NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — By the time U.S. military
forces left Somalia in 1994 after entering the lawless nation more than a year
earlier to stop a famine, 44 Army soldiers, Marines and airmen had been killed
and dozens more wounded. Thus ended America's last large-scale military
intervention in Africa.
But the U.S. has come back, using special forces
advisers, drones and tens of millions of dollars in military aid to combat a
growing and multifaceted security threat. This time the United States is
playing a less obtrusive role but is focusing once again on Somalia.
While putting few U.S. troops at risk, the United
States is also providing intelligence and training to fight militants across
the continent, from Mauritania in the west along the Atlantic Ocean, to Somalia
in the east along the Indian Ocean.
The Pentagon is paying a lot more attention to
Africa than in years past, analysts say. A hardline Islamist group in Nigeria,
Boko Haram, bombed the U.N. headquarters in the capital in August, killing 23
people. A Nigerian man tried to blow up an airliner over Detroit on Christmas
2009. The flight was saved only because of a malfunction with explosives the
bomber had carried from Lagos, Nigeria. An al-Qaida group known as AQIM that
operates in the west and north of Africa kidnaps foreigners, making vast tracts
no-go areas.
And, most worrisome to the United States, an
al-Qaida-linked group in Somalia has recruited dozens of Americans, most of
them of Somali descent.
"If you ask me what keeps me awake at night,
it is the thought of an American passport-holding person who transits through a
training camp in Somalia and gets some skill and then finds their way back into
the United States to attack Americans here in our homeland," Gen. Carter
Ham, the commander of the U.S. Africa Command, said in Washington this month.
"That's mission failure for us."
U.S. and European officials also worry that AQIM is
working to establish contacts with Boko Haram and al-Shabab, the Islamist Somali
insurgent group.
"I think the security threats emanating from
Africa are being taken more seriously than they have been before, and they're
more real," said Jennifer Cooke, the director of the Africa program at the
Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies.
The U.S. is conducting counterterrorism training
and equipping militaries in countries including Algeria, Burkina Faso Chad,
Mali, Mauritania, Morocco, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal and Tunisia to
"preclude terrorists from establishing sanctuaries," according to the
U.S. Africa Command, which is headquartered in Stuttgart, Germany.
In Somalia, the U.S. helps support 9,000 troops
from Uganda and Burundi to fight militants in Mogadishu, the Somali capital. In
June, the Pentagon moved to send nearly $45 million in military equipment to
Uganda and Burundi, another country contributing in Somalia. The aid included
four small drones, body armor and night-vision and communications gear and is
being used in the fight against al-Shabab.
The U.S. also announced this month it is sending
100 advisers, most of them special forces, to battle the rebel group Lord's
Resistance Army in Central Africa and nail its leader, Joseph Kony, who is
wanted by the International Criminal Court. In Libya, U.S. fighter planes
helped rebels defeat former dictator Moammar Gadhafi.
The latest attack against Africa's militants saw
Kenya this month deploy troops into southern Somalia to fight al-Shabab
insurgents. The U.S. says it is not aiding Kenya's incursion, but America has
given Kenya $24 million this year in military and police aid "to counter
terrorists and participate in peacekeeping operations," the U.S. Embassy
said.
The U.S. government "has had a burr under its
saddle about Somalia" for years, dating to the 1993 downing of two U.S.
helicopters over Mogadishu, a battle known as Black Hawk Down in which 18 U.S.
troops died, said John Pike of the Globalsecurity.org think tank near
Washington. Back then, Washington deployed thousands of troops to combat a
famine but the mission escalated into a hunt for warlords.
These days, only a handful of U.S. troops are
involved directly in Somalia — special forces who enter on kill missions. In
2009, Navy SEALs targeted and killed al-Qaida operative Saleh Ali Saleh Nabhan
in a helicopter raid. The Americans jumped out of the helicopters, grabbed
Nabhan's body from his bullet-riddled convoy and flew off. The corpse — like
Osama bin Laden's two years later — was buried at sea.
"The U.S. has really developed an interest in
Africa that we just have never seen before," Pike said. "Between all
the goings and comings in the Horn of Africa and all this snake-eater (special
forces) Sahara stuff, ungoverned territories ... it's all over the place. Since
I think an awful lot of it is being run out of Special Operations Command and
out of the agency (the CIA), I think it is probably far larger than anyone
imagines."
U.S. drones launched from the Seychelles islands in
the Indian Ocean also provide intelligence, and the pilotless planes are
capable of being armed.
Al-Shabab counts 31 American citizens among its
ranks, a U.S. official in Washington told The Associated Press. They're mostly
American-Somalis who left the U.S. to join the group. The U.S. official, who
spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive intelligence matters, said
foreign fighters among al-Shabab's ranks want to attack Western targets.
Intelligence has revealed sophisticated and fairly
advanced plans by al-Shabab to attack targets in Europe, the official said, but
the operations have been disrupted by the recent stepped-up fighting in
Somalia.
Ugandan and Burundian troops fighting al-Shabab
militants in Mogadishu as part of an African Union force have pushed back the
insurgents in recent months and now control almost all the capital. The Kenyan
incursion has forced al-Shabab to fight on its southern flank as well.
Though the Kenyan invasion appears to further the
U.S. goal of pressuring al-Shabab, U.S. officials say the American military is
not providing assistance to Kenya in its incursion.
"The United States has supported Kenyan
efforts to improve its ability to monitor and control often porous land and
maritime borders and territory exploited by terrorists and illicit traffickers,
particularly along its border with Somalia," said Katya Thomas, a
spokeswoman at the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi.
But, she added: "The United States did not
encourage the Kenyan government to act nor did Kenya seek our views. We note
that Kenya has a right to defend itself against threats to its security and its
citizens."
Some aspects of Kenya's military adventure appear
poorly thought out. The troops moved in just as seasonal rains began. Kenyan
forces are now bogged down in the mud, a literal reminder of the potential
quagmire for countries that try to intervene in Somalia, whose last nationwide
leader was overthrown in 1991.
A paper published by the U.S. Army examining the
ill-fated Operation Restore Hope of the early 1990s concluded that "the
chaotic political situation of that unhappy land bogged down U.S. and allied
forces in what became, in effect, a poorly organized United Nations
nation-building operation."
An invasion by Ethiopia in 2006 was extremely
unpopular and gave rise to the militants now known as al-Shabab.
"That's the problem with Somalia, there is
just no easy answer," said Cooke, the analyst. "The problem is so
huge and multi- faceted that tackling one aspect of it, i.e., beating back
al-Shabab, just can't fix it. Part of the problem is that the government we
have invested in as our key partner in Somalia is a fiction of a government,
and so Kenya can try to create some space but there is nothing to fill
that."
The chairman of the Pentagon's Joint Chiefs of
Staff, Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, told the House Armed Services Committee this
month that the U.S. must remain active in Africa because terrorists are networked
globally.
"One of the places they sit is Pakistan. One
of the places they sit or sat is Afghanistan. One of the places they sit is the
African continent," Dempsey said.
Associated Press reporter Lolita Baldor in
Washington contributed to this report.
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.






