AFRICOM Related News Clips 7 Dec 11-1

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    United States Africa Command

    Public Affairs Office

    7 December 2011

    USAFRICOM - related news stories

    Good morning. Please find attached news clips related to U.S. Africa Command and

    Africa, along with upcoming events of interest for December 7, 2011.

    Of interest in todays clips:

    Suicide attack in Somalia kills police officers, and more attacks in the south kill others.

    Ugandan officials confirm U.S. troops deploy to fight LRA in south-east CAR.

    In DRC, election results delayed for 48 hours due to technical difficulties. Tensionsremain high as many are bracing for unrest and violence.

    The U.N. toughens its sanctions against Eritrea.

    Provided in text format for remote reading. Links work more effectively when this

    message is viewed as in HTML format.

    U.S. Africa Command Public Affairs

    Please send questions or comments to:[email protected] (+49-711-729-2687)

    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Top News related to U.S. Africa Command and Africa

    Suicide bomber hits Somali capital, dozens killed in South (Reuters)http://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/suicide-bomber-hits-somali-capital-dozens-killed-in-south/

    6 December 2011By Mohamed Ahmed and Richard LoughA suicide bomber struck the Somali capital on Tuesday, the latest in a wave of deadly

    attacks in Mogadishu, and dozens of Islamist rebels and Somali government troops have

    been killed in fighting in the south.

    U.S. troops deploy in LRA rebel hunt: Uganda Army (AFP)

    U.S. Africa Command Public Affairs Office +49(0)[email protected]

    mailto:[email protected]://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/suicide-bomber-hits-somali-capital-dozens-killed-in-south/http://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/suicide-bomber-hits-somali-capital-dozens-killed-in-south/http://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/suicide-bomber-hits-somali-capital-dozens-killed-in-south/http://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/suicide-bomber-hits-somali-capital-dozens-killed-in-south/mailto:[email protected]
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    http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5i22DCljw814O0FYw2PKlwUSh

    e_rQ?docId=CNG.e611ebd178808f855c88ccddb02d23b7.f16 December 2011

    By Max Delany

    US troops have begun a region-wide hunt for fighters from the Lord's Resistance Army, a

    Ugandan-born group that has been killing, raping and looting for years, the Ugandanarmy said Tuesday.

    US Commandos venture into Konys killing fields (The Monitor-Uganda)http://www.monitor.co.ug/News/National/-/688334/1285462/-/bg6kk1z/-/7 December 2011

    By Tabu ButagiraDozens of US Special Forces have established a frontline base in Obo, southeastern

    Central African Republic (CAR), to help regional armies in a final push to remove LRA

    leader Joseph Kony and his commanders from the battlefield.

    DR Congo election results delayed by 48 hours (BBC)http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-160591547 December 2011

    Publication of presidential election results in the DR Congo has been delayed by 48 hours

    because of technical difficulties, officials say.

    Kinshasa tense ahead of DRC vote result (Al Jazeera)http://www.aljazeera.com/news/africa/2011/12/2011126709613817.html6 December 2011

    By Azad Essa

    The winner of last week's presidential election in the Democratic Republic of Congo(DRC)is due to be named on Tuesday, stirring fears of new unrest in the conflict-prone

    country.

    UN toughens Eritrea sanctions over efforts to destabilise neighbors(France 24)http://www.france24.com/en/20111205-un-toughens-sanctions-eritrea-efforts-destabilise-

    neighbours-somalia-shabaab-islamists

    5 December 2011News WiresThe UN Security Council voted Monday for stricter sanctions on Eritrea, including

    extending travel bans and a freeze on assets, over its support for al Shabaab Islamistmilitants in Somalia and its "efforts to destabilise" regional states.

    Horn of Africa crisis may last into summer: EU (Reuters)

    http://af.reuters.com/article/topNews/idAFJOE7B50A820111206

    6 December 2011

    By Emma Bartha

    U.S. Africa Command Public Affairs Office +49(0)[email protected]

    http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5i22DCljw814O0FYw2PKlwUShe_rQ?docId=CNG.e611ebd178808f855c88ccddb02d23b7.f1http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5i22DCljw814O0FYw2PKlwUShe_rQ?docId=CNG.e611ebd178808f855c88ccddb02d23b7.f1http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-16052353http://www.monitor.co.ug/News/National/-/688334/1285462/-/bg6kk1z/-/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-16052353http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-16059154http://www.aljazeera.com/news/africa/2011/12/2011126709613817.htmlhttp://www.france24.com/en/20111205-un-toughens-sanctions-eritrea-efforts-destabilise-neighbours-somalia-shabaab-islamistshttp://www.france24.com/en/20111205-un-toughens-sanctions-eritrea-efforts-destabilise-neighbours-somalia-shabaab-islamistshttp://www.france24.com/en/20111205-un-toughens-sanctions-eritrea-efforts-destabilise-neighbours-somalia-shabaab-islamistshttp://af.reuters.com/article/topNews/idAFJOE7B50A820111206http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5i22DCljw814O0FYw2PKlwUShe_rQ?docId=CNG.e611ebd178808f855c88ccddb02d23b7.f1http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5i22DCljw814O0FYw2PKlwUShe_rQ?docId=CNG.e611ebd178808f855c88ccddb02d23b7.f1http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-16052353http://www.monitor.co.ug/News/National/-/688334/1285462/-/bg6kk1z/-/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-16052353http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-16059154http://www.aljazeera.com/news/africa/2011/12/2011126709613817.htmlhttp://www.france24.com/en/20111205-un-toughens-sanctions-eritrea-efforts-destabilise-neighbours-somalia-shabaab-islamistshttp://www.france24.com/en/20111205-un-toughens-sanctions-eritrea-efforts-destabilise-neighbours-somalia-shabaab-islamistshttp://af.reuters.com/article/topNews/idAFJOE7B50A820111206
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    The crisis in Horn of Africa which has left more than 13 million people at risk of

    starvation will continue into the spring, and possibly the summer, the European Union's

    top aid official said on Tuesday.

    Well be tough with the big boys (Reporting Development Network

    Africa)http://allafrica.com/stories/printable/201112060697.html6 December 2011

    By Suleiman Mustapha

    Ghanas Environment and Science Minister, Sherry Ayittey has warned that the 54

    African countries at the UN climate change conference in Durban will not be bullied into

    making concessions to the developed countries at the expense of the African poor.

    Opinion: Continent lies naked to Euro-American Military Offensive (Zimbabwe

    Herald)

    http://allafrica.com/stories/201112060286.html

    6 December 2011

    By Glen Ford

    The United States and its allies, principally the French, are positioned to 'take' much of

    the continent with the collaboration of most of its governments." The US and its allies are

    engaged in an Asian and African offensive, a multi-pronged assault thinly camouflaged

    as humanitarian intervention that, in some regions, looks like a blitzkrieg.

    ###------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    UN News Service Africa Briefshttp://www.un.org/apps/news/region.asp?Region=AFRICA

    UN relief fund allocates $6 million to alleviate food crisis in Niger

    6 December The United Nations relief chief today announced the allocation of $6

    million from the world bodys humanitarian fund to support efforts to alleviate the

    suffering of millions of people facing severe food shortages in Niger.

    Dozens killed in latest round of ethnic violence in South Sudan UN mission

    6 December The United Nations peacekeeping operation in South Sudan is

    investigating the causes of another spasm of ethnic violence in the new country that has

    reportedly killed dozens of villagers and displaced many more.

    Congolese post-election violence will not be tolerated, ICC prosecutor warns

    6 December As the people of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) await the

    results of last weeks presidential and legislative elections, the prosecutor of the

    International Criminal Court (ICC) warned today that any outbreak of poll-related

    violence will be investigated and those found responsible prosecuted.

    U.S. Africa Command Public Affairs Office +49(0)[email protected]

    http://allafrica.com/stories/20112060697.htmlhttp://allafrica.com/stories/201112060286.htmlhttp://www.un.org/apps/news/region.asp?Region=AFRICAhttp://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=40645&Cr=+niger+&Cr1=http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=40641&Cr=south+sudan&Cr1=http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=40636&Cr=democratic&Cr1=congohttp://allafrica.com/stories/20112060697.htmlhttp://allafrica.com/stories/201112060286.htmlhttp://www.un.org/apps/news/region.asp?Region=AFRICAhttp://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=40645&Cr=+niger+&Cr1=http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=40641&Cr=south+sudan&Cr1=http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=40636&Cr=democratic&Cr1=congo
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    (Full Articles on UN Website)

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    Upcoming Events of Interest:

    Wednesday, 7 DEC 2011

    WHAT: Center for Strategic & International Studies (CSIS) Discussion on"Future of America's Expeditionary Force in Readiness."WHEN: 9:00 - 11:30 a.m.

    Keynote address by General Joseph F. Dunford, Jr., Assistant Commandant of the U.S.

    Marine Corps; other speakers: Thomas Donnelly, American Enterprise Institute; AndrewHoehn, RAND Corporation; Lieutenant General Robert Blackman, U.S. Marine Corps

    (Ret); Lieutenant General James Dubik, U.S. Army (Ret); and Nathan Freier

    (Moderator), Center for Strategic and International Studies.WHERE: CSIS, 1800 K Street, NW

    CONTACT: 202-887-0200; web site: www.csis.org

    SOURCE: CSIS - event announcement at: http://csis.org/event/military-strategy-forum-

    general-joseph-f-dunford-jr

    WHAT: New America Foundation (NAF) Discussion on Which WayForward for Egypt?WHEN: 12:15 1:45 p.m.

    SPEAKERS: Featured Speakers: Randa Fahmy, Vice President, Egyptian American Rule

    of Law Association; Nathan Brown, Professor, Political Science & International Affairs,

    George Washington University, Nonresident Senior Associate, Carnegie Endowment forInternational Peace; Michael Wahid Hanna, Fellow, The Century Foundation (will have

    just returned from Egypt); and Moderator, Leila Hilal, Co-Director, Middle East TaskForce, New America Foundation.

    WHERE: NAF, 1899 L Street, NW, Suite 400

    CONTACT: 202-986-2700; web site: www.newamerica.net

    SOURCE: NAF event announcement at:http://newamerica.net/events/2011/which_way_forward_for_egypt

    WHAT: U.S. Institute of Peace Discussion on The United States Effortsto Combat the Lord's Resistance Army.

    WHEN: 2:00 3:30 p.m.SPEAKERS: Johnnie Carson, Featured Speaker, Assistant Secretary of State, U.S.

    Bureau for African Affairs; Ambassador William M. Bellamy Director, Africa Center for

    Strategic Studies; Michael Poffenberger, Co-founder & Executive Director, Resolve;Ambassador George E. Moose, Welcoming Remarks, Vice Chairman of the Board of

    Directors, U.S. Institute of Peace; and Raymond Gilpin, Moderator, Director, Sustainable

    Economies, U.S. Institute of Peace.WHERE: USIP, 2301 Constitution Avenue, NW

    U.S. Africa Command Public Affairs Office +49(0)[email protected]

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    CONTACT: 202-457-1700; web site: www.usip.org

    SOURCE: USIP event announcement at: http://www.usip.org/events/the-united-states-

    efforts-combat-the-lords-resistance-army

    WHAT: Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS)

    Johns Hopkins University Discussion on The Arab Awakening: HowShould the West Respond?WHEN: 4:00 p.m.SPEAKERS: Jose Maria Aznar, distinguished fellow at the SAIS Center for Transatlantic

    Relations (CTR) and former president of the government of Spain; William A. Taylor,

    Special Coordinator for Middle East Transitions at the U.S. Department of State andformer U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine; Marcin Zaborowski, Director of the Polish Institute

    for International Affairs; and Maurizio Molinari, correspondent for La Stampe.

    WHERE: SAIS, Kenney Auditorium, Nitze Building, 1740 Massachusetts Avenue, NWCONTACT: Felisa Neuringer Klubes at 202-663-5626, [email protected] ; web site:

    www.sais-jhu.edu

    SOURCE: SAIS event announcement at: http://www.sais-jhu.edu/calendar/index.htm

    Thursday, 8 DEC 2011

    WHAT: Middle East Institute (MEI) publication launch and discussion onThe Arab Spring: Implications for U.S. Policy and Interests.WHEN: 12:00 1:30 p.m.

    SPEAKERS: Allen Keiswetter, Principal Coordinator and author with Charles Dunne;Ambassador Art Hughes; and Ambassador Molly Williamson.

    WHERE: SEIU Building, Room 2600, 2nd floor, 1800 Massachusetts Avenue, NW

    CONTACT: 202-785-1141 or [email protected]; web site: www.mei.edu

    SOURCE: MEI event announcement at:http://www.mei.edu/Events/Calendar/tabid/504/vw/3/ItemID/371/d/20111208/Default.as

    px

    WHAT: Discussion on Climate Change and Agricultural AdaptationWHEN: Thursday, December 8, 2011, 3:30 p.m. 5:30 p.m. (RSVP by Dec. 7)

    WHO: Speakers: David Lobell, Stanford University Professor and Fatima Denton

    (commentator) Team Leader at Climate Change Adaptation in Africa (ACCA)WHERE: Bechtel Conference Center, Encina Hall, Stanford University

    CONTACT: 650-723-4920 or e-mail: Ashley Dean, [email protected]

    Media contact: http://events.stanford.edu/events/299/29933/

    ###

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    New on www.africom.mil

    AIDS Prevention and Testing Center Benefits Tunisians

    U.S. Africa Command Public Affairs Office +49(0)[email protected]

    http://www.africom.mil/http://www.africom.mil/
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    By Toni Metcalfe-El Abed

    Office of Security Cooperation, Tunisia

    TUNIS, Tunisia, Dec 2, 2011 On the occasion of World AIDS Day, U.S. Ambassadorto Tunisia Gordon Gray inaugurated a new AIDS prevention and testing center built for

    the benefit of the Tunisian Association for the Prevention of AIDS and Sexually

    Transmissible Diseases (ATL/MST SIDA).

    ###------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    FULL TEXT

    Suicide bomber hits Somali csapital, dozens killed in South (Reuters)http://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/suicide-bomber-hits-somali-capital-dozens-killed-in-

    south/

    6 December 2011

    By Mohamed Ahmed and Richard Lough

    MOGADISHU/NAIROBI, Dec 6 (Reuters) - A suicide bomber struck the Somali capital

    on Tuesday, the latest in a wave of deadly attacks in Mogadishu, and dozens of Islamist

    rebels and Somali government troops have been killed in fighting in the south.

    The car bomb exploded 50 metres from the recently reopened Turkish embassy, near to

    the Kilometre 4 (K4) junction, a busy intersection in Mogadishu's administrative district.

    A health official said at least three people were killed by the blast.

    The suicide attack piles yet more pressure on a Western-backed government that relies on

    African Union troops to prop it up and fight an insurgency by Islamist militants whocontrol virtually all of Somalia outside Mogadishu.

    Witnesses told Reuters that the security forces stopped the vehicle earlier, before moving

    the car to a quieter sideroad.

    "The troops tried to question the driver and take photographs when the suicide bomber

    detonated his bomb," Abdiweli Elmi, a policeman on patrol at the junction said.

    Two policemen and one civilian were killed, Elmi said.

    A Reuters witness said human body parts could be seen around the ripped-apart car and

    security forces fired into the air to disperse the crowds.

    There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack. Suspicion is likely to fall

    on al Shabaab rebels.

    U.S. Africa Command Public Affairs Office +49(0)[email protected]

    http://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/suicide-bomber-hits-somali-capital-dozens-killed-in-south/http://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/suicide-bomber-hits-somali-capital-dozens-killed-in-south/http://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/suicide-bomber-hits-somali-capital-dozens-killed-in-south/http://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/suicide-bomber-hits-somali-capital-dozens-killed-in-south/
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    The al Qaeda-linked militants, who have fought the government since 2007, have

    intensified the frequency of suicide attacks in Mogadishu since withdrawing from most of

    their bases in the capital in August.

    A Turkish government official said the target of the attack was unknown. None of

    Turkey's embassy staff hurt.

    Turkey was the first state from outside the immediate region to open an embassy in

    Mogadishu.

    Its interests have been the target of violent incidents since Prime Minister Tayyip

    Erdogan visited Mogadishu in August. Erdogan was the first leader from outside Africa

    to visit the capital for nearly two decades.

    HEAVY FIGHTING, AIR STRIKES

    The rebels, who control large swathes of Somalia, are also fighting against Somali

    government and Kenyan troops in the rebel-controlled southern and central parts of the

    country. Ethiopian forces have also crossed into Somalia.

    More than 40 militants and 11 Somali government troops were killed in weekend fighting

    in the town of Hayo, between the Kenyan border and the al Shabaab stronghold of

    Afmadow in southern Somalia, a Kenyan military spokesman said on Tuesday.

    Emmanuel Chirchir said Kenyan jets had also launched air strikes on al Shabaab bases on

    Monday, and that it was too early to give an assessment of damage.

    Kenya is eight weeks into an offensive inside Somalia to crush rebel networks but the

    military campaign has become bogged down by heavy rains and lack of clear strategy,

    diplomats say.

    "(Kenyan) jets targeted two al Shabaab camps south of Afmadow town, killing a number

    of al Shabaab fighters, and destroyed technical vehicles," Chirchir said, referring to the

    machinegun-mounted trucks used by the militants.

    A lawmaker from Somalia's Lower Juba region that borders Kenya and nearby residents

    said al Shabaab had only clung on to Hayo for a few hours before government troops

    regained control.

    The Kenyan government agreed on Tuesday that its force in southern Somalia should

    become part of the AU peacekeeping force (AMISOM) in the anarchic country.

    Earlier this month, Kenya offered to boost AMISOM, which numbers about 9,400 and is

    made up of troops from Uganda and Burundi. Both the AU and regional bloc IGAD said

    they supported the idea of integrating the Kenyan soldiers.

    U.S. Africa Command Public Affairs Office +49(0)[email protected]

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    "The cabinet ... approved the re-hatting of the Kenya Defence Forces in Somalia to

    AMISOM, subject to approval by parliament," the president's office said.

    "This has been done at the request of the African Union to enhance a combined strategy

    for the operation against al Shabaab," it said in a statement.

    However, analysts said it might not be that straightforward for Kenyan soldiers to

    become part of AMISOM - unless Nairobi is prepared to contribute the cost of its mission

    in Somalia.

    If Kenya wants AMISOM to help fund its operation on the ground as part of the African

    Union force, the U.N. Security Council would need to approve extra funding, analysts

    said.

    The AMISOM force is also capped at 12,000 soldiers. Uganda, Burundi and Djibouti

    have already committed to raising troop numbers to the mandated ceiling by early next

    year. Raising that limit cap would require a vote at the U.N.'s Security Council.

    (Additional reporting by Abdi Sheikh in Mogadishu, Sahra Abdi in Nairobi and Jonathon

    Burch in Ankara; Writing by Richard Lough; Editing by Louise Ireland)

    ###

    U.S. troops deploy in LRA rebel hunt: Uganda Army (AFP)http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5i22DCljw814O0FYw2PKlwUShe_rQ?docId=CNG.e611ebd178808f855c88ccddb02d23b7.f16 December 2011

    By Max Delany

    ENTEBBE, Uganda US troops have begun a region-wide hunt for fighters from the

    Lord's Resistance Army, a Ugandan-born group that has been killing, raping and looting

    for years, the Ugandan army said Tuesday.

    US President Barack Obama in October sent 100 special forces soldiers to help Uganda

    track down LRA chief and international fugitive Joseph Kony, who has wreaked havoc

    over four nations for more than two decades.

    "They (US troops) are there and they are setting up their bases," said Ugandan army

    spokesman Felix Kulayigye.

    US troops had deployed to Obo in the Central African Republic and Nzara in South

    Sudan, where Uganda's army has forward bases to battle the rebel group, Kulayigye said,

    but gave no details of the numbers of troops sent.

    U.S. Africa Command Public Affairs Office +49(0)[email protected]

    http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5i22DCljw814O0FYw2PKlwUShe_rQ?docId=CNG.e611ebd178808f855c88ccddb02d23b7.f1http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5i22DCljw814O0FYw2PKlwUShe_rQ?docId=CNG.e611ebd178808f855c88ccddb02d23b7.f1http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-16052353http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5i22DCljw814O0FYw2PKlwUShe_rQ?docId=CNG.e611ebd178808f855c88ccddb02d23b7.f1http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5i22DCljw814O0FYw2PKlwUShe_rQ?docId=CNG.e611ebd178808f855c88ccddb02d23b7.f1http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-16052353
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    Some of the US troops staged a training exercise Tuesday with Ugandan airforce crews in

    Entebbe, about 35 kilometres (21 miles) west of the capital Kampala, on how to package

    supplies to be air dropped to frontline troops.

    Previously Uganda had to rely on supplies being ferried in by helicopter to specified

    landing sites but will now be able to be resupplied without having to return to base,Kulayigye said.

    A US official, speaking to AFP here on condition of anonymity because he was not

    authorised to talk to the press, confirmed that some troops had arrived in affected areas

    but could not say where exactly the troops were located.

    The rebels currently number several hundred, a fraction of their strength at their peak but

    still include a core of hardened fighters infamous for mutilating civilians and abducting

    children for soldiers and sex-slaves.

    The majority of US troops will be based in Uganda while a smaller number will be basedin jungle areas in neighbouring countries to advise regional armies tracking the rebels,

    US officials say.

    The US state department currently gives $17 million each year to cover the cost of

    transporting Ugandan forces to the conflict zone.

    Tens of thousands of people have been killed since Kony took up arms in the late 1980s,

    initially against the Ugandan government.

    The International Criminal Court has a warrant against Kony, one of the continent's most

    wanted men.

    Driven out of Uganda, the guerrillas have since scattered across a vast region of the

    Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of Congo and South Sudan, recruiting

    fighters from those nations over the years.

    The LRA emerged from the frustrations of Uganda's marginalised Acholi ethnic group

    against the government, but its leaders have since dropped their national political agenda

    for the narrow objective of pillage and plunder.

    US Commandos venture into Konys killing fields (The Monitor-Uganda)http://www.monitor.co.ug/News/National/-/688334/1285462/-/bg6kk1z/-/7 December 2011

    By Tabu Butagira

    U.S. Africa Command Public Affairs Office +49(0)[email protected]

    http://www.monitor.co.ug/News/National/-/688334/1285462/-/bg6kk1z/-/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-16052353http://www.monitor.co.ug/News/National/-/688334/1285462/-/bg6kk1z/-/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-16052353
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    Dozens of US Special Forces have established a frontline base in Obo, southeastern

    Central African Republic (CAR), to help regional armies in a final push to remove LRA

    leader Joseph Kony and his commanders from the battlefield.

    Revelations about the deployment at the frontier enclave with Democratic Republic of

    Congo and South Sudan, emerged as a senior Ugandan military officer said Kony ishiding in CAR. The undulating terrain, said UPDF spokesman Felix Kulayigye, made

    worse by dense forests, shortage of tracking devices and transport infrastructure have

    slowed efforts to capture the rebel commander, wanted by the International Criminal

    Court.

    Col. Kulayigye told journalists yesterday on the sidelines of joint US-UPDF quick-

    packaging-for-airdrop drills at Entebbe Military Airbase, that Kony keeps oscillating

    between border areas of the three countries.

    People we capture (freed captives) tell us in which group he is; and we corroborate the

    information using our field intelligence, the spokesman said.

    Midair supplies

    The airdrop packaging skill, hitherto scarce among Ugandan soldiers, and one now being

    imparted by US troops, is expected to help UPDF execute mid-air conveyance of food,

    arms and other logistics to foot soldiers on LRA trail in the vast jungles.

    This, the military said, will increase operational efficiency and reduce time previously

    wasted when battlefield troops had to trek long distances to designated assembly points to

    replenish stock.

    The ongoing training of UPDF by their American counterparts on logistics managementand air raid techniques, marked by simultaneous amplified flight drills in Entebbe and

    northern Uganda, will have a multiplier effect and enhance the capability for the anti-

    LRA offensive, Col. Kulayigye said.

    President Obama, under pressure from domestic campaigners and lobbyists, and in line

    with the Lords Resistance Army Disarmament and Northern Uganda Recovery Act

    2009, in October this year, ordered deployment of about 100 US Special Forces to

    capture or kill Kony and his commanders.

    It is understood Washington got frustrated that the Ugandan military was not using

    intelligence data passed to it effectively, partly due to inaccurate interpretation and insome cases delays in relaying the information to field commanders. Yet UPDF is the

    most capable army to hunt the rebels.

    A US official said the Special Forces, who are available following end of the Iraq war

    and troops withdrawal from Afghanistan, have deployed to help fix the problem and

    ensure regional armies end the LRA menace.

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    No timeline

    Staff of the US embassy in Kampala took both local and foreign journalists to Entebbe

    Airbase to see firsthand UPDFs newly-acquired skills on packaging for airdrop

    otherwise called Container Delivery Systems.

    Both Ugandan and American officials declined to give a timeline within which they

    expect to remove Kony, who, according to UPDF accounts, has on several occasions

    since 1987, eluded capture and or death, by a whisker.

    ###

    DR Congo election results delayed by 48 hours (BBC)

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-16059154 7 December 2011

    Publication of presidential election results in the DR Congo has been delayed by 48 hours

    because of technical difficulties, officials say.

    The result had been due before the end of President Joseph Kabila's term at 23:00 GMT

    and the opposition say they will not recognise his authority now.

    But a presidential spokeswoman said that a few hours' delay was not a constitutional

    power vacuum.

    Mr Kabila is leading the partial vote count, followed by Etienne Tshisekedi.

    He had 46% of the vote, with MrTshisekedi trailing with 36% with two-thirds of the

    ballots counted.

    The opposition has alleged fraud in what are only the second polls since the 1998-2003

    war ended in DR Congo.

    Fraud allegations

    "As we haven't yet been able to receive the tally sheets from all 60,000 polling stations inthe country, we decided to push back the publication by 48 hours," said Matthieu Mpita,

    the spokesman of the National Independent Electoral Commission.

    "It was our objective to make the deadline," he said, "but we need all the elements."

    U.S. Africa Command Public Affairs Office +49(0)[email protected]

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    Some four million people lost their lives in the conflict and armed groups continue to

    operate in eastern parts of the vast country, which is two-thirds the size of Western

    Europe.

    The BBC's Thomas Hubert in the Congolese capital, Kinshasa, says Mr Tshisekedi's

    supporters insist he has won and are unlikely to accept defeat in polls marred by

    allegations of rigging, including pre-marked ballots.

    DR Congo polls in numbers

    Our correspondent says that though dozens of helicopters were deployed to collect result

    sheets from remote polling stations across the country, bags of unprocessed ballot papers

    and electoral documents were still unprocessed in Kinshasa as the deadline approached.

    Riot police have been patrolling the city amid fears that the expected announcement

    could spark violence, our correspondent says.

    Tear gas has already been used to disperse Mr Tshisekedi's supporters. Many shops in the

    capital remained closed.

    Witnesses also reported heavy police and military deployments as well as curfews in

    several cities across the country.

    According to Human Rights Watch, election violence has already left at least 18 dead and

    more than 100 wounded.

    The International Criminal Court's chief prosecutor issued a warning to the country,

    whose election he said the ICC was watching "very closely".

    "I urge leaders, commanders, and politicians on all sides to calm your supporters.

    Electoral violence is no longer a ticket to power, I assure you. It is a ticket to The

    Hague," Luis Moreno-Ocampo said, according to the Associated Press news agency.

    ###

    Kinshasa tense ahead of DRC vote result (al Jazeera)http://www.aljazeera.com/news/africa/2011/12/2011126709613817.html

    6 December 2011By Azad Essa

    U.S. Africa Command Public Affairs Office +49(0)[email protected]

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    Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo - The winner of last week's presidential

    election in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) is due to be named on Tuesday,

    stirring fears of new unrest in the conflict-prone country.

    The latest result projections, announced early on Tuesday by the country's electoral

    commission, gave Joseph Kabila, the incumbent president, 46.4 per cent with votes fromjust over two-thirds of polling centres counted. His main rival, Etienne Tshisekedi, has

    36.2 per cent.

    But opposition candidates, including Tshisekedi, have rejected the results, claiming that

    the electoral process was a complete sham and calling on supporters to rebuff the results.

    An official from Tshisekedis UDPS party told Al Jazeera that the electoral commission

    "must publish the correct results".

    Meanwhile, doubts remained that the commission would be able to release provisional

    results as expected, as the central counting centre still had thousands of ballot sheets from

    Kinshasa's four constituencies.

    A spokesman for Congo's election commission said that the body was working to release

    results before midnight on Tuesday, as required by law, but a delay may be inevitable if

    tally sheets are not compiled in time.

    Matthieu Mpita told the AP news agency by telephone that helicopters had been

    dispatched to the remote corners of the country to pick up compilation sheets.

    He said the numbers have not been transmitted to the central compilation centre in

    Kinshasa due to a technical glitch with the communications equipment.

    Mpita said, "It's our objective to release the results before midnight tonight," but it

    depends on whether the body gets a full count.

    David Pottie, from the US-based Carter Center monitoring organisation, said that

    completing the count [by Tuesday] would take a "tremendous amount of work".

    Pottie told Al Jazeera that the monitoring team had not completed their assessment of the

    entire electoral process, but had issues with the level of transparency and lack of ready

    information.

    Threat of violence

    Security intensified on Monday in the central business district of Kinshasa, the capital,

    and residents saw an increase in tanks, army personnel and riot police as fears grew of apossible backlash on the streets if Kabila was re-elected in an election which critics say

    was dogged by irregularities.

    At least 18 people have already died in election-related violence in the DRC, according to

    Human Rights Watch.

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    As a precautionary measure against possible clashes in the city, hundreds of Congolese

    flocked to the port on Monday to make a journey across the Congo River to Brazzaville,

    in neighbouring Congo Republic.

    Weekend reports indicated that an estimated 3,000 people had already made the boat trip

    across the river, in expectation of violence brewing in the city.City insiders, however, said only a handful of passengers were boarding the ferry to

    escape and if the situation really deteriorated, the port will most likely be closed and

    people will use any means to cross the river ... but that not happened yet.

    Rike, 24, a manager of a local nightclub in Kinshasa, told Al Jazeera that she was leaving

    for four days because Kinshasa was not the place to be right now.

    Business as usual

    Despite the tension, Kinshasa remained bustling with activity on Monday. Businesses

    were open, the local blue and yellow taxi services ran as per normal and informal traders

    sold their wares, including fruit and clothes on the city streets.

    By early evening, however, the centre of town saw the parade of traffic emptying, with

    locals rushing home or buying last minute groceries under the twilight.

    A manager of a local supermarket in the city centre said that business would open on

    Tuesday, but would probably close early if there were problems.

    Nevertheless, heightened security measures in the city were conspicuous in the absence

    of white UN vehicles on the streets of Kinshasa after dark, a sign that UN agencies and

    certain embassies have issued security warnings to their staff urging them not to travel

    around the city at night.

    But Kinshasa is not the only city reported to be on edge.

    Officials in Mbuji-Mayi, the capital of Kasai-Oriental province where Tshisekedi enjoys

    much support, imposed an overnight curfew. In Lubumbashi, in the southeastern Katanga

    state, the presidential guard has been deployed to deal with security concerns.

    While the threat of violence was palpable in some parts of the capital, some observers

    said suggestions that violence was inevitable were unhelpful and premature.

    It is arrogant to assume that parties are not talking to each other," Anita Vandenveld,Country Director of National Democratic Institute (NDI), told Al Jazeera.

    No one I have spoken to, from any party has expressed any desire for violence, and the

    onset of violence would mean that talks have broken down, she said.

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    On Monday, the UN stabilisation mission in Congo, known as MONUSCO, led a

    delegation of diplomats, including ambassadors from Russia and Gabon to hold talks

    with Tshisekedi.

    On Sunday night, Jacob Zuma, South Africa's president, called the incumbent and two of

    the main opposition leaders, including Tshisekedi and Vital Kamerhe, and impressed onthem the need for sound leadership and unity at this time.

    They assured me of their willingness to co-operate and put the country first," Zuma said

    in a press statement.

    ###

    UN toughens Eritrea sanctions over efforts to destabilise neighbors(France 24)http://www.france24.com/en/20111205-un-toughens-sanctions-eritrea-efforts-destabilise-neighbours-somalia-shabaab-islamists

    5 December 2011

    Agence France Presse

    AFP - The UN Security Council on Monday toughened sanctions against Eritrea after

    East African governments accused the isolated state of plotting terrorist attacks and

    supporting rebel groups.

    A resolution, passed with 13 votes in favor, while Russia and China abstained, allows the

    council to increase the number of individuals and entities that can be hit with a travel ban

    and assets freeze.

    The resolution demands that Eritrea "cease all direct or indirect efforts to destabilize

    states, including through financial, military, intelligence and non-military assistance."

    Eritrea has backed Shebab Islamist militants in Somalia, according to a UN sanctions

    monitoring group and neighboring governments.

    The resolution also "condemns" an alleged Eritrean plot to bomb an African summit in

    Addis Ababa in January.

    However demands made by Gabon and Nigeria, which drew up the resolution, to include

    a ban on investment in Eritrea's key mining industry and a government tax on remittances

    sent back by Eritrean workers abroad were dropped.

    The action was passed after several East African leaders called on the 15-member

    Security Council to clamp down on Eritrea, which was first hit by UN sanctions in 2009.

    U.S. Africa Command Public Affairs Office +49(0)[email protected]

    http://www.france24.com/en/20111205-un-toughens-sanctions-eritrea-efforts-destabilise-neighbours-somalia-shabaab-islamistshttp://www.france24.com/en/20111205-un-toughens-sanctions-eritrea-efforts-destabilise-neighbours-somalia-shabaab-islamistshttp://www.france24.com/en/20111205-un-toughens-sanctions-eritrea-efforts-destabilise-neighbours-somalia-shabaab-islamistshttp://www.france24.com/en/20111205-un-toughens-sanctions-eritrea-efforts-destabilise-neighbours-somalia-shabaab-islamistshttp://www.france24.com/en/20111205-un-toughens-sanctions-eritrea-efforts-destabilise-neighbours-somalia-shabaab-islamists
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    "It is a problem of attitude of a certain clique in Asmara that has never grown up from a

    rebel group," said Ethiopia's Prime Minister Meles Zenawi. "It is a problem of

    lawlessness and reckless disregard for international law."

    "The regime in Eritrea insists on terrorizing my people," said Somalia's President Sharif

    Sheikh Ahmed.

    Eritrea has strongly denied the claims made about its activities. But no Eritrean officials

    spoke at the meetings.

    ###

    After the vote, US ambssador Susan Rice said: "We have sent a clear message to the

    government of Eritrea that it must cease all illegal actions threatening international peace

    and stability."

    "Our goal is to show Eritrea that it will pay an ever higher price for its actions," the US

    envoy added.

    ###

    Horn of Africa crisis may last into summer: EU (Reuters)

    http://af.reuters.com/article/topNews/idAFJOE7B50A820111206

    6 December 2011

    By Emma Bartha

    LONDON (Reuters) - The crisis in Horn of Africa which has left more than 13 million

    people at risk of starvation will continue into the spring, and possibly the summer, theEuropean Union's top aid official said on Tuesday.

    European Humanitarian Aid Commissioner Kristalina Georgieva said the Sahel region

    faced "very dramatic hunger" next year and feared some countries there were ignoring the

    problem.

    The Horn of Africa crisis, triggered by the worst drought in decades, has affected

    Somalia, Ethiopia, Kenya and Djibouti.

    Georgieva said around 250,000 people were at risk of dying from hunger in Somalia,

    where the country's two-decade war has exacerbated the famine.

    The situation is critical in central and southern Somalia where al Qaeda-affiliated al

    Shabaab rebels banned 16 relief agencies last week from areas they control.

    "The crisis is going to be there at least through the spring and possibly all the way to the

    summer," the commissioner told a media briefing in London ahead of talks with British

    development minister Andrew Mitchell.

    U.S. Africa Command Public Affairs Office +49(0)[email protected]

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    Georgieva said she was extremely concerned about the famine's long-term repercussions

    on the region because of the vast numbers of Somalis who had fled to refugee camps in

    Kenya, Ethiopia and Yemen. Instability in Somalia meant they were unlikely to return

    home once the crisis was over.

    The commissioner said there were probably 400,000 to 500,000 Somalis in Yemen, theArab world's poorest country which is also plagued by unrest. The figure is twice the

    official estimate.

    "The flow of refugees from poor country to poor country has stability and security

    implications," she added.

    Georgieva said the famine showed governments and donors must do more to prevent

    droughts becoming full-blown humanitarian crises.

    "The Horn of Africa drought ... is a wake-up call on how much more we need to do to

    anticipate and prevent droughts turning into killers. We cannot stop droughts but we canstop famines," she said.

    FEARS OVER MALI

    Turning to the Sahel, she said the looming hunger crisis there was likely to be even worse

    than that in 2010 because the surrounding region was also expected to suffer food

    problems and would not act as a buffer.

    She said there were even concerns that northern Nigeria could be affected.

    Niger and Mauritania have already issued alerts following erratic rainfall, droughts and

    insect infestations.

    Although they are likely to be the worst-hit countries, Georgieva said both were "looking

    at the problem with open eyes" and taking precautions including stockpiling food.

    "I'm more worried about Mali, and even Burkino Faso, because there seems to be a bit of

    a desire there to wish the crisis away," she said.

    But the commissioner said the crisis in the arid region south of the Sahara desert would

    not be of the magnitude seen in the Horn of Africa, partly because donors were

    mobilising now. The Commission has already provided 55 million euros for the region.

    "Investing now is not only morally the right thing to do, but it will cut costs in the

    future," she added.

    She contrasted the 30 euros it cost to feed a family in Niger for a month to the 220 euros

    it cost to treat just one child with acute malnutrition - a condition which would handicap

    it for life.

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    "It's unfortunate that very often the massive response comes when the crisis is already

    deep and on the six o'clock news," she added. "We have to be ready to act independently

    of the news cycle."

    Georgieva said that in the Horn of Africa the benefits of investing in disaster prevention

    were clear to see in Moyale in northern Kenya.

    The district avoided the worst affects of the drought by installing roofs that allow people

    to store water, setting up mobile clinics to prevent child malnutrition and encouraging

    pastoralists to shrink their herds proportionate to the available grassland.

    "The results are very impressive. The question is why we don't do this everywhere,"

    Georgieva said.

    ###

    Well be tough with the big boys (Reporting Development NetworkAfrica)http://allafrica.com/stories/printable/201112060697.html

    6 December 2011By Suleiman Mustapha

    Ghana's Environment and Science Minister, Sherry Ayittey has warned that the 54

    African countries at the UN climate change conference in Durban will not be bullied into

    making concessions to the developed countries at the expense of the African poor.

    "We have come to Durban with very clear and precise objectives; and that is to negotiate

    for a second commitment for the Kyoto protocol", she said. "It's a tough negotiation andwe are going to be tough, we will not be pushovers" Ayittey stressed at a news

    conference in the South African port city of Durban.

    African Ministers and other developing countries have been fighting for the survival of

    the Kyoto Protocol in the form of a second commitment period, as the first period ends

    next year. The minister who is leading the Ghanaian delegation to the Durban conference

    said developing countries are demanding an ambitious second commitment period under

    the Kyoto Protocol, the only legally binding instrument under the UN Framework

    Convention on Climate Change. The Kyoto Protocol signed by most developed nations,

    excluding the United States, had undertaken a legally binding regime to cut emissions,

    leaving all developing countries out of it. Delegates at the climate change conference inDurban are struggling to find common grounds to extend it.

    Some developed countries including Canada, Russia, Japan and Australia are resisting

    African demands to move ahead with a second period of commitments under the Kyoto

    Protocol.

    U.S. Africa Command Public Affairs Office +49(0)[email protected]

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    China is currently the world's biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, but as a developing

    country is not yet required to reduce its emissions. As China accounts for around one fifth

    of the world's population, increases in its emissions could dwarf any cuts made by the

    industrialised countries. The average Chinese person consumes only 10-15 per cent of the

    energy of an average US citizen, but with the economy developing at high speed many

    analysts expect China's per capita emissions to overtake America's by mid-century.

    There are attempts by some developed countries to lobby the Africa group to soften their

    stance and back off the Kyoto Protocol, but Ayittey said there is no backing down on the

    Kyoto Protocol.

    Securing the necessary climate finance forms a critical part of the official African

    position. "We've heard great things about the Green Climate Fund (GCF). Now some

    countries want to step back from it. It's unacceptable. They have to walk the talk - we

    need the finance to cope."

    Referring to pledges by developed countries jointly mobilise $100 billion per year by2020, Ayittey said, "You have to be responsible if you commit to a legally binding

    instrument. If your country doesn't keep its word, it shouldn't be trusted".

    The marathon talks entered their second week on Monday, but there has been no clear

    indication as to what will happen to the Kyoto Protocol.

    Countries have to sign up for another legally binding emissions reduction period if they

    want to keep the protocol going after 2012.

    The African position is that, should a second commitment period be achieved, developed

    nations should reduce their carbon emissions by at least 40 percent in the period 2013 to2017 and by at least 95 percent by 2050. She said, "Developed countries have shown us

    economic leadership, political leadership and sometimes military leadership - and now

    we want them to show us climate leadership."

    Call for review of Clean Development Mechanism

    On adaptation and finance, the Minister Africa wanted Durban to agree on a review of the

    Clean Development Mechanism (CDM), which she said was currently not effective, with

    very few states benefiting from it.

    The CDM allows a country with an emission-reduction or emission-limitationcommitment under the Kyoto Protocol to implement an emission-reduction project in

    developing countries. Such projects can earn saleable certified emission reduction (CER)

    credits, each equivalent to one tonne of CO2, which can be counted towards meeting

    Kyoto targets.

    ###

    U.S. Africa Command Public Affairs Office +49(0)[email protected]

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    Opinion: Continent lies naked to Euro-American Military Offensive

    http://allafrica.com/stories/201112060286.html

    6 December 2011

    By Glen Ford

    The United States and its allies, principally the French, are positioned to 'take' much ofthe continent with the collaboration of most of its governments." The US and its allies are

    engaged in an Asian and African offensive, a multi-pronged assault thinly camouflaged

    as humanitarian intervention that, in some regions, looks like a blitzkrieg.

    This frenzied aggression, still in its first year, saw NATO transformed into an

    expeditionary force to crush the unoffending Gaddafi regime in Libya and is now poised

    to topple the secular order in Syria.

    Although drawing on longstanding schemes for overt and covert regime change in

    selected countries, and fully consistent with global capital's historic imperative to

    bludgeon the planet into one malleable market subordinate to Washington, London andParis, the current offensive had a particular genesis in time: the nightmare vision of an

    Arab awakening.

    The prospect of an Arab Spring at the dawn of 2011 sparked general hysteria in imperial

    capitals.

    Suddenly, they stared in the face of geopolitical death at the hands of the Arab "street."

    Washington understands full well that the emergence of Arab governments that reflect

    the will of the people would soon result, as Noam Chomsky is fond of saying, in the US

    being "thrown out" of the region, the final toll of the bell, not just for the oil-hungryWest, but for international capital's annexes in the autocratic cesspools of the Persian

    Gulf.

    "The prospect of an Arab Spring at the dawn of 2011 sparked a general hysteria in

    imperial capitals."

    With centuries of Euro-American domination flashing before their eyes, Washington,

    London and Paris quickly configured NATO to unleash shock and awe on the victim of

    choice in North Africa: Muammar Gaddafi. The momentum of that show of force has led

    an expanding cast of imperial actors to the gates of Damascus.

    But Africa is the most vulnerable region in America's warpath, a continent ripe for the

    plucking due to the multitudinous entanglements of Africa's political and military classes

    with imperialism.

    The awful truth is, the US and its allies, principally the French, are positioned to "take"

    much of the continent with the collaboration of most of its governments and, especially,

    its soldiers.

    U.S. Africa Command Public Affairs Office +49(0)[email protected]

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    AFRICOM, established in 2008 by the Bush administration and now fully the creature of

    President Obama's "humanitarian" interventionist doctrine, claims military responsibility

    for the entire continent except Egypt.

    The US military command has assembled a dizzying array of alliances with regional

    organisations and blocs of countries that, together, encompass all but a few nations on thecontinent - leaving those holdouts with crosshairs on their backs.

    As the US bullies its way southward in the wake of the seizure of Libya, its path has been

    smoothed by the Africans, themselves.

    The long US war against Somalia, dramatically intensified with American backing for the

    Ethiopian invasion in late 2006, is now sanctioned by IGAD, the International Authority

    on Development in East Africa, comprised of Ethiopia; the puppet government in

    Somalia's capital, Mogadishu; Kenya; Uganda; the de facto French and US military

    protectorate, Djibouti; and, nominally, Sudan.

    "As the US bullies its way southward in the wake of the seizure of Libya, its path has

    been smoothed by the Africans, themselves."

    This year's French-led, but nominally United Nations operation to oust the regime of

    Laurent Gbagbo, in Ivory Coast, was vouchsafed by Ecowas, the 16-member Economic

    Community of West African States, including Benin Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Ivory

    Coast, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra

    Leone, and Togo.

    AFRICOM stages a huge, annual military exercise called African Endeavor, which trains

    African militaries to use "standard communications practices."

    African armies are taught US command-and-control procedures, on American-made

    equipment, that is serviced by American advisors.

    In 2009, the militaries of 25 African nations took part in the exercise. This year, 40

    nations joined Operation African Endeavor, accounting for the vast bulk of the

    continent's men under arms.

    More insidiously, through AFRICOM's "soldier-to-soldier" doctrine, US and African

    military peers are encouraged to forge one-on-one relationship up and down the levels of

    command: general-to-general, colonel-to-colonel, major-to-major, and even captain-to-captain.

    AFRICOM hopes these peer partnerings will forge personal relationships with African

    armed forces over the long haul, regardless of whatever regime is in power.

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    In the Sahel, AFRICOM maintains close relationships with virtually every nation along

    the vast band of land south of the Sahara desert that stretches from the Indian Ocean to

    the Atlantic, all under the heading of "anti-terrorism."

    These include Mauritania, Mali, Chad, and Niger, plus Nigeria and Senegal. To the north,

    AFRICOM has similar ties to the Maghreb countries: Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia and,until this year, Gaddafi's Libya.

    "This year, 40 nations joined Operation African Endeavor, accounting for the vast bulk of

    the continent's men under arms."

    AFRICOM is often the real power behind nominally African missions. AMISOM,

    officially the African Uni0n's so-called peace keeping force in Somalia, is in fact

    comprised of troops from Uganda and Burundi, U.S. client states that act as mercenaries

    for Washington, and paid for mainly by the Americans. They are soon to be joined by

    500 soldiers from Djibouti. For years, AMISOM was all that saved the puppet regime in

    Mogadishu from instant annihilation in its tiny enclaves at the hands of the Shababresistance. Today, the reinforced "African Uni0n" fighters are on the offensive, along

    with Kenyan and Ethiopian invaders, aimed at smashing the Shabab in a pincer

    movement. US drones based in Ethiopia and Djibouti bring death from overhead. Thus, a

    force nominally fielded by the African Uni0n is an active belligerent in a US engineered

    war that has set the Horn of Africa ablaze, a conflict also sanctioned by IGAD, the

    regional co-operative body.

    It is only a matter of time before Eritrea, an adversary of Ethiopia and one of the few

    African nations outside the AFRICOM orbit, is attacked, doubtless by nominally African

    forces backed by the US and French.

    Certainly, the thoroughly compromised African Union will be in no position to object.

    No sooner than the last loyalist stronghold fell in Libya, President Obama extended his

    "humanitarian" interventionist reach deep into central Africa, sending 100 Special Forces

    troops to Uganda for later assignment to the Democratic Republic of Congo, the new

    nation of South Sudan, and the Central African Republic, the French neocolonial outpost

    where the Americans sent Haitian President Jean Bertrand Aristide after kidnapping him

    in 2004.

    l Glen Ford is BAR executive editor. This article is reproduced from

    blackagendareport.com

    Supposedly, the American Green Berets will hunt for the 2,000 or so fighters of the

    Lord's Liberation Army - a force the Ugandans themselves could snuff out if they were

    not busy acting as America's mercenaries elsewhere on the continent. (Washington's

    other loyal hit man in the region, Rwanda, was cited by a United Nations report as

    bearing responsibility for some the millions slaughtered in Congo.

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    "A force nominally fielded by the African Uni0n is an active belligerent in a U.S.

    engineered war that has set the Horn of Africa ablaze."

    NATO's aggression in Libya was made inevitable when Nigeria, South Africa and Gabon

    dishonored themselves at the United Nations Security Council by voting in favor of the

    bogus "No Fly Zone." The momentum of the Euro-American offensive flows southward,and will soon set much of the continent afire. The Horn of Africa is already a carnal

    house of flame and famine, engineered by the Americans but fully joined by Africans and

    their regional institutions. In the west, ECOWAS legitimizes imperial policies, while in

    the Sahel, Africans scramble to identify targets for the Americans. Each year, most of the

    continent's militaries gather round the Americans to learn how to command and control

    their own troops, thus making their armies useless to resist the real enemy: the U.S. and

    NATO.

    Betrayed by a political/military class eager to integrate itself into the imperial system on

    any terms, Africa lies naked to the Euro-Americans.

    It will be up to the slums and the bush to reverse this catastrophe. If the Americans and

    Europeans are to be resisted, Africans will have to fight their own governments, first.

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    END OF REPORT