"There are enough indications, from a security perspective, to justify
caution and greater Western involvement. However, the Sahel is not a
hotbed of terrorist activity. A misconceived and heavy handed approach
could tip the scale the wrong way; serious, balanced, and long-term
engagement with the four countries should keep the region peaceful. An
effective counter-terrorism policy there needs to address the threat
in the broadest terms, with more development than military aid and
greater U.S.-European collaboration." 

ISLAMIST TERRORISM IN THE SAHEL: FACT OF FICTION?

► http://www.crisisgroup.org/home/index.cfm?id=3347&f=1
► International Crisis Group

Jul 27 2005 ► Mar 31. The Sahel, a vast region bordering the Sahara
Desert and including the countries of Mali, Niger, Chad and
Mauritania, is increasingly referred to by the U.S. military as "the
new front in the war on terrorism". There are enough indications, from
a security perspective, to justify caution and greater Western
involvement. However, the Sahel is not a hotbed of terrorist activity.
A misconceived and heavy handed approach could tip the scale the wrong
way; serious, balanced, and long-term engagement with the four
countries should keep the region peaceful. An effective
counter-terrorism policy there needs to address the threat in the
broadest terms, with more development than military aid and greater
U.S.-European collaboration. 
There are disparate strands of information out of which a number of
observers, including the U.S. military, have read the potential threat
of violent Islamist activity in the four Sahelian countries covered by
the Americans' Pan-Sahel Initiative (PSI). There is some danger in
this, but in this region, few things are ex-actly what they seem at
first glance. Mauritania, which calls itself an Islamic republic,
harshly suppresses Islamist activities of any kind, while Mali, a star
pupil of 1990s neo-liberal democratisation, runs the great-est risk of
any West African country other than Nigeria of violent Islamist
activity. Those who believe pov-erty breeds religious fanaticism will
be disappointed in Niger, the world's second poorest country, whose
government has maintained its tradition of tolerant Sufi Islam by
holding to an unambiguous line on sepa-ration of religion and the state. 
The prospects for growth in Islamist activity in the region -- up to
and including terrorism -- are delicately balanced. Muslim populations
in West Africa, as elsewhere, express increasing opposition to
Western, especially U.S., policy in the Middle East, and there has
been a parallel increase in fundamentalist prose-lytisation. However,
these developments should not be overestimated. Fundamentalist Islam
has been present in the Sahel for over 60 years without being linked
to anti-Western violence. The Algerian Salafi Group for Preaching and
Combat (GSPC), which lost 43 militants in a battle with Chad's army in
2004 after being chased across borders by PSI-trained troops, has been
seriously weakened in Algeria and Mali by the combined efforts of
Algerian and Sahelian armed forces.
The U.S. military is a new factor in this delicate balance. Its
operations in the four countries are orches-trated by the European
Command (EUCOM) headquarters in Stuttgart, Germany. In the absence of
Con-gressional willingness to fund a serious engagement by other parts
of the government, the Pentagon has become a major player by
emphasising the prospect of terrorism, though military planners
themselves recognise the inherent dangers in a purely military
counter-terrorism program. 
With the U.S. heavily committed in other parts of the world, however,
Washington is unlikely to devote substantial non-military resources to
the Sahel soon, even though Africa is slowly gaining recognition --
not least due to West Africa's oil -- as an area of strategic interest
to the West. The resultant equation is laden with risks, including
turning the small number of arrested clerics and militants into
martyrs, thus giving ammunition to local anti-American or anti-Western
figures who claim the PSI (and the proposed, expanded Trans-Saharan
Counter Terrorism Initiative (TSCTI) still under consideration in the
U.S. gov-ernment) is part of a larger plan to render Muslim
populations servile; and cutting off smuggling networks that have
become the economic lifeblood of Saharan peoples whose livestock was
devastated by the droughts of the 1970s and 1980s, without offering
economic alternatives. To avoid creating the kinds of problems the PSI
is meant to solve, it needs to be folded into a more balanced approach
to the region, one also in which Europeans and Americans work more
closely together.

Recommendations to the U.S. Government:

1. Establish a healthier balance between military and civilian
programs in the Sahel, including by:
(a) opening USAID offices in the capitals of Mauritania, Niger and Chad;
(b) tailoring significant development programs to nomadic populations
in northern Mali, with emphasis on roads and livestock infrastructure
(wells and regional slaughterhouses); and
(c) promoting tourist infrastructure in such historic places of
interest as Timbuktu, and Agadez,helping to diminish smuggling by
offering Tuareg populations viable economic alternatives.
2. Continue to provide training and equipment to improve customs and
immigration surveillance at all airports in the region, both national
and international.
3. Seek cooperative diplomatic and developmental assistance
relationships with the Europeans in order to take advantage of their
experience in the Sahelian region.
4. Coordinate its own military capacity-building training with NATO's
Mediterranean Dialogue and France's RECAMP program, in order to
multiply effectiveness and diminish perceptions of an American-
only venture. 

To Donors:
5. Treat development and counter-terrorism as interlinked issues in
the Sahelian region, rewarding governments for showing courage on
religious policy (as in Niger) and making up the difference if 
already extremely limited social services are further reduced by cuts
in Islamic NGO funding.
To NATO:
6. Consider making military capacity-building more multilateral by
extending the Mediterranean Dialogue beyond Mauritania to Mali, Niger,
and Chad.
To the EU:
7. Share regional expertise more actively with the U.S. and coordinate
both military capacity-building and development assistance programs
with it. 
To the Government of Mali:
8. Begin negotiations with Tuareg communities where military posts
were closed in order to reinstate government presence, possibly using
a majority of Tuareg troops to do so. 
9. Focus development aid in the north on two sectors, -- livestock and
tourism -- both of which need significant investments in
infrastructure, beginning with roads, to become viable.






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