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Update: Operations in the Sahel



By Scott Morgan

Within the last fortnight two events have taken place in the Sahel that should have analysts both intrigued and concerned: the first event took place in Niger (a State of Emergency now exists in the provinces adjoining the border with Burkina Faso since December 1st). There have also been a series of low intensity attacks in recent weeks in Burkina. Several factors are at play in this situation being one one of them economic - others include spillover from Mali and blowback from Libya.



Most thought their concerns were the borders with Mali and with other nations facing issues such as Ivory Coast and Togo. Several EU nations supporting the Peacekeeping Mission in Mali, such as Germany, are using Niger as a logistics base for their troops supporting the mission. The United States flies UAVs from Niger in support of several Operations in the region as well.

Burkina Faso is a member of the Sahel G5 (Along with Niger, Mali, Mauritania and Chad) that has been receiving assistance from the EU, the United States and other actors with counterterrorism operations. Recent events indicate that despite the programs being currently used in the country, the Government is on shaky ground. How this is brought to a resolution is yet to be determined. That being said, the longer this is allowed to fester the more unstable the region is more likely to become.

The Role of Algeria

The other major surprise which has not caught the International Media's attention is the discovery made on December 7th by the Algerian Security Forces near their southern border with Mali: a cache of eleven anti-tank missiles was discovered (near Bordj Badji Mokhtar ). Over the last month, previous searches in this area uncovered an additional cache containing 41 anti-tank missiles, another raid uncovered a cache of ammunition that included 20 mortar rounds and 120 kg of ammonium nitrate. The Algerian Military has been patrolling the borders with Mali, Niger, Libya and Tunisia to prevent terrorist infiltration and arms smuggling.

Algeria is of concern for a couple of reasons: the Sahelian Islamist Movements (that created roots during the turbulent period of the 1990s when the country was ruled by the Military) and the health of President Bouteflika. The President is expected to run for a fifth term of office despite recent images showing him to be in frail health.

2018 appears to be heading out like a lion to transplant another metaphor into this discussion. Events in the Central African Republic and the Nigerian Elections most likely will be impacted by events coming from this part of the Sahel. How the regional governments and their western backers will react to them will determine how 2019 goes….

(Image: Sahel[Ed] - Google Images)

[The views expressed in this publication are solely those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of Dissecting Society. © 2007-2018 Author(s) ALL RIGHTS RESERVED]


This post first appeared on Dissecting Society, please read the originial post: here

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Update: Operations in the Sahel

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