the
 Sahara desert.
 
 In 2003, U.S. forces began training armies in Mali,
 Niger, Mauritania and Chad as part of a U.S. State
 Department-funded program called the Pan-Sahel
 Initiative to help guard porous borders against
 terrorists and arms- and drug-trafficking. The Sahel
 straddles the southern edge of the Sahara desert.
 
 EUCOM pushed to expand the initial $6 million
 program
 to Algeria, Tunisia, Morocco, Nigeria and Senegal
 and
 massively boosted its budget. It is now called the
 Trans-Sahara Counter-Terrorism Initiative, and is
 expected to be funded with $100 million a year for
 five years.
 
 This year's Flintlock exercises are divided into two
 phases, Silkman said. In the first - in Chad,
 Mauritania, Mali, Niger and Algeria - 12-man U.S.
 special forces teams conduct infantry training with
 African units. These include live-fire rifle
 marksmanship, first aid, border patrol and airborne
 operations. They also instruct on human rights and
 the
 laws of land warfare.
 
 On June 16, officials from all nine countries will
 participate in a "command post exercise" in which
 they'll be given a terrorism scenario and be asked
 to
 solve it together. The aim, Silkman said, is to
 improve collaboration between governments to keep
 terrorists from seeking sanctuary in the region.
 
 "You're not going to be able to eradicate all kinds
 of
 radical terrorism, that's clear," Silkman said. "But
 realistically, what we're trying to do is get the
 countries to work together so that we can deny ...
 lines of communication, sanctuary, sustenance of any
 kind, be that water or food."
 
 "If the terrorists or would-be terrorists are denied
 those things, then it's a safer environment for
 Africans and Africans are onboard with that. That's
 why they're coming to this exercise," she said.
 
 ___
 
 On the Net:
 
 U.S. European Command: http://www.eucom.mil
 
     





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