DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — The US scrambled on Sunday to evaluate the way forward for its counterterrorism operations within the Sahel after Niger’s junta mentioned it was ending its yearslong navy cooperation with Washington following a go to by high U.S. officers.
The U.S. navy has lots of of troops stationed at a serious airbase in northern Niger that deploys flights over the huge Sahel area — south of the Sahara Desert — the place jihadi teams linked to al-Qaida and the Islamic State group function.
High U.S. envoy Molly Phee returned to the capital, Niamey, this week to satisfy with senior authorities officers, accompanied by Marine Gen. Michael Langley, head of the U.S. navy’s African Command. She had beforehand visited in December, whereas performing Deputy Secretary of State Victoria Nuland traveled to the nation in August.
The State Division mentioned Sunday in a put up on X, previously Twitter, that talks had been frank and that it was in contact with the junta. It wasn’t clear whether or not the U.S. has any leeway left to barter a deal to remain within the nation.
Niger had been seen as one of many final nations within the restive area that Western nations might accomplice with to beat again rising jihadi insurgencies. The U.S. and France had greater than 2,500 navy personnel within the area till lately, and along with different European international locations had invested lots of of thousands and thousands of {dollars} in navy help and coaching.
However that modified in July when mutinous troopers ousted the nation’s democratically elected president and months later requested French forces to depart.
The U.S. navy nonetheless had some 650 personnel working in Niger in December, based on a White Home report back to Congress. The Niger base is used for each manned and unmanned surveillance operations. Within the Sahel the U.S. additionally helps floor troops, together with accompanying them on missions. Nevertheless, such accompanied missions have been scaled again since U.S. troops had been killed in a joint operation in Niger in 2017.
It’s unclear what prompted the junta’s resolution to droop navy ties. On Saturday, the junta’s spokesperson, Col. Maj. Amadou Abdramane, mentioned U.S. flights over Niger’s territory in latest weeks had been unlawful. In the meantime, Insa Garba Saidou, a neighborhood activist who assists Niger’s navy rulers with their communications, criticized U.S. efforts to power the junta to choose between strategic companions.
“The American bases and civilian personnel can’t keep on Nigerien soil any longer,” he advised The Related Press.
After her journey in December, Phee, the highest U.S. envoy, advised reporters she had “good discussions” with junta leaders and referred to as on them to set a timeline for elections in return for restoring navy and assist ties. However she additionally mentioned the U.S. had warned Niamey in opposition to forging nearer ties with Russia.
Neighboring Mali and Burkina Faso, which have skilled two coups every since 2020, have turned to Moscow for safety assist. After the coup in Niger, the navy additionally turned to the Russian mercenary group Wagner for assist.
WATCH: Coup in Niger places U.S. efforts to thwart terrorism in Africa’s Sahel area in danger
Cameron Hudson, who served with the Central Intelligence Company and State Division in Africa, mentioned the incident reveals the diminution of U.S. leverage within the area and that Niger was angered by Washington’s try to strain the junta to avoid Russia. “That is ironic since one mantra of the Biden Administration has been that Africans are free to decide on their companions,” he mentioned.
The U.S. delegation go to coincided with the beginning of Ramadan, a month of dawn-to-dusk fasting and intense prayer for Muslims. Niger’s junta chief, Gen. Abdourahmane Tchiani, refused to satisfy them. A U.S. press convention on the embassy in Niger was canceled.
The junta spokesperson, talking on state tv, mentioned junta leaders met the U.S. delegation solely out of courtesy and described their tone as condescending.
Aneliese Bernard, a former U.S. State Division official who specialised in African affairs and director of Strategic Stabilization Advisors, a danger advisory group, mentioned the latest go to had failed and the U.S. must take a vital have a look at the way it’s doing diplomacy not simply in Niger however in the entire area.
“What’s happening in Niger and the Sahel can’t be checked out repeatedly in a vacuum as we all the time do,” she mentioned. “The US authorities tends to function with blinders on. We are able to’t deny that our deteriorating relationships in different elements of the world: the Gulf, Israel and others, all have an influential affect on our bilateral relations in international locations in West Africa.”
Mednick reported from Jerusalem. AP diplomatic correspondent Matthew Lee contributed from Frankfurt, Germany.