CounterPunch/Dissident Voice/Global Research
by Ben Schreiner
The French military
intervention into Mali on Friday — France’s second in as many years into a
former African colony — was reportedly “seconded” by the United States. This ought to come as
no great surprise, given the Pentagon’s deepening penetration into Africa.
According to the U.S.
Africa Command (AFRICOM), the Pentagon plans on deploying soldiers to 35
different African countries in 2013. As NPR reports, upwards of 4,000 U.S. soldiers will “take part in
military exercises and train African troops on everything from logistics and
marksmanship to medical care.” (The Malian army officer responsible for
the country’s March coup just so happened to have received U.S. military
training.)
Of course, the U.S.
military already has a significant on-the-ground presence in Africa. For
instance, the “busiest Predator drone base outside of the Afghan war zone”
— with 16 drone flights a day — is located at Camp Lemonnier in Djibouti.
But as the Army
Times notes, “the region in many ways remains the Army’s last
frontier.” And in order to satiate the U.S. appetite for global
"power projection," no frontiers are to be left unconquered.
Thus, as a June
report in the Washington Post revealed, the preliminary tentacles of the U.S. military
already extend across Africa. As the paper reported, U.S.
surveillance planes are currently operating out of clandestine bases in Burkina
Faso, Mauritania, Uganda, Ethiopia, Djibouti, and Kenya, with plans afoot to
open a new base in South Sudan.
The Post
reported further that, “the Pentagon is spending $8.1 million to upgrade a
forward operating base and airstrip in Mauritania, on the western edge of the
Sahara. The base is near the border with strife-torn Mali.”
And with such assets
already in place, the Pentagon was in position to not only “second” France’s
intervention into Mali, but, as the New York Times reported, to weigh a “broad range of options to support the
French effort, including enhanced intelligence-sharing and logistics
support.”
Illuminating what
such U.S. support may come to eventually look like in Mali, J. Peter Pham, director of the
Atlantic Council's Africa Center in Washington and a senior strategy advisor to
AFRICOM, commented: "Drone strikes or airstrikes will not
restore Mali's territorial integrity or defeat the Islamists, but they may be
the least bad option." A rather ominous sign, given that employing such
a “least bad option” has already led to the slaying of hundreds of innocents in the U.S. drone campaign.
Of course, much the
same as with the drone campaign, the Pentagon’s push into Africa has come
neatly packaged as an extension of “war on terror.” As a June Army
Times report notes, “Africa, in particular, has emerged as a
greater priority for the U.S. government because terrorist groups there have
become an increasing threat to U.S. and regional security.”
But what intervention
hasn’t come to be justified by employing some variant of the ever handy “war on
terror” refrain? As French President François Hollande declared on
Friday, “The terrorists should know that France will always be there when the
rights of a people, those of Mali who want to live freely and in a democracy,
are at issue.”
“The ideology of our
times, at least when it comes to legitimizing war” Jean Bricmont writes in his
book Humanitarian
Imperialism, “is a certain discourse on human rights and
democracy.” And, we might add, a certain cynical discourse on combating
terror.
Naturally, then,
the notion that the West’s renewed interest in Africa is derived from an
altruistic desire to help African states combat terrorism and establish democracy is rather absurd. It was the NATO
alliance, lest one forgets, that so eagerly aligned with Salifi fighters to
topple Muammar Gaddafi in Libya. Moreover, it is this very same military
alliance that is now simultaneously cheering Salifists in Syria, while
bombing them in the AfPak region, Somalia, Yemen, and now Mali.
Clearly, only those
practicing doublethink stand a chance of comprehending the ever shifting
terrain of the Western “war on terror.”
Indeed, for once the
veils of protecting “democracy” and combating “terror” are lifted, the imperial
face is revealed.
Thus, the imperative
driving the renewed Western interest in Africa, as Conn Hallinan helps explain,
is the race to secure the continent’s vast wealth.
“The U.S. currently
receives about 18 percent of its energy supplies from Africa, a figure that is
slated to rise to 25 percent by 2015,” Hallinan writes. “Africa also
provides about one-third of China’s energy needs, plus copper, platinum, timber
and iron ore.”
What’s more, as
Maximilian Forte contends in Slouching Towards Sirte, “Chinese interest are seen as
competing with the West for access to resources and political influences.
AFRICOM and a range of other U.S. government initiatives are meant to count
this phenomenon.”
And this explains
NATO’s 2011 foray into Libya, which removed a stubborn pan-Africanist
leader threatening to frustrate AFRICOM’s expansion into the Army's
"last
frontier." And this explains the French-led, U.S. supported
intervention into Mali, which serves to forcibly assert Western
interests
further into Africa.
Intervention, we see,
breeds intervention. And as Nick Turse warned back in July, “Mali may only be the beginning and
there’s no telling how any of it will end.”
All that appears
certain is a renewed wave of barbarism, as the scramble for Africa
accelerates.
Read at CounterPunch, Dissident Voice, and Global Research.
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