Not to mention the oil. Nor, I suppose, the jatropha plantations. :-(

-----

http://www.washingtontimes.com/world/20070430-124131-8532r.htm
 - World - The Washington Times, America's Newspaper
U.S. force aims to secure Africa

By Jason Motlagh
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
April 30, 2007

The United States hopes by year's end to establish an Africa Command 
that will anchor military operations across a continent seen to be of 
increasing strategic importance and threatened by transnational 
terrorists.
    The new force, known informally as AfriCom, will preside over all 
countries on the continent except Egypt and is expected to be 
operational by the fall, according to Pentagon officials. They say it 
is needed to secure vast, lawless areas where terrorists have sought 
safe haven to regroup and threaten U.S. interests.
    "Part of the rationale behind the development of this command is 
clearly the growing emergence of the strategic importance of Africa 
from a global ... security and economic standpoint," Rear Adm. Robert 
Moeller, head of the Africa Command Transition Team, said earlier 
this month. "This allows us to work more closely with our African 
partners to ... enhance the stability across the continent."
    Plans for such a force were first disclosed in April 2004, but it 
was not until February this year that Defense Secretary Robert M. 
Gates laid out the scope of the new command.
    AfriCom will initially operate as part of the Stuttgart, 
Germany-based European Command before becoming independent at the end 
of 2008. It will be a "unified combatant command" that includes 
branches of the military along with civilians from the departments of 
Defense, State and Agriculture, among others, according to Adm. 
Moeller.
    The force will deal with peacekeeping, humanitarian aid missions, 
military training and support of African partner countries. A 
headquarters location has yet to be determined.
    The United States now maintains five military commands worldwide, 
with Africa divided among three of them: EuCom covers 43 countries 
across North and sub-Saharan Africa; Central Command oversees East 
Africa, including the restive Horn of Africa; and Pacific Command 
looks after Madagascar.
    In 2001, CentCom established a task force in the Horn to track 
down al Qaeda terrorists and monitor instability in Somalia. It has 
since expanded to conduct humanitarian missions in the region.
    EuCom directs a seven-year, $500 million counterterrorism 
initiative that provides military and developmental aid to nine 
Saharan countries deemed vulnerable to groups looking to establish 
Afghanistan-style training grounds and carry out other illicit 
activities.
    The main target of U.S. Special Forces training African troops 
has been the Algeria-based Salafist Group for Call and Combat. The 
group withered after a crackdown by Algerian authorities and a 
state-sponsored amnesty program, but a new al Qaeda-linked offshoot 
claimed responsibility for the April 11 Algiers suicide bombings that 
killed more than 30 people.
    U.S. military officials say there is evidence that a quarter of 
suicide bombers in Iraq are from North Africa. Other jihadists are 
said to have traveled as far as Afghanistan to receive training 
before returning home to Africa to sow trouble.
    However, the initiative is not welcome in every African country. 
Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, quoted in the Libyan daily Al-Fajr 
Al-Jadid, said at a conference in Chad last week that such a force 
was neither wanted nor needed.
    "We told [the Americans] we do not need military aircraft flying 
over, nor do we need military bases," he reportedly said. "We are in 
need of economic elements and an economic support. If your support to 
us is military intervention, then we do not need you, nor your help."
    Some Western critics worry that a military-based policy on the 
continent could breed radicalism where it scarcely exists by 
sustaining despotic regimes that usurp funding and military hardware 
to tighten their grip on power.
    A 2005 report by the International Crisis Group, a Brussels-based 
think tank, said the Saharan region is "not a terrorist hotbed," and 
warned that some governments try to elicit U.S. aid while using the 
"war on terror" to justify human rights abuses.
    U.S. officials insist the new AfriCom will not result in a 
large-scale deployment of U.S. forces on the continent. Instead, they 
want to place "a greater mix of diplomatic, developmental and 
economic experts" on the ground. Current estimates are for about 
1,000 personnel, on par with other regional commands.
    "The goal is for AfriCom not to be a U.S. leadership role on the 
continent," said Ryan Henry, deputy undersecretary of defense for 
policy, who spoke with reporters in Washington last week after 
returning from a "fact-finding" trip to Africa.
    "We would be looking to complement rather than compete with any 
leadership efforts currently going on."


_______________________________________________
Biofuel mailing list
Biofuel@sustainablelists.org
http://sustainablelists.org/mailman/listinfo/biofuel_sustainablelists.org

Biofuel at Journey to Forever:
http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html

Search the combined Biofuel and Biofuels-biz list archives (50,000 messages):
http://www.mail-archive.com/biofuel@sustainablelists.org/

Reply via email to