Over the last few weeks, AFRICOM has appeared in
several major media outlets. Until now, there has been very little
national-level press coverage of the command, reflecting a lack of knowledge
about AFRICOM among the general public. As such, we are delighted to see media exposure
that highlights not only the basic facts but also the criticisms that AFJN and
the AFRICOM Working Group have been discussing since August.
Newsweek, Dan Rather Reports , and NPR have each
provided commentary on AFRICOM that gives both sides to the issue, including
African rejections and hesitations over US military involvement in the
continent.
Farai Chideya on NPR’s News
& Notes interviewed Emira Woods, co-editor-in-chief of Foreign Policy
in Focus at the Institute for Policy Studies. AFJN has been working closely with
Woods in drafting statements and visiting Congressional and Ambassadorial
offices about US military presence in Africa.
Newsweek and Dan Rather Reports are also excellent sources for understanding
the harmful effects of this new development and we applaud such analysis within
the media.
AFRICOM became operational on October 1st, though
its headquarters remain alongside EUCOM in Stuttgart, Germany
until a location is found on the continent. Though the rhetoric about
humanitarian aid as a project of AFRICOM has shifted to the backburner (likely
due to opposition from NGO’s and governments in Africa),
AFJN remains opposed to the current structure of the command. The military
insists AFRICOM will be an excellent tool for training African militaries –
from the African Union (AU) to national armies. However, American military
training is unlikely to be culturally sensitive, responsible, or appropriate
for African peacekeeping tasks. The training that the US military has conducted in Uganda has not
been used for its slated peacekeeping mission but for counter-insurgency
attacks against the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) in the north. Also, as the
recent Blackwater scandal has shown us, the inevitable involvement of private
defense contractors in military capacity-building will be nothing but
detrimental to African societies.
Thus, AFJN remains strong in its opposition to the command. We
do not agree with the humanitarian role of the Defense Department nor do we
believe that training of African militaries will be carried out such a way as
to increase the efficacy of the AU or government forces. Instead, we hope to
promote a non-military alternative to involvement in the continent. We
encourage the US government
to live up to its current obligations in Africa
and to reform US policies that are harmful to Africans. From PEPFAR to AGOA to
US farm subsidies, there is much that the US government can do outside of its
military expansionism.
AFRICOM is therefore seen as another phase in the Bush
Administration’s War on Terror and hunger for oil; it is a self-interested
command and one that is unlikely to yield positive results even for the US. The
American track-record in the fields of counter-terror operations and resource
extraction is negative and we can only assume that AFRICOM will be the same.
However, while we would like to see AFRICOM removed from the
military’s operations entirely, we cannot expect to shift a command that was
constructed at the Administration-level. AFJN will therefore work to develop a
set of policy recommendations that includes non-military alternatives as well
as a means of engaging the US
military in Africa in a more responsible
manner.
AFJN encourages you to listen to or read the recent
media reports and to continue checking the AFJN website for more information,
for policy recommendations, and ways you can help us counter this new military development.
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