3. AFRICOM: US Military Control of Africas
Resources
Source:
MoonofAlabama.org 2/21/2007
Title: Understanding AFRICOM
Author: Bryan Hunt
http://www.moonofalabama.org/2007/02/understanding_a_1.html
Student Researcher: Ioana Lupu
Faculty Evaluator: Marco Calavita, Ph.D
In February 2007 the White House announced the formation of the US
African Command (AFRICOM), a new unified Pentagon command center in
Africa, to be established by September 2008. This military penetration
of Africa is being presented as a humanitarian guard in the Global War
on Terror. The real objective is, however, the procurement and control
of Africas oil and its global delivery systems.
The most significant and growing challenge to US dominance in Africa
is China. An increase in Chinese trade and investment in Africa threatens
to substantially reduce US political and economic leverage in that resource-rich
continent. The political implication of an economically emerging Africa
in close alliance with China is resulting in a new cold war in which
AFRICOM will be tasked with achieving full-spectrum military dominance
over Africa.
AFRICOM will replace US military command posts in Africa, which were
formerly under control of US European Command (EUCOM) and US Central
Command (CENTCOM), with a more centralized and intensified US military
presence.
A context for the pending strategic role of AFRICOM can be gained from
observing CENTCOM in the Middle East. CENTCOM grew out of the Carter
Doctrine of 1980 which described the oil flow from the Persian Gulf
as a vital interest of the US, and affirmed that the US
would employ any means necessary, including military force
to overcome an attempt by hostile interests to block that flow.
It is in Western and Sub-Saharan Africa that the US military force
is most rapidly increasing, as this area is projected to become as important
a source of energy as the Middle East within the next decade. In this
region, challenge to US domination and exploitation is coming from the
people of Africamost specifically in Nigeria, where seventy percent
of Africas oil is contained.
People native to the Niger Delta region have not benefited, but instead
suffered, as a result of sitting on top of vast natural oil and natural
gas deposits. Nigerian peoples movements are demanding self-determination
and equitable sharing of oil-receipts. Environmental and human rights
activists have, for years, documented atrocities on the part of oil
companies and the military in this region. As the tactics of resistance
groups have shifted from petition and protest to more proactive measures,
attacks on pipelines and oil facilities have curtailed the flow of oil
leaving the region. As a Convergent Interests report puts it, Within
the first six months of 2006, there were nineteen attacks on foreign
oil operations and over $2.187 billion lost in oil revenues; the Department
of Petroleum Resources claims this figure represents 32 percent of the
revenue the country [Nigeria] generated this year.
Oil companies and the Pentagon are attempting to link these resistance
groups to international terror networks in order to legitimize the use
of the US military to stabilize these areas and secure the
energy flow. No evidence has been found however to link the Niger Delta
resistance groups to international terror networks or jihadists. Instead
the situation in the Niger Delta is that of ethnic-nationalist movements
fighting, by any means necessary, toward the political objective of
self-determination. The volatility surrounding oil installations in
Nigeria and elsewhere in the continent is, however, used by the US security
establishment to justify military support in African oil
producing states, under the guise of helping Africans defend themselves
against those who would hinder their engagement in Free Trade.
The December 2006 invasion of Somalia was coordinated using US bases
throughout the region. The arrival of AFRICOM will effectively reinforce
efforts to replace the popular Islamic Courts Union of Somalia with
the oil industryfriendly Transitional Federal Government. Meanwhile,
the persistent Western calls for humanitarian intervention
into the Darfur region of Sudan sets up another possibility for military
engagement to deliver regime change in another Islamic state rich in
oil reserves.
Hunt warns that this sort of support is only bound to increase
as rhetoric of stabilizing Africa makes the dailies, copied directly
out of official AFRICOM press releases. Readers of the mainstream media
can expect to encounter more frequent usage of terms like genocide
and misguided. He notes that already corporate media decry
Chinas human rights record and support for Sudan and Zimbabwe
while ignoring the ongoing violations of Western corporations engaged
in the plunder of natural resources, the pollution other peoples
homelands, and the shoring up of repressive regimes.
In FY 2005 the Trans-Sahara Counter Terrorism Initiative received $16
million; in FY 2006, nearly $31 million. A big increase is expected
in 2008, with the administration pushing for $100 million each year
for five years. With the passage of AFRICOM and continued promotion
of the Global War on Terror, Congressional funding is likely to increase
significantly.
In the end, regardless of whether its US or Chinese domination
over Africa, the blood spilled will be African. Hunt concludes, It
does not require a crystal ball or great imagination to realize what
the increased militarization of the continent through AFRICOM will bring
to the peoples of Africa.
Update by Bryan Hunt
By spring 2007, US Department of Energy data showed that the United
States now imports more oil from the continent of Africa than from the
country of Saudi Arabia. While this statistic may be of surprise to
the majority, provided such information even crosses their radar, its
certainly not the case for those figures who have been pushing for increased
US military engagement on that continent for some time now, as my report
documented. These import levels will rise.
In the first few months following the official announcement of AFRICOM,
details are still few. Its expected that the combatant command
will be operational as a subunit of EUCOM by October 2007, transitioning
to a full-fledged stand-alone command some twelve months later. This
will most likely entail the re-locating of AFRICOM headquarters from
Stuttgart, Germany, where EUCOM is headquartered, to an African host
country.
In April, US officials were traversing the continent to present their
sales pitch for AFRICOM and to gauge official and public reaction. Initial
perceptions are, not surprisingly, negative and highly suspect, given
the history of US military involvement throughout the world, and Africas
long and bitter experience with colonizers.
Outside of a select audience, reaction in the United States has barely
even registered. First of all, Africa is one of the least-covered continents
in US media. And when African nations do draw media attention, coverage
typically centers on catastrophe, conflict, or corruption, and generally
features some form of benevolent foreign intervention, be it financial
and humanitarian aid, or stern official posturing couched as paternal
concerns over human rights. But US military activity on the continent
largely goes unnoticed. This was recently evidenced by the sparse reporting
on military support for the invasion of Somalia to rout the Islamic
Courts Union and reinstall the unpopular warlords who had earlier divided
up the country. The Pentagon went so far as to declare the operation
a blueprint for future engagements.
The DOD states that a primary component of AFRICOMs mission will
be to professionalize indigenous militaries to ensure stability, security,
and accountable governance throughout Africas various states and
regions. Stability refers to establishing and maintaining order, and
accountability, of course, refers to US interests. This year alone,
1,400 African military officers are anticipated to complete International
Military Education and Training programs at US military schools.
Combine this tasking of militarization with an increased civilian component
in AFRICOM emphasizing imported conceptions of democracy promotion
and capacity-building and African autonomy and sovereignty
are quick to suffer. Kenyans, for example, are currently finding themselves
in this position.
It is hoped that, by drawing attention to the growing US footprint
on Africa now, a contextual awareness of these issues can be useful
to, at the very least, help mitigate some of the damages that will surely
follow. At the moment, there is little public consciousness of AFRICOM
and very few sources of information outside of official narratives.
Widening the public dialogue on this topic is the first step toward
addressing meaningful responses.